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VCU Massey Comprehensive Cancer Center’s new designation driven by the community, by Dr. Robert A. Winn

Building engines for General Motors was going to be my one-way ticket to the other side of the tracks. Growing up, I dreamt of getting that job at the plant in my working class Buffalo, N.Y., neighborhood, earning a steady …

Wealthy extremists attacking funding for Black women entrepreneurs are desperate, by Marc H. Morial

“In the face of persistent, systemic discrimination against Black people and all people of color arising from our country’s long history of racism, Ed Blum and his recently created front group are bent on dismantling programs benefiting the Black community. …

Haters, you don’t know Black women, by Dr. E. Faye Williams

Like many of our sisters who are doing their very best to do the right thing, I’ve had my fill of threats, too—one as late as the past week.

When will we raise the minimum wage?, by Julianne Malveaux

The federal minimum wage has been stuck at $7.25 an hour since 2009. Several states have a higher minimum, but a predictable few, including Mississippi, Tennessee, Louisiana, South Carolina, and Alabama, are stuck at that low minimum.

The renaissance wasn’t just a concert tour, by Errin Haines

We have just witnessed the Summer of the Black Woman.

Razzle-dazzle vs. racial violence, by Clarence Page

Sixty years after Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s historic March on Washington, much of his dream is still just a dream.

Enigma of high-stakes testing, by Ashley Clerge

Hello again, folks. Let us continue to go down the rabbit hole of understanding standardized testing and why it has become the cornerstone of the American education system.

No, Donald, you’re not being persecuted like the Scottsboro Boys, by Amy Goodman and Denis Moynihan

“War Is Peace, Freedom Is Slavery, Ignorance Is Strength.” So wrote George Orwell in 1984, his famous dystopian novel about authoritarian- ism. The book gave us the term “Orwellian,” describing situations where facts are ignored, truth is turned on its …

Once more, America faces a reckoning, by Rev. Jesse Jackson

This country faces a reckoning. The question is whether we will come together or fall apart, move forward or descend toward a moral abyss. In this time of deep discord, of partisan divide, racial tension, extreme inequality, the outcome is …

Who gets to play?, by Julianne Malveaux

As summer winds down, and folks start rushing back to school or work, the memories of their vacations perhaps sustain them when, after Labor Day, the business of fall quickly engulfs them. There’s that Gershwin song from Porgy & Bess, …

60 years after the March on Washington, please read Dr. King’s full ‘I Have a Dream’ speech, by Congresswoman Jennifer McClellan

It’s been 60 years since the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, when Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech. One of the most famous speeches in American history, it is named for its …

Labor Day 2023: Celebrating the union difference and building tomorrow’s public service workforce, by Lee Saunders

As we prepare to celebrate Labor Day, it’s as exciting a time as any to be a part of a union. Working people are seeing what the union difference is all about, and they want to be a part of …

Georgia’s case against Donald Trump’s team shows the real crime — against voters, by Clarence Page

Are you the sort of aging baby boomer who can’t hear the opening notes of Rossini’s “William Tell Overture” without thinking of the Lone Ranger?

Racist attacks can’t hide lawlessness in Fulton County’s case against Trump, by Marc H. Morial

“With Trump, you don’t need to look for a dog whistle. It’s a bull horn when it comes to race. And I do think that’s deliberate. We’ve seen the — I mean, slanderous attacks that he has put out against …

Not a ‘brawl,’ but a vicious attack, by Julianne Malveaux

We need to watch our language.