Politics

Women of Color Were Shut Out of Congress For Decades. Now They’re Transforming It. | FiveThirtyEight

Women of Color Were Shut Out of Congress For Decades. Now They’re Transforming It. | FiveThirtyEight

The second is that a historic number of women of color — 49 in total, according to data collected by the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University1 — will serve in the 117th Congress, including the first three Korean American women elected to Congress and the first Black women to represent Washington state and Missouri.

Ammon Bundy Comes Out in Support of BLM, Calls to Defund the Police

Ammon Bundy Comes Out in Support of BLM, Calls to Defund the Police

Ammon Bundy, an anti-government activist who lead the 41-day armed takeover of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge back in 2016, expressed support for the Black Lives Matter movement and for defunding the police in a recent acebook video.

He said in the video that he had considered attending, near his home in Boise, Idaho, “a rally with the Black Lives Matter in support of defunding the police because yes the police need to be defunded.ȁ He decided not to attend the rally, citing concerns about potential violence from fellow “Patriotsȁ who have criticized his stance on the issue.

Anyone who doesn’t understand his support for the movement “must have a problem,ȁ he said.

“You must have a problem in your mind if you think that somehow the Black Lives Matter is more dangerous than the police," he said. “You must have a problem in your mind if you think that Antifa is the one going to take your freedom.'

Phil Ochs – Crucifixion (Live)

β€œIt’s a song about Christ-killing, how all America and even, especially, New York loves to create heroes to moralize to them and then kill them violently, bloodily and dig the death so much, every detail of the death. It’s a song about Jesus Christ. It’s called The Crucifixion. It’s a song about Kennedy. And maybe a song about Dylan.”
- Phil Ochs

Conspiracy theorists commandeer Trump’s legal operation – Axios

Off the rails: Conspiracy theorists commandeer Trump’s legal operation – Axios

The White House became a strange ghost town in the days after the election. Trump's schedule — already unstructured — became more so. It was impossible to shift his focus from his grievances about the election to important policy matters. In conversations in the Oval Office, Trump would occasionally slip and seem to acknowledge he lost, saying, "Can you believe I lost to that fucking guy? That fucking corpse?"

Most in the West Wing, including chief of staff Mark Meadows, understood that Trump had lost. But nobody confronted him directly with that unpleasant news. Instead many on the staff chose to avoid him.

Trump’s premeditated election lie lit the fire – Axios

Off the rails: Trump’s premeditated election lie lit the fire – Axios

or weeks, Trump had been laying the groundwork to declare victory on election night — even if he lost. But the real-time results, punctuated by ox’s shocking call, upended his plans and began his unraveling.

Trump had planned for Americans to go to bed on Nov. 3 celebrating — or resigned to — his re-election. The maps they saw on TV should be bathed in red. But at 11:20 p.m. that vision fell apart, as the nation’s leading news channel among conservatives became the first outlet to call Arizona for Joe Biden. Inside the White House, Trump's inner circle erupted in horror.

Over the next two months, Trump took the nation down with him as he descended into denial, despair and a reckless revenge streak that fueled a deadly siege on the U.S. Capitol by his backers seeking to overturn the election. This triggered a constitutional crisis and a bipartisan push to impeach Trump on his way out the door, to try to cast him out of American politics for good.

But in four years, Trump had remade the Republican Party in his own image, inspiring and activating tens of millions of Americans who weren’t abandoning him anytime soon. He’d once bragged he could shoot another person on ifth Avenue and not lose his voters. In reality, many of them had eagerly lined up to commit violence on his behalf.

How the 1968 Sanitation Workers’ Strike Expanded the Civil Rights Struggle – HISTORY

How the 1968 Sanitation Workers’ Strike Expanded the Civil Rights Struggle – HISTORY

On ebruary 12, 1968, 1,300 Black sanitation workers in Memphis began a strike to demand better working conditions and higher pay. Their stand marked an early fight for financial justice for workers of color as part of the civil rights movement. The strike also drew Martin Luther King, Jr. and fatefully became the setting for his “I’ve Been to the Mountaintopȁ speech and his assassination.

Hauling trash, sometimes in the pouring rain, was a taxing and dirty job. Yet the city of Memphis expected garbage collectors to work long hours for meager wages and without overtime pay. Their compensation, 65 cents per hour, was so low that many were eligible for welfare and food stamps.