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207 Sentences With "racial prejudice"

How to use racial prejudice in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "racial prejudice" and check conjugation/comparative form for "racial prejudice". Mastering all the usages of "racial prejudice" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The NAACP Legal Defense Fund accused her of racial prejudice.
That racial prejudice extended to the clubs in the neighborhood.
He aimed to curb racial prejudice as Japanese families resettled.
Hate and racial prejudice are clear factors in this world.
Researchers have gone back and used the US General Social Survey that measures the levels of racial prejudice every two years to see if areas which are higher in racial prejudice [have unique health outcomes].
But since then, we also validated our finding with practically every other measure of racial prejudice that we can find, so this is not a finding of racial prejudice that is specific to this measure.
The thesis is moot because it is based in racial prejudice.
Jones said for some defenders, it's not about overt racial prejudice.
Regular church attendees even exhibit less racial prejudice than their nonreligious peers.
Is it the most serious manifestation of racial prejudice facing the country?
And the question of racial prejudice is very powerful in the film.
She could not go into detail about the specific racial prejudice being alleged.
It seems to me, starting off with racial prejudice, that's always pretty interesting.
Wouldn't a machine learning program learn there's racial prejudice in our justice system?
Working as a Democratic pollster, white Americans' racial prejudice is hard to avoid.
The whole force of Boasian anthropology is the demonstration that racial prejudice is cultural .
The volatile music suggests the unpredictable ways racial prejudice manifests itself in daily life.
Chief Justice John Roberts denounced the "noxious strain of racial prejudice" seen in that case.
"We have a major problem with racial prejudice in our country and society," he wrote.
We refer to a person as racist when they have some degree of racial prejudice.
True, Trump was the first modern Republican to win the nomination based on racial prejudice.
The first installment of the travel ban illustrated religious bigotry; the latest version features racial prejudice.
Chief Justice John Roberts denounced the "noxious strain of racial prejudice" seen in that Texas case.
Our education system needs a leader who is unafraid to tackle systemic racial prejudice and injustice.
Kyle Jarrow's jaunty script hints, without preaching, at issues of racial prejudice, environmentalism, and government corruption.
Racial prejudice did not disappear after the American civil rights movement; it simply became less overt.
This isn't the same as racial prejudice, but it absolutely helps maintain a system of racism.
Put another way, she makes the case that white identity is not synonymous with racial prejudice.
Born into slavery in 1856, Flipper defied racial prejudice and institutional power to survive West Point.
There are laws in place to combat racial prejudice of course, but they are unfortunately never enforced.
But it wouldn't know it's racial prejudice — it would just begin to associate darker complexions with criminality.
"I'm not willing to say that Georgia executes people on the basis of racial prejudice," he says.
In the world of Detroit, explicit racial prejudice is relegated to the past or kept off-screen.
"The ATP takes any allegations of racial prejudice extremely seriously," a statement issued by the organization said.
Still, Merah is widely portrayed in French media as a victim of France's social and racial prejudice.
"As a Jew, I have no room in my mind or heart for racial prejudice," he said.
One 2007 study showed that perceived racial prejudice can inhibit a person's performance on a cognitive assessment.
There may be an omitted variable or something we haven't included in the model other than racial prejudice.
" The Many Faces of RacismBy Tim Soutphommasane "Psychologists also point to another aspect of racial prejudice and motivations.
Setting aside racial prejudice, we can find one source in the operational relationship between American and ARVN forces.
Similar to life back in the States, racial prejudice affects people's day-to-day experiences in different ways.
Some black campaign workers described microaggressions — subtle interactions that, while not overtly discriminatory, still played on racial prejudice.
It would "appeal to insular prejudice against foreigners, to racial prejudice against Jews, and to Labour prejudice against competition".
I now know who all the major players are in the anti and SHARP [Skinheads Against Racial Prejudice] scene.
The comment violated departmental rules against racial prejudice, according to the internal review, which was also released this week.
Joining countless civil rights activists, Holocaust survivors stood up against the racial prejudice and profiling that can generate genocide.
Law enforcement officials in Florida said the technology's performance was not a sign that it somehow harbored racial prejudice.
The stated purpose of the anthology was "to combat racial prejudice," and was apparently banned in several British colonies.
The survey said that a majority of Americans, 51%, express explicit racial prejudice toward blacks, compared to 48% in 2008.
