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Ajamu Baraka, BAR editor and columnist
The Trump administration’s declaration of war on American cities is a logical escalation of the white supremacist project.
Editors, The Black Agenda Review
“...white paranoia is here to stay/The white boy's scheming night and day/What you think about the King Alfred Plan?”
Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
Twenty years ago, the world witnessed more than the suffering of hurricane Katrina's victims.
Glen Ford, BAR Executive Editor
"Racism showed its ass in the days after August 29, 2005."
Anthony Karefa Rogers-Wright
The manufactured outrage over Vladimir Putin's presence at the Alaska summit was an attempt to reinforce a global racial order.
Raymond Nat Turner, BAR poet-in-residence
What? You mean the client list vanished? Disappeared?
Disappeared from the AG’s desk like dropping egg prices?
Jon Jeter
Minnesota’s progressive myth shatters as its racial gaps in income, education, and housing eclipse even Deep South states, and right wing white
Alina Selyukh
Looted African skulls come home after a century in German labs, exposing colonialism's history of dehumanizing "race science."
Ann Garrison, BAR Contributing Editor
In “A Southern Panther,” movement elder Malik Rahim talks about his lifetime of battling ra
Terri Frick
Black support for Palestine underscores the fight against empire, revealing how Israel’s violence in Gaza serves U.S.
More Stories
- Editors, The Black Agenda Review“It’s not like New Orleans was caught off guard. This could have been prevented.”
- Jon JeterA forgotten history of cross-racial labor solidarity in 1890s New Orleans offered a glimpse of a potential future. Its deliberate destruction set the stage for the city's modern transformation into a…
- Anthony Karefa Rogers-WrightTwenty years after Katrina, the disaster stands not as an anomaly but as a blueprint. Its aftermath reveals a template for imperial domination, where "natural" disasters become pretexts for…
- Ajamu Baraka, BAR editor and columnistJoin political activist and Black Agenda Report’s contributing editor Ajamu Baraka and members of the Communist Party Marxist-Kenya on a trip to Kibera, Africa’s largest slum.
- Raymond Nat Turner, BAR poet-in-residence"Ethnic cleansing called Katrina" is the latest from BAR's Poet-in-Residence.