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The Assault on Critical Race Theory

ellisconversations's podcast

Release Date: 06/19/2021

States Rights, Legal Wrongs: A Recurring Page from the Segregationist Playbook show art States Rights, Legal Wrongs: A Recurring Page from the Segregationist Playbook

ellisconversations's podcast

In this episode, the hosts discuss the history of invoking some form of States’ Rights theory to limit the efforts of the federal government to expand or protect the rights of persons within the United States     Southern Manifesto   Mississippi State Sovereign Commission .   “Calhoun’s justification of nullification and secession as constitutional rights of the state also went beyond traditional states’ rights doctrine as they were based on an unprecedented notion of absolute state sovereignty. Most old states’ righters, including James Madison, condemned...

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Claudine Gay: The Latest Victim in the Debate over DEI, Affirmative Action, and Meritocracy show art Claudine Gay: The Latest Victim in the Debate over DEI, Affirmative Action, and Meritocracy

ellisconversations's podcast

In this episode, the hosts discuss the controversy concerning the Resignation of Harvard president Claudine Gay.Is Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion undermining merit or does it address a history of Discrimination, Exclusion, and Inequality.  

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From Jamestown to Charlottesville: Virginia and America’s racial divide show art From Jamestown to Charlottesville: Virginia and America’s racial divide

ellisconversations's podcast

In this episode, the hosts discuss the leading role that Virginia has played in the racial divide in America’s history.  Home to the Founding Fathers and Capital of the Confederacy, the state has been the crucible of the ideals which built this country and the ideas which would tear it apart.   Washington, DC History     Virginia 1619     .                Florida Episode -     Indiana Episode -  

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Holding the Line: Sandra Day O’Connor’s legacy of bringing stability to the Supreme Court by protecting its established precedents. show art Holding the Line: Sandra Day O’Connor’s legacy of bringing stability to the Supreme Court by protecting its established precedents.

ellisconversations's podcast

In this episode, the hosts discuss Justice O’Connor’s role as the “swing vote” as the Court addressed major fault lines in our society on issues such as abortion, affirmative action, and gender equality.   Planned Parenthood v. Casey   Grutter v. Bollinger

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Black History: Never Equal; Never Protected: Up North to Indiana show art Black History: Never Equal; Never Protected: Up North to Indiana

ellisconversations's podcast

In this episode, the hosts continue examining how specific states have addressed racial equality, Black history, and White Supremacy. In this episode, they travel outside the Deep South, and focus on the state of Indiana – Klan Capital and home of Sundown Towns.   LINKS IN THIS EPISODE Links for podcast Violence in Jacksonville Florida Ax Handle Saturday Indiana History links Rosedale, NY Racist attacks Other Related Episodes       Check out  Check out

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Black History: Never Equal; Never Protected - First Stop: Florida show art Black History: Never Equal; Never Protected - First Stop: Florida

ellisconversations's podcast

In this episode, the hosts begin a series of episodes examining how specific states have addressed the racial equality, Black history, and White Supremacy.  First stop: Florida.   LINKS IN THIS EPISODE Smithsonian Magazine   Florida Academic Standards 2023   Ron DeSantis and the State Where History Goes to Die Removing Relics of "The Lost Cause" | On the Media | WNYC Studios Lost Cause    Other Related Episodes       Check out  Check out

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Colorblind Remedies for Color-Conscious Wrongs show art Colorblind Remedies for Color-Conscious Wrongs

ellisconversations's podcast

Photo Credit : Encyclyopedia Britanica   In this program, the hosts discuss the Supreme Court’s decision to forbid race-conscious affirmative action  approaches to achieve diversity n higher education.  The discussion contrasts Justice Roberts’ pronouncement that decisions should be color-blind with Justice Jackson’s reminder that the country has been far from colorblind and the effects are not just historical but real in the present because of the intergenerational transmission of inequality.  Moreover, the “self-evident” truth that all are created equal has not...

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Not in Our Stars, but in Ourselves: How The Supreme Court Undermined Its Own Reputation show art Not in Our Stars, but in Ourselves: How The Supreme Court Undermined Its Own Reputation

ellisconversations's podcast

Image Credit: Collection of the Supreme Court of the United States In this episode, the hosts discuss the Roberts Court’s failure to adhere to precedent and the effect this is having on the public’s confidence in the Supreme Court.  Respect for precedents and the application of the principle of stare desisis provide constancy and comfort and avoids the appearance that the Court is swayed by political consideration.  Simple assertions that a prior decision was wrongly decided are inadequate to justify undermining the expectations of parties before the Court and the public at...

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The Fire This Time: Black History Surviving in the Time of Modern-Day Book Banning show art The Fire This Time: Black History Surviving in the Time of Modern-Day Book Banning

ellisconversations's podcast

Photo credit: Afro.com EPISODE SUMMARY In this episode, the hosts discuss Black History and the historical use of book burning, book banning, and other methods to suppress inconvenient truths. False narratives flourish when voices remain silent are have been removed from the discussion. To download the transcript,  A FEW KEY TAKEAWAYS FROM THIS EPISODE Denying Black people education and banning books is part of historical pattern to control access to information to control the narrative This practice of banning and burning books has been used throughout history by people in power...

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Martin Luther King: Waiting on His Dream show art Martin Luther King: Waiting on His Dream

ellisconversations's podcast

EPISODE SUMMARY In this episode, the hosts discuss why Martin Luther King should not be limited by a selection of words from the “I Have a Dream” speech delivered in 1963, and how he pointed out the failings of America,  confronted those in power, and challenged them to make that dream a reality.  A FEW KEY TAKEAWAYS FROM THIS EPISODE If you look at the "I Have a Dream "speech, and you don't look at that one line, but you look at what he said about the state of Black America and how black Americans were shackled in their own country, then you get a better sense of how he was...

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Photo by Tasha Jolley on Unsplash

In this episode, the hosts discuss the new legislative “ad campaign” attacking the teaching of Critical Race Theory, which seeks to honestly analyze the impact of law, race, and history on American institutions. These new legal initiatives seek to outlaw curricula which make students feel uncomfortable. This may raise questions whether schools can even teach about the newest federal holiday, Juneteenth.

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1619 Project

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/08/14/magazine/1619-america-slavery.html 

Slate article on laws

https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2021/06/florida-critical-race-theory-ban-what-it-tells-us-about-anti-anti-racism.html 

Text of Oklahoma law

http://webserver1.lsb.state.ok.us/cf_pdf/2021-22%20ENR/hB/HB1775%20ENR.PDF 

NYT article on support for BLM

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/05/22/opinion/blm-movement-protests-support.html  

Code Switch on Support for BLM

https://www.npr.org/2021/06/08/1004467239/the-racial-reckoning-that-wasnt