Until then, we hadn't felt like we belonged anywhere; we'd felt victimized by racial prejudice from both blacks and whites.
Later, having made it to England, he finds himself subjected to both racial prejudice and his own countrymen's class hatred.
Exhibitions by Imani Roach, Soda_Jerk, and Anthony Warnick at SPACES gallery explore American racial prejudice across different periods of time.
For these whites, it's about protecting their in-group and showing some sense of favoritism, completely independent of racial prejudice.
You've got the prevalence of white racial prejudice in American politics, and you've got this rise of white identity politics.
And to live such a life, there is no room for white nationalist beliefs rooted in xenophobia and racial prejudice.
It also found 33 percent of ethnic minority respondents thought racial prejudice was as high as when Lawrence was murdered.
What we have here, then, is a war on both sides, with black women battling both the patriarchy and racial prejudice.
They found people who live in areas that are characterized by higher levels of racial prejudice have higher rates of death.
Mutz and Goldman conclude that whites' racial prejudice toward African Americans actually declined from the summer of 2008 to Obama's inauguration.
It also prompts viewers to think about current death penalties and how to respond to racial prejudice in their own lives.
Some studies show racial prejudice in America is actually going down, but America's politics are still increasingly fractured along racial lines.
I was also the president of Florida SHARP [Skinheads Against Racial Prejudice] and got into politics and joined the Communist Party.
Whereas racial prejudice refers to animosity toward other racial groups, white identity reflects a sense of connection to fellow white Americans.
But how, exactly, should those conversations and campaigns take form — in a way that can meaningfully reduce or eliminate racial prejudice?
They are victims of Tibet's remote and forbidding topography as well as of racial prejudice and the party's anti-separatist zeal.
Wright began spearheading a fresh campaign for full drug prohibition within the US—once again built almost entirely on racial prejudice.
These movies were often saturated with populist ideas (class consciousness, anti-authoritarianism, racial prejudice) and incorporated populist forms (vaudeville, slapstick, burlesque).
I never saw racial prejudice in the military, but I was shocked by our indifference to the killing of innocent Vietnamese.
Dylan wrote the famous song "Hurricane" in direct response to this American episode of justice and injustice, and racial prejudice ..and vindication.
For all of us who oppose state and federal measures that would codify racial prejudice, the Dallas-area Republican proved our point.
The indictment of racial prejudice in the earlier movie was blistering stuff, but "Us" spares nobody, regardless of color, age, or creed.
So in the book, I make this really crisp distinction between white identity and white racial prejudice, and that's an important distinction.
"For reasons of racial prejudice and the economics of the fashion business," Avedon said, he never photographed her for editorial use again.
We see the entangled effects of racial prejudice, misogyny, violence and environmental depredation laid out like the scrambled pieces of a puzzle.
Most of the racial prejudice Americans harbor today is subtle and manifests itself in stealthier ways than it did in the past.
In the paper, we measure racial prejudice using a specific measure called racial resentment, which is a very prevalent measure in the literature.
" Other films on offer include "Suburbicon", a George Clooney-directed satire tackling racial prejudice in 1950s America, and Darren Aronofsky's horror movie "mother!
He delivered real-time shooting "results" to the country between Air Force One stops and urged Americans to fight religious and racial prejudice.
An interracial love story set in the Jim Crow south, it melds personal explorations of racial prejudice with fairy tale, theater and film.
There are many whites who feel strongly connected with other whites, but they do not simultaneously score high on measures of racial prejudice.
As an African American woman, she's curious: Which places may have been safe from racial prejudice for her 60 or 70 years ago?
Representation of black and Hispanic individuals in Silicon Valley has declined according to a new study examining racial prejudice in the technology sector.
When the group started to think about the dictionary definitions, she said they discussed how associating darkness with badness can lead to racial prejudice.
What we found was that there was a very strong correlational relationship that persists over time between opposition to gun control and racial prejudice.
This egregious heuristic failure is, ironically, a clear case of stereotyping, the precursor to racial prejudice — the very thing the protesters claim to oppose.
While no one suggests that all of Mr. Trump's supporters are racist, surveys show that they are particularly likely to express explicit racial prejudice.
"I don't think Cornell University is a hotbed of racial prejudice," said Ithaca's mayor, Svante L. Myrick, who is also a 2009 Cornell graduate.
The Oscar-nominated drama about African-American NASA employees fighting racial prejudice in the early days of the space program has made $131.4 million stateside.
