Related Stories
Gary Wilson
The same legal machinery that once protected Jim Crow segregation has found a new way to strip Black voters of political power without touching
Anthony Karefa Rogers-Wright
Democrats keep telling us that Jim Crow is a ghost of the past, but the Supreme Court's latest ruling proves otherwise.
Mark P. Fancher
Tennessee just erased its only majority-Black voting district.
Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
From the 1870 15th Amendment to the Voting Rights Act of 1965, voting rights for Black people have proven to be ephemeral.
Anthony Karefa Rogers-Wright
The Supreme Court decision in Louisiana v.
Mark P. Fancher
The conditions are ripe for growing Black political consciousness, but revolutionary movements must broaden their reach to all sectors and clas
Anthony Karefa Rogers-Wright
The political theater of condemning Trump's racism serves the function of diverting attention from the more dangerous, policy-based r
Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
The Democratic Party is useful only to the oligarch class, who give them their marching orders.
Anthony Rogers-Wright
Preserving the Black Radical Tradition demands struggle not only against white supremacists, but also against the co-opted Black political clas
More Stories
- Pan-African Community ActionWhile politicians debate legal procedure, residents of Washington DC live under a sustained military deployment, exposing how both federal and local power collaborate against them.
- Hanna EidThe A.I. revolution has a hidden cost. Its massive data centers create huge amounts of waste and decimate labor and humanity.
- Willie MackThe Trump 2.0 administration is demonstrating the logical endpoint of a state project built on racial oppression. Trump’s actions show continuity with past history.
- Vijay Prashad , Carlos RonWhile the U.S. works to manufacture chaos and regime change, the Venezuelan government holds the line, revealing the gap between Washington's narratives and the realities on the ground.
- Adam MahoneyFour million Americans live within 1 mile of a data center. The communities closest to them are “overwhelmingly” non-white.