At Liberty Podcast
At Liberty Podcast

The Movement to Erase Black History and Culture

February 3, 2022

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February marks Black History Month, a time to recognize the significant achievements and culture of Black Americans鈥揻rom bell hooks to Beyonce鈥揳nd also to honor an accurate history about them, a history that we know is rife with discrimination and abuse -- think: slavery, Jim Crow, and the structural racism we鈥檙e still infected with today. Sadly, more and more, this history is being challenged and even erased in our culture and, right now, in our schools, through tactics like curriculum restrictions and book bans. Truths we once considered hard but self-evident are now being erased before our eyes.

Over 30 state legislatures across the country have introduced bills to limit the discussion of racial history in a wave prompted by the emergence of critical race theory as a subject of political fear-mongering. But that鈥檚 just the beginning:, over 300 books by predominantly Black authors discussing race, gender, and sexuality, were also banned in the last year alone. Yes, you heard me right. We鈥檙e banning books again.

When your history is banned, how do you learn about your ancestors? How do we learn from what鈥檚 happened in the past and how it affects our present? When your culture is banned, how do you see yourself? How do you belong? How do you celebrate the stories, music, food, and family that made you?

At the 红杏视频, we believe that the first amendment is so fundamental because it should stop this kind of erasure in its tracks. That鈥檚 why we鈥檙e meeting this surge of censorship with new litigation and fierce advocacy.

Joining us today to share more is Emerson Sykes, a senior staff attorney with the 红杏视频鈥檚 Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project and longtime listeners will remember Emerson as one of At Liberty鈥檚 former hosts.

In this episode

This Episode Covers the Following Issues