Studies have shown how racial prejudice has infiltrated the judicial system, where Native Hawaiians often receive longer and harsher sentences than their non-Hawaiian counterparts.
The most difficult task in doing this research has always been disentangling opposition to welfare attributable to racial prejudice from opposition attributable to straightforward conservatism.
Despite a record of condemning some forms of racial prejudice, he also appeared on the Nixon Tapes complaining about the Jewish "stranglehold" on the country.
Speaking Wednesday, Pelosi argued Trump's plan was merely a mask for racial prejudice — and she implied he was a hypocrite, given the first lady's background.
It also ran "The Talk," an ad showing mothers telling their children stories about racial prejudice, to promote its "My Black is Beautiful" discussion site.
With racial prejudice against all African-Americans still a potent force, many would just as soon ditch the discussion of "black on black" complexional bias.
It is impossible to say to what extent the disparities — no matter how great — are due to racial prejudice by the police, prosecutors or juries.
Namely, American society rests atop a deep pool of racial prejudice that has defined the relationship between blacks and whites for most of American history.
And one way to think about that is there are a lot of white people in the United States who have a strong sense of racial antipathy or racial prejudice who don't identify with their racial group, and there are a lot of white people who do have this sense of solidarity but who wouldn't score particularly high on any social science measure of racial prejudice.
As Western Christianity spread to the Americas, Africa and the East, it was allowed that indigenous men could be ordained, despite considerable and growing racial prejudice.
But Collin from Lawrence doesn't see the event as an act of racial prejudice: Situations like this pop up in the news when everything goes wrong.
Despite trends in the reduction of racial prejudice over recent decades, the marginalization of black Americans takes place at every level of the contemporary medical system.
Chief Justice John Roberts condemned "a particularly noxious strain of racial prejudice" in Buck's case, but dissented in Pena Rodriguez's case, along with two fellow conservatives.
In doing so, they have advanced the false narrative that New York City police officers are, as a group, bad actors motivated by personal racial prejudice.
But the phrase "structural racism" attempts to appropriate our moral intuitions about racial prejudice and racial discrimination in the service of tendentious claims, and that's problematic.
On Thursday, Airbnb issued its comprehensive report on racial prejudice on the platform, and outlined a variety of changes to the service that it plans to make.
Ashley Jardina wrote me that the use of race by the Republican Party could precisely be described as Republicans capitalizing on white racism or white racial prejudice.
There is a young bride from Barbados who settles in Cornwall in the 1950s, grappling with racial prejudice while trying to make friends and raise her family.
Instead he continued the trademarks of his historically boorish campaign, including name-calling, repeatedly telling boldfaced lies, and statements grounded in misogyny, racial prejudice and religious intolerance.
And her team has asked to move the trial to another county because, it contends, its client has been the victim of "racial prejudice" since his arrest.
But in that time of racial prejudice, Coleman had needed to earn her license from France's Fédération Aéronautique Internationale before touring America and Europe giving flight lessons.
The effects wore off between Obama's inauguration and 2010, but the data fits into a broaderliterature showing that racial prejudice did not increase during the economic crisis.
In an age where Jews were openly condemned as "Christ Killers" and prohibited from entering parliament, racial prejudice alone could have intimidated him from running for public office.
The effects wore off between Obama's inauguration and 2010, but the data fits into a broader literature showing that racial prejudice did not increase during the economic crisis.
Trump's frequent past record of racial prejudice suggests his targeting of the four women is a reflection of his true impulses as much as a transactional political strategy.
Drug testing a potential employee wouldn't stop many or even most of these cases of racial prejudice, since beliefs about race can go much deeper than drug use.
So what research since the '80s has found is that the way white people express their racial prejudice is by a new language, this language of racial resentment.
A woman assumed to be white was revealed after months to be a light-skinned black, turning the story, and the audience, sharply to questions of racial prejudice.
The report on Ferguson, where mass protests in 2014 followed the deadly shooting of unarmed Michael Brown, discovered racial prejudice and the use of excessive force by police.
Unlike other movies on similar subjects, "The Best of Enemies" doesn't treat racial prejudice as a freakish, isolated pathology, but rather as an unremarkable, omnipresent fact of life.
However, a more accurate and complete view of American, not just black, history must be taught and learned if we are to heal persistent racial prejudice and division.
