Nikole Hannah-Jones on How an American ideal got hijacked
11:33
Share this -
copied
After the Civil War, Congress passed an act to establish the Freedmen's Bureau, which sought to provide resources to displaced Southerners including recently freed Black Americans. Intrinsic in its foundation was the idea that after the abolition of slavery, it was the responsibility of Congress to right the wrongs of our nation's ugly past. But in a new extended essay for New York Times Magazine, Nikole Hannah-Jones argues that in the decades since the civil rights era, the national ideal of colorblindness has been co-opted, and is now being used in an organized effort to stall - and even undo - civil rights era efforts to advance racial progress. The end of affirmative action is another symptom of that backlash against racial progress.March 16, 2024
Gaza entrepreneurs want youth to play a role in Gaza’s future
11:33
Exploring Haitian culture and the American Dream with 'American Street' by Ibi Zoboi
10:18
Now Playing
Nikole Hannah-Jones on How an American ideal got hijacked
11:33
UP NEXT
Wife of Russian political prisoner: Russian people 'enraged' at Putin after years of 'being lied to'
11:34
‘A system of overseers’: Diluting progressive prosecutors & the voters who elect them
11:51
‘Righteous rage’: How female rage translates to political progress