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Megan Thee Stallion x Sports Illustrated
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The Tulsa Race Massacre at âBlack Wall Streetâ Took Place 99 Years Ago Today
In the span of about 24 hours between May 31 and June 1, 1921, a white mob descended on Greenwood, a successful Black economic hub in Tulsa, Oklahoma then-known as âBlack Wall Street,â and burned it to the ground. Some members of the mob had been deputized and armed by city officials. In what is now known as the âTulsa Race Massacre,â the mob destroyed 35 square blocks of Greenwood, burning down more than 1,200 black-owned houses, scores of businesses, a school, a hospital, a public library, and a dozen Black churches. The American Red Cross, carrying out relief efforts at the time, said the death toll was around 300, but the exact number remains unknown. A search for mass graves, only undertaken in recent years, has been put on hold due to the Covid-19 pandemic. Those who survived lost their homes, businesses, and livelihoods. Property damage claims from the massacre alone amount to tens of millions in todayâs dollars. The massacreâs devastating toll, in terms of lives lost and harms in various ways, can never be fully repaired.
Following the massacre, government and city officials, as well as prominent business leaders, not only failed to invest and rebuild the once thriving Greenwood community, but actively blocked efforts to do so.
No one has ever been held responsible for these crimes, the impacts of which Black Tulsans still feel today. Efforts to secure justice in the courts have failed due to the statute of limitations. Ongoing racial segregation, discriminatory policies, and structural racism have left Black Tulsans, particularly those living in North Tulsa, with a lower quality of life and fewer opportunities.
On the 99th anniversary of the massacre, a movement is growing to urge state and local officials to do what should have been done a long time agoâact to repair the harm, including by providing reparations to the survivors and their descendants, and those feeling the impacts today.
Under international human rights law, governments have an obligation to provide effective remedies for violations of human rights. The fact that a government abdicated its responsibility nearly 100 years ago and continued to do so in subsequent years does not absolve it of that responsibility todayâespecially when failure to address the harm and related action and inaction results in further harm, as it has in Tulsa. Like so many other places across the United States marred by similar incidents of racial violence, these harms stem from the legacy of slavery.
There are practical limits to how long, or through how many generations, such claims should survive. However, Human Rights Watch supports the conclusion of the Oklahoma Commission to Study the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921 (recently renamed the Tulsa Race Massacre Commission)âa commission created by the Oklahoma state legislature in 1997 to study the massacre and make recommendationsâthat reparations should be made.
Read more
Some historians call this the âTulsa Race Riot.â It was not a riot; it was a massacre strictly towards Black people. Calling it a âriotâ takes the accountability off of white people and remixing their historyâŠas usual. It was an ethnic cleansing at the hands of angry white mobs who took their asses over there to the Greenwood District to shoot and drop bombs (provided to them by government officials) on Black victims. They hated the existence of Black people succeeding, happy, minding their damn business, solely supporting Black businesses, and displaying economic growth that they couldnât get their hands in. Still do.
The rest of that article above goes into extensive detail on the need for reparations and the aftermath (education, health, redlining, etc) for Black Tulsans now.
The video below from Vox goes into details âBlack Wall Streetâ before the ethnic cleansing with footage included from that time, as well as the massacre itself and the aftermath. For example, white people distributed photo postcards of the ethnic cleansing as souvenirs:
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Dr. Olivia Hooker was the last survivor of the Tulsa Race Massacre. She passed away in 2018 at the age of 103. She was a professor and psychologist for children. How interesting. Seeing something so traumatic done to your people as a child and dealing with PTSD to then go on and treat children. This was her:
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The most iconic version of Cinderella (starring Brandy and Whitney Houston) premiered 20 years ago
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The Addams Family (1991) dir. Barry Sonnenfeld
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Angelica Ross, Doona Bae, Samara Weaving, Laura Harrier, Rinko Kikuchi, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Zhong Chuxi, ChloĂ« Grace Moretz, NoĂ©mie Merlant & Deepika Pudukone for Louis Vuittonâs Pre-Fall 2020 Collection by Nicholas GhesquiĂšre
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The foreshadowing from this statement alone⊠exquisite.
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MAKE AN APPOINTMENT
When you randomly FaceTime her
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We should already be planning how weâre going to support the nigh-inevitable mass teachersâ strike in a few weeks.
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