Since movies were for everyone, every movie had to be universally acceptable, reflecting sensibilities that were, in practice, dictated by religious dogma, racial prejudice and conservative sexual mores.
"Quite frankly, I believe the officer violated our policy," Police Chief Elliott Isaac said about Brown deploying his taser without warning and expressing racial prejudice, according to WLWT5.
But the movement has always had hyper-violent fringes as well: rather than attacking minorities, Skinheads Against Racial Prejudice (SHARPs) beat up racist skinheads at punk and metal shows.
The powerful Commander Waterford (Joseph Fiennes) calls Moira a "degenerate," in part because it's suggested she is a lesbian, but there's no suggestion of racial prejudice in the show.
I grew up in Atlanta in the 1970s, when friends spoke of "Jewing down" a price and anti-Semitism was casual, if not nearly as omnipresent as racial prejudice.
"Though my dad never really talked about it, I know he faced lots of criticism as well as racial prejudice because he was of Mexican descent," Ernie Martinez said.
"United has no legitimate reason or justification to remove [Obioma] from the flight but for racial prejudice and insulted [her] by stating that Ms. Obioma stank," the suit states.
"I would like to know how many times my colleague has been called the N-word," she said, before mentioning another racial epithet and other incidents of racial prejudice.
Even as rank-and-file union workers often shared in the racial prejudice that was prevalent in their communities, the union's leaders and organizers made civil rights a priority.
Given the federal report on systemic racial prejudice by police in the Missouri city that came out not long after Brown's killing, none of this is exactly a surprise.
Yes, there is research that shows since Obama [was] elected, there has been an increase in racial prejudice and animosity — but that it was primarily [concentrated] in social media context.
Charles Hale, his pastor, has "never seen one iota of racial prejudice", adding that Mr Sessions and his wife have "humble hearts" and modest tastes: "they live by their faith".
Even today, as black communities face pressing problems of addiction and chronic unemployment and the discrimination in hiring that helps to perpetuate it, many are dedicated to ignoring racial prejudice.
It's worth noting that the SFPD is nearly equal parts white and minority, which lends credence to the idea that racial prejudice is an inherent characteristic of policing in America.
I think lots of people have racial prejudice, but white people are more likely to be landlords, more likely to be CEOs, more likely to be in positions of power.
A federal district judge said Mr. Buck's lawyer "recklessly exposed his client to the risks of racial prejudice," but still found that his case was not "extraordinary" enough to reopen.
There's good evidence that racial prejudice drives these police calls, with research finding that black people are widely perceived as more aggressive and less innocent simply due to their race.
Again, we want to stress we do not intend to offend anyone, and are only preserving a part of history that should remind us all of the senselessness of racial prejudice.
Patricia Devine, a professor of psychology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison who studies ways to reduce racial prejudice, calls this "tuning in" to habits of mind that usually go unexamined.
But Kennedy wrote that "blatant racial prejudice is antithetical to the functioning of the jury system and must be confronted in egregious cases like this one" despite policies on jury confidentiality.
The series includes the films "When Little Lindy Sang" (1916), which touches on racial prejudice and tells the story of a black girl in a white classroom (today at 7 p.
Desegregation led to higher income, more years of education and better health outcomes for blacks, and integration also reduced racial prejudice among whites, according to studies by the economist Rucker Johnson.
"Birtherism," Charlottesville and this latest example of the unwillingness to condemn blatant racial prejudice threaten our becoming the inclusive, just and moral society toward which we have aspired since our founding.
Perhaps one without the other — economics in a setting where no one racialized it, or racial prejudice at a time of economic prosperity — would not have brought about the same result.
Hate to nitpick a sensitivity warning but Disney+'s feels so brief and kind of dismissive by calling it "outdated cultural depictions" vs Warner Brothers actually calling it racial prejudice pic.twitter.
Testimony laced with "a particularly noxious strain of racial prejudice" in a Texas death penalty case required a new sentencing for the defendant, Duane Buck, the Supreme Court ruled on Wednesday.
Rapper Blueface says the LAPD is full of crap and they lied when they said they swarmed a bunch rappers out of concern for them ... he says it could be racial prejudice.
This underscores the connection between gun violence and the rise of white nationalism: A 2016 study found that among white people, racial prejudice is a predictor of opposition to gun-safety laws.
