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- Eliminating Poverty and Economic Inequality
Making Recovery Last
Power has three faces. The first face — we see who won and who lost. The second face: who decides. To figure that out, you must ask who is benefiting and who is losing: the third face. This is when the deep structural contours of power emerge.” — Marshall Ganz on Steven Lukes’ “three faces…
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- Eliminating Poverty and Economic Inequality
Exposing Gaps in Disaster Relief
The time is now for federal funding to adequately support communities that are disproportionately impacted by natural disasters and climate change by focusing preparation and recovery efforts on rebuilding communities, not just rebuilding property.” In late August 2005, Hurricane Katrina, a storm with sustained winds of 125 mph when it made landfall, caused widespread destruction…
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- Dismantling White Supremacy
Active Club network uses propaganda and fitness to promote white nationalism
The Active Clubs are a loose network of white supremacist groups operating within the United States and internationally. The network’s founder and leader, Robert Rundo, has a long history of racist activism and violence. While living in Eastern Europe, he founded the group in close collaboration with Denis Yevgenyevich Kapustin, a neo-Nazi of Russian-German descent…
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Active Clubs
Active Clubs are a network of white supremacist groups that operate in Europe, North America, South America and Australia. Robert Rundo, a white nationalist with a long history of racist violence, cofounded the Active Club network in 2020 while in Europe following U.S. federal rioting charges. The group aims to build a hypermasculine white nationalist…
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- Eliminating Poverty and Economic Inequality
Keeping the Power On
The storm’s impact of displacing thousands of voters depressed voter turnout to 36%, down 10 points from 2002.” Hurricane Katrina brought devastation to the Gulf Coast, with an estimated 1,392 fatalities, 300,000 homes destroyed, and over a million people displaced. The storm was responsible for over $125 billion in damages and an estimated $2.9 billion…
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- Eliminating Poverty and Economic Inequality
From Katrina to Helene
Far-right groups seek to exploit natural disasters to spread conspiracy theories, slow government response, and present benign public personas.” In 2005, when Hurricane Katrina hit the Lower Ninth Ward in New Orleans, it didn’t just cause horrific flooding. It laid bare the structural racism in this country, with media coverage providing one example. At the…
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- Eliminating Poverty and Economic Inequality
Weathering the Storm
The U.S. wholly failed to provide these protections in the aftermath of Katrina, especially with respect to Black communities.” Hurricane Katrina, like other climate-related disasters, raises a host of issues that are addressed by international human rights laws and standards. These laws and standards, including relevant treaties and the United Nations Guiding Principles on Internal…
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- Eliminating Poverty and Economic Inequality
The Picture of Prejudice
“The media brought a white gaze to our neighborhoods. Their interpretation of who the people were was a huge misfire based on a long-term disengagement with Black media.” — Rachel Breunlin, professor of anthropology at University of New Orleans Twenty years after floodwaters from Hurricane Katrina inundated the low-lying areas of New Orleans, where most…
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- Dismantling White Supremacy
Trump’s effort to terminate Lisa Cook is a ‘shameful abuse of executive power’
President Trump’s attempt to fire Lisa Cook — a highly experienced economist and trailblazing Black woman — from the Federal Reserve Board of Governors is another example of his shameful abuse of executive power. After criticizing and threatening Fed Chair Jerome Powell for months but taking no action, Trump has turned his partisan assault on…
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- Strengthening Democracy & Voting Rights
Georgia Justice Project’s work to enfranchise voters receives SPLC grant
Last year, the Georgia Justice Project (GJP) began placing yard signs around the state with a simple message: “Felony sentence complete? You can vote.” A man driving past a gas station in Conyers saw the sign, pulled over and immediately phoned GJP. “He’s like, ‘Is this true?’” said Ann Colloton, policy and outreach coordinator for…
