On Point
Have we reached a turning point for racism and soccer? While the answer is likely to be no (I mean, right?), experts are finding reason to believe that England soccer fans and authorities have just experienced a solid, maybe, in the form of "a potentially seismic moment in the sport's struggle with racism." An English team walked off the pitch during an FA Cup match, one of the most prestigious in tournament play, to protest racist abuse from fans. It's an unprecedented move. "Football has conditioned fans as well as players into believing that the way to beat racist abuse is to play on, complete the game, win the game emphatically," a journalist/expert Darren Lewis tells CNN. The move is a new standard, he says. "[W]e should not, in 2019, be sending young, black men into any situation where they should expect racial abuse."
CNN
Hate crime reports have doubled in England and Wales While the reports have increased in the last five years, authorities are seeing a change in the types of crimes being committed. While the majority of hate crimes are hate based, crimes against transgender people increased by 37% last year alone, along with a marked rise in sexual orientation and disability hate crime. The uptick is explained in part by better reporting. Authorities noted spikes in reports after specific events, like the Brexit vote, and the terror attack in 2017. While half of religious hate offenses were against Muslim people, the number of crimes against Jewish people appears to have doubled last year.
The Guardian
There's an epidemic of rape in Indigenous communities According to a Newsy investigation called "A Broken Trust," some one-third of Native American and Alaska Native women can expect to be raped in their lives, but few will find justice. Of the many issues in play is a lack of coordination between tribal and federal justice authorities, compounded by, if I may, a complete lack of everyone else caring. "Native women have told me that what you do when you raise a daughter in this environment is you prepare her for what to do when she's raped—not if, but when," said Sarah Deer, University of Kansas professor and author.
USA Today
Emmett Till's memorial is now bulletproof A memorial for Emmett Till, the Chicago teen who was brutally murdered by white supremacists in 1955, has been vandalized repeatedly over the years. Last July, the sign was removed after a photo of three white University of Mississippi students was posted standing next to it with guns. Well, it's back, and now it's in a bulletproof form. It is made of steel. It weighs 500 pounds. It is over an inch thick. And Huffpost reporter and #BlackObituaryProject founder Ja'han Jones happened to catch the moment when two Black Ole Miss students carried the old, bullet-riddled memorial across campus and lay it to rest at the base of a confederate monument. He posted a video on Twitter. "The message from the students carrying the sign is that both the desecrated sign and the confederate monument belong to the same tradition of racist terrorism, and their righteous act of linking them in this way cannot be undone. Ever," he tweeted. "Salute to them."
New York Times
On Background
Even classical sculpture is racist You know those majestic Green and Roman figures that grace the halls of many a classic museum? Cold white marble, thousand-yard stare? Turns out they were painted, with costumes, in often exuberant, even campy colors and with pigments that reflected their varied skin tones. While the practice of scrubbing sculpture remnants of any traces of color has gone on for ages, it's one that is being revisited now. For one thing, it calls into question the nobility of the era. (One aggrieved art historian said a color-corrected statue of Emperor Augustus looked "like a cross-dresser trying to hail a taxi.") But for another, it was the adoption of the ancient aesthetic by white supremacy group Identity Evropa, that caused Sarah Bond, a classics professor at the University of Iowa, to challenge the way institutions presented the sculpture. Her essays, describing the way the art was originally presented, has earned her hate mail.
New Yorker
The many misconceptions about coming out at work This piece from HBR outlines seven, but the main one is clear: Not everyone who is "out" at work is out to everybody. The research, which surveys professionals in Australia, finds that the number of people who keep their identity hidden from some people is more dramatic there (68%), but research suggests some 46% of workers in the U.S. are only partially out at work. Here's another myth worth considering: LGBTQ+ people don't, in fact, have control of when and to whom they share their identities. From the research: "Some individuals are outed against their will, while others are forced to come out because of workplace policies."
HBR
Here are some questions to ask as you're touring colleges with your already nervous pre-freshperson Debra Mashek, a psychology professor and executive director of Heterodox Academy, an independent academic consortium that promotes viewpoint diversity in higher education, offers six intriguing questions to ask as your family shops for a college that actually welcomes diversity of thought. You don't need to get a completely informed answer to get a sense of what the culture is like. Just give something simple a go: Are the professors open to differing opinions? Are students welcome to share their views even if others might disagree? But one really stood out to me: How often do students of different political orientations host events together?
Fortune
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Quote
"Inclusion is not a matter of political correctness. It is the key to growth."
—Rev. Jesse Jackson
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