While polling says Brexit was about "sovereignty",  the polling may reflect something akin to the "Bradley Effect", where voters lie to pollsters to hide their racial prejudice, but as applied to immigrants.
Although the alignment seems unlikely to last, the past month of protests hint at what a true class consciousness might look like, unimpeded by France's persistent rural-urban divides or racial prejudice.
Separately, Yanna Krupnikov and Spencer Piston, political scientists at Stonybrook and Syracuse Universities, found that "the level of racial prejudice" is as high among Latinos as it is for non-Hispanic whites.
As Hopkins wrote, It's clear that Trump's support in the 2016 primaries was concentrated among Republicans who were especially concerned about immigration and who expressed higher levels of anti-Black racial prejudice.
Opposition to immigration is fueled by racial prejudice and xenophobia, the thinking goes, and so anyone who wants to distance themselves from these despicable attitudes ought correspondingly to favor higher levels of immigration.
And in a Quinnipiac University poll this month, 73% of Republicans said there was too much political correctness in American life, compared to only 21% who believed there was too much racial prejudice.
The roots of coronavirus discrimination appear to lie in people's instinctual, "visceral disgust" of infectious diseases, rather than scientific fact or racial prejudice, said Cindy Kam, a political science professor at Vanderbilt University.
AF: First, we analyzed waves and waves of major data sets going back to the 1990s — that's the earliest data we can find questions of racial prejudice and guns asked in the same wave.
Justice Anthony Kennedy, writing for the court, said the need to erase racial prejudice from legal proceedings overrides long-standing policies aimed at keeping jury deliberations generally off-limits in bids to overturn verdicts.
The partly autobiographical "Terminus," which is set in 1994, is the second play in a planned cycle set in a small Georgia town, and the region's history of racial prejudice looms over the show.
If the previous four decades had been about moving the non-college-educated whites most prone to racial prejudice from the Democratic Party into the Republican Party, that transformation had now mostly been completed.
Colorism, a term coined by writer Alice Walker in her 1982 book In Search of Our Mothers' Gardens, refers to the different ways people experience racial prejudice based on the hue of their skin tone.
Many builders and developers, city planners, housing commissions, politicians, business leaders, bank lenders, philanthropists, and, yes, millions of complacent New Yorkers — and not just the Trumps — all played a role in that awful racial prejudice.
We think of 'racial prejudice' as an individual-level sense of hostility, animus, set of negative stereotypes, or other negative attitudes that one person has toward members of a group by way of their race.
"Institutions and media organizations have been slower over the course of Trump's entire political career, his political rise, to accurately describe how he's used racial grievance and racial prejudice for his own benefit," he said.
And even a whiff of racial prejudice would be political suicide in a country where 20% of citizens are immigrants (compared with 13% in the United States) and the native-born are obsessed with being nice.
When Morton assumed that the ancient Israelites, who he believed were white, would have never married ancient Egyptians if they were black, he failed to realize that racial prejudice was a "genuine American feeling," Douglass wrote.
Despite the unquestioned gains of the civil rights movement, which made outright expressions of racism politically taboo, Trump's election has exposed the abiding existence of a deep pool of racial prejudice beneath the surface of American society.
There are few in recent memory who have done so as effectively as Colin Kaepernick, the former San Francisco 49ers quarterback who sparked a movement against racial prejudice not only in the NFL, but across the country.
It ratchets up the drama to deadly serious heights in the second act that might seem melodramatic were it not for the legitimate points that the story and the dialogue raise about human nature and racial prejudice.
" It also argued that Australia's discussion about China's role has "unscrupulously vilified the Chinese students as well as the Chinese community in Australia with racial prejudice, which in turn has tarnished Australia's reputation as a multicultural society.
Meanwhile some of those who were outraged by what they saw argued the boys' behavior — including allegations they chanted "build a wall" and did a mocking tomahawk chop — was a side-effect of the Trump administration's racial prejudice.
Trump launched his bid accusing Mexico of sending rapists and drug peddlers across the border, prompting the government to accuse him of stirring up hatred and fanning concerns on the border that racial prejudice is becoming more acceptable.
The exposure of racial prejudice is among Fuller's lifelong themes; so is the depiction of violence with a luridly lyrical flair, as in a scene of a gangland execution that leaves a wooden bathtub riddled with leaking holes.
More than a few strands of the Civil Rights era remain for black Americans, but the world has advanced in ways that shield James from ever confronting the daily lashings of racial prejudice someone like Robinson bravely endured.
