Attorney General James Announces First Indictments Under New Deed Theft Law

Attorney General James Announces First Indictments Under New Deed Theft Law

Editorial credit: lev radin / Shutterstock.com Deepa Roy and Victor Quimis Stole The Home of an Elderly Queens Widow While She Received End-of-Life Hospice Care Indictments Are First Brought by AG James Using New Criminal Deed Theft Law She Championed NEW YORK – New York Attorney General Letitia James today announced the indictments of Deepa Roy, […]

A Watershed Moment: How Joan Little’s Acquittal Redefined Self-Defense and Ignited a Movement

A Watershed Moment: How Joan Little’s Acquittal Redefined Self-Defense and Ignited a Movement

By Esther Claudette Gittens | Photo by: AI In the turbulent summer of 1975, a North Carolina courtroom became the epicenter of a case that would forever alter the American legal landscape and galvanize nascent movements for racial and gender equality. Joan Little, a young Black woman incarcerated for breaking and entering, faced the death […]

The Unseen Scars: Renty Taylor, Delia, and Harvard’s Enduring Legacy of Racism

The Unseen Scars: Renty Taylor, Delia, and Harvard’s Enduring Legacy of Racism

By Esther Claudette Gittens| Editorial credit: 365 Focus Photography / Shutterstock.com In the annals of American history, the story of Renty Taylor and his daughter Delia serves as a harrowing testament to the brutality of slavery and the insidious ways in which academic institutions participated in and perpetuated racist ideologies. Forced to disrobe for photographs […]

Pope Leo XIV’s Link to Haiti Is Part of a Broader American Story of Race, Citizenship and Migration

Pope Leo XIV’s Link to Haiti Is Part of a Broader American Story of Race, Citizenship and Migration

By:Chelsea Stieber | theconversation.com |Editorial credit: Marco Iacobucci Epp / Shutterstock.com Early coverage of Pope Leo XIV has explored the first American pontiff’s Chicago upbringing, as well as the many years he spent in Peru, first as a missionary and then as a bishop. Genealogist Jari Honora broke the story of the pope’s ancestors’ connection to the Creole of color community in […]

The Unwavering Loyalty of African Americans to the Democratic Party: Analyzing Civil Rights, DEI, Humanitarianism, Voting Rights, and Republican Shortcomings

The Unwavering Loyalty of African Americans to the Democratic Party: Analyzing Civil Rights, DEI, Humanitarianism, Voting Rights, and Republican Shortcomings

By Brian Figeroux, Esq.  African Americans have consistently shown strong loyalty to the Democratic Party for over half a century. While some political groups argue that Black voters should be more politically diverse, the overwhelming majority of African Americans continue to support Democrats in local, state, and national elections. This political allegiance is not based […]

The Psychological and Emotional Toll on Black Women: Navigating the Systematic Destruction of Black Men in America

The Psychological and Emotional Toll on Black Women: Navigating the Systematic Destruction of Black Men in America

By Xavier Figeroux, Brian Figeroux, Jr. and Michael Figeroux The historical and ongoing systematic destruction of Black men in America has had a profound impact on Black women, shaping their mental and emotional well-being, as well as their personal relationships. As the primary support systems for Black men, Black women have endured centuries of grief, […]

The Systematic Destruction of the Black Man in America: A Historical and Contemporary Analysis

The Systematic Destruction of the Black Man in America: A Historical and Contemporary Analysis

By Xavier Figeroux, Brian Figeroux, Jr. and Michael Figeroux The history of the United States is deeply intertwined with the oppression and destruction of Black men, a process that has been deliberately and systematically implemented by the white ruling class. From slavery to Jim Crow, from the war on drugs to mass incarceration, the targeted […]

Who Was Una Marson? The Jamaican Feminist, Writer, Poet, Playwright and Radio Pioneer

Who Was Una Marson? The Jamaican Feminist, Writer, Poet, Playwright and Radio Pioneer

By Jamaicans.com | Photo credit: Erika Koch / National Portrait Gallery UK On this day, 6th February 1905, the remarkable Una Marson was born in Santa Cruz, St Elizabeth, Jamaica. A poet, playwright, journalist, and activist, Marson was a pioneer in Caribbean literature and an unwavering advocate for gender equality and racial justice. Her contributions […]

Fighting School Segregation Didn’t Take Place Just in the South

Fighting School Segregation Didn’t Take Place Just in the South

By: Ashley Farmer | theconversation.com Whether it’s black-and-white photos of Arkansas’ Little Rock Nine or Norman Rockwell’s famous painting of New Orleans schoolgirl Ruby Bridges, images of school desegregation often make it seem as though it was an issue for Black children primarily in the South. It is true that Bridges, the Little Rock Nine and other […]

The History of Criminalizing Black Protest: A Reflection on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day

The History of Criminalizing Black Protest: A Reflection on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day

By Brian Figeroux, Esq | Editorial credit: NatalieSchorr / shutterstock.com  Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is widely celebrated for his unwavering commitment to nonviolent protest as a means of achieving social change. As the face of the Civil Rights Movement, King advocated for peaceful resistance in the fight against racial injustice, firmly believing that nonviolence […]