Letters To the Editor: Re "Clinton Reaches Historic Mark, A.P. Says" (front page, June 7): Eight years ago, I was thrilled that the Democratic Party overcame racial prejudice and selected the first black man to be its presidential nominee.
Expanding hate crimes laws that have often been used to protect people of color from violence motivated by racial prejudice, including police violence, is a particularly cynical policy choice given the extraordinary protections and immunities that police already have.
As Stephens writes: Liberals may have been fond of claiming that Republicans were all closet bigots and that tax cuts were a form of racial prejudice, but the accusation rang hollow because the evidence for it was so tendentious.
Proudly Sikh, Noyz's lyrical themes of xenophobia and racial prejudice have only gained added resonance in a time when the western world turns to far-right political figureheads over the misguided fear of South Asians and Middle Eastern people.
By contrast, stressors such as poverty, racial prejudice, incarceration and illness can accelerate aging, making others "old" in their 50s, with cellular changes and risks of chronic disease and death akin to those of people many decades their senior.
The idea is that racial prejudice that was once expressed openly is now channeled through rhetoric emphasizing personal responsibility, a minimization of the effects of discrimination, and a belief that hard work alone is enough for oppressed minorities to thrive.
"I applaud the authors' effort to give tools to faculty who train medical students and residents who are the subject of discrimination and abuse," Jain said, adding that he knows what it feels like to face racial prejudice as a physician.
From racist calls targeting Abrams to Trump's characterization of Gillum as a "thief" and his astonishingly wrongheaded efforts to link Democrats to caravans of undocumented immigrants via an ad reminiscent of Willie Horton, racial prejudice and nativism fueled the GOP firewall.
Three concurrent installations — Philadelphia-based Imani Roach's Havens, Cleveland-based Anthony Warnick's Except As A Punishment for Crime, and NYC-based Australian collective Soda_Jerk's Astro Black — explore the social, political, and economic contexts of racial prejudice across different periods of time.
A mother's instinct to fight for her own children, said Kardashian West, is a key motivator that keeps her willing to stand up for what's right — an issue made all the more important when the prevalence of racial prejudice is considered.
We are only now beginning to roll back excessive laws on cannabis, for example, because it is painfully clear that the reasons behind its prohibition had more to do with racial prejudice and social hysteria than with public health concerns.
The appeal comes four and a half months after federal Judge Allison Burroughs ruled that although Harvard's admissions system was "not perfect," it nonetheless met the legal standard needed to ensure that it was not motivated by racial prejudice or stereotyping.
But of the two composers it is Rossini who fleshes out his Desdemona more fully, creating a proud, red-blooded woman well equipped to defy social conventions and racial prejudice with her choice of the foreign-born Otello as partner.
There's some evidence that contact with people from a vulnerable group can reduce prejudice against that group — but notably, a recent meta-analysis concluded that the effects are weakest for racial prejudice, and the evidence sparsest when it comes to adults.
"'Let us all hope that the dark clouds of racial prejudice will soon pass away... and in some not too distant tomorrow the radiant stars of love and brotherhood will shine over our great nation...'"  On MLK day, I like to read his Letter From Birmingham Jail, which still resonates: "Let us all hope that the dark clouds of racial prejudice will soon pass away... and in some not too distant tomorrow the radiant stars of love and brotherhood will shine over our great nation..." Comey frequently tweets out quotes relating to events of the day.
There's a disconnect between undoing centuries of racial prejudice—dismantling the remnants of discriminatory policies, letting black people tell their own stories—and thinking society is "doing better" when only the most obvious forms of shouty, red-faced racism are stamped out.
While Ayoung impressively addresses the legacy of slavery and racial prejudice in the United States, however, it feels like a missed opportunity, if not a case of tokenism, that only one artwork mentions the Tuskegee experiment, cited twice in the press release.
They resist attacks from foreign dictators and call out a president who praises them while he labels our free press and his political opponents as enemies of the people, foments racial prejudice and fear, and seeks to suppress millions of Americans from voting.
He files his own brief with the court—reproduced in the novel in its entirety—asking for his indictment to be dismissed on account of centuries of racial prejudice in the form of slavery and the mass incarceration of people of color.
The former president ended the speech harkening back to all that the country had overcome in the last century: "overcoming Depression...bringing down barriers to racial prejudice... winning two world wars and the 'long twilight struggle' of the Cold War," Clinton listed.
Of course, neither the United States, with its long history of racial prejudice and occasional fits of political hysteria, like McCarthyism, nor Britain, with its tenacious class system, ever quite lived up to the shining ideals they presented to the postwar world.
The rebukes they might suggest to any RNC delegate (say) who wandered as far off the beaten track as Cleveland's new North Collinwood arts district would have to do with the specifics of social policy, personal behavior, taxation, law enforcement, and racial prejudice.
Why does the inspiration they proclaim after yet another black person publicly forgives yet another white killer hardly ever result in tangible evidence that they won't simply pocket the gesture without even re-examining why racial prejudice and disparities persist or their role in that persistence?
The evidence suggests that if more Americans knew how many black men were succeeding, and more about the routes they are taking, it would reduce racial prejudice and engender hope among today's young black males that they too have a shot at making it in America.
But there's a belief here—a dangerous and pervasive one, I think—that any racial prejudice tamer than snarling dogs, fire hoses, and "Whites Only" signs isn't really racism, but something ingrained in a lost culture, something not malicious or active, but embedded, covert, and therefore forgivable.
YG, whose song "Big Bank" triggered a fierce war that goes to the heart of civil rights and racial prejudice in America, says the Madden CEO called him to express regret over editing out Colin Kaepernick from the song ... but it may be too little, too late.
The Sinking City is a fascinating proposition: It's an ambitious detective game from Frogwares (creators of several Sherlock Holmes games), set in a directly HP Lovecraft-inspired universe complete with cosmic horror, a literally sinking New England town, and plenty of characters who exhibit bald-faced racial prejudice.
The specific anxieties Emilio harbors as a legal guardian of four minors with DACA status rather than citizenship are explored, and the siblings face a mix of racial prejudice and anti-immigrant sentiment from multiple authority figures in their orbit...all while habitually alerting the workers in their restaurant about ICE raids.
Clearly, these kinds of studies — and there are many more — show that racism still plays a big role in America: Although we now live in a world where it's not as acceptable to take part in explicit racism, it seems like people are, quietly but surely, engaging in other kinds of racial prejudice.
But this year the "Queen of Hip-Hop Soul" has taken her acting career to the next level: Blige is starring in Netflix's potential Oscar player Mudbound — a Dee Rees film adaption of the 2008 novel — where she plays a mother-of-four dealing with racial prejudice on a Mississippi Delta farm during the Jim Crow South.
"New footage shows that media was wrong about teen's encounter with Native American" @TuckerCarlson — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 22, 2019 Video of Sandmann's confrontation quickly went viral on Friday, with many over the weekend chastising the teenagers for their behavior — including allegations they chanted "build a wall" — and arguing it was a side-effect of the Trump administration's racial prejudice.
But this year the "Queen of Hip-Hop Soul" has taken her acting career to the next level: Blige was nominated for Best Supporting Actress for her performance in Mudbound — a Dee Rees film adaption of the 2008 novel — where she plays a mother-of-four dealing with racial prejudice on a Mississippi Delta farm during the Jim Crow South.
What seemed indisputable to me, though, on Monday, was that my open letter published online on Sunday, addressed to the woman who had told my family to go back to China, tapped into a deep reservoir of emotions held by many Asian-Americans about the racial prejudice they have experienced and a hunger for it to be recognized more broadly.
The movie "does a good job of dramatizing the salient emotions of the moment and the racism that surrounded Robinson and every other black American of his time," A. O. Scott wrote in The Times, adding that the director Brian Helgeland "avoids the trap that so many depictions of the Jim Crow era fall into, which is to imply that racial prejudice was an individual or regional pathology rather than a national social norm."
FEELINGS FOR: 100 = FULLY POSITIVE 85 Their own race 583 77 80 72 70 69 50 = NEUTRAL Other race 59 0 = NEGATIVE Black Clinton voters White Trump voters Black Trump voters White Clinton voters FEELINGS FOR: 100 = FULLY POSITIVE 423 Their own race 80 77 80 593 583 573 Other race 563 553 = NEUTRAL 543 = NEGATIVE Black Clinton voters White Trump voters Black Trump voters White Clinton voters By The New York Times | Source: analysis of American National Election Studies data by Eric Kaufmann The share of white liberals who say racial prejudice is the main reason blacks cannot get ahead has jumped substantially since 533.

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