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The Edition: No. 178

Jun 30, 2020

Many of life’s failures are people who did not realize how close they were to success when they gave up. // Thomas Edison

+ Dear Women: Make a bet on yourself.

+ These Madewell spotted calf hair sandals are sublime.

+ A dermatologist’s pregnancy safe skincare routine.

+ Don’t miss this vibrant H&M cotton dress and pretty smocked dress.

+ 9 Ways to Boost Your Resume in Quarantine.

+ The greatest gym bag ever made is finally back in stock.

+ 4th of July Barbecue recipes from the NYT.

+ The quietest wireless headphones for working-from-home.

+ What to say when someone cries at work.

+ Whistles is one of my top-5 brands. This relaxed work dress explains why.

+ On Performing Gratitude (an important read).

+ Summer Plans: Swimsuit + Straw Hat + Baby Pool + Cocktail

+ Long Reads: Is New York City’s most corrupt official their head lifeguard?

In the original version of this post, I failed at being the kind of ally I want to be during this time of societal change.  I’ll keep working to do better.

I wanted to share the story of Viola Liuzzo because she was a brave and decent woman, murdered by the Klan, while an FBI agent watched, for having the audacity to fight for equal treatment and voting rights for black people.  She was then defamed by the FBI  because Hoover realized that having a white woman murdered could upend the parade of lies he was telling white America about the Civil Rights Movement, its black leaders, and the black people who fought for equality.

People like Rev. George Winston Lee, murdered in 1953 for being the first black man to register to vote in his county and for using his pulpit to encourage others to register as well.

Like Clyde Kennard, framed for a theft he didn’t commit so that the state of Mississippi could prevent him from integrating the University of Southern Mississippi.  He died in prison while serving his unjust sentence. (Spies of Mississippi is a documentary worth your time.)

Like Black Panther leader Fred Hampton, who was murdered by the FBI because he was too good at bringing groups of people from different backgrounds together to fight shared oppression.

Like Claudette Colvin, who was arrested for refusing to give up her seat on a Montgomery bus months before Rosa Parks became a household name, but didn’t receive the recognition she deserved because she was young, pregnant, and unmarried, and the white Christian majority wouldn’t be able to sympathize with her.

Like Harry and Harriette Moore, killed for speaking up about equality, and the 74 others who Southern Poverty Law Center says were murdered by racially motivated violence only to be forgotten by history.

The stories of the dead are legion.  They are almost entirely black.  They are almost entirely without justice.  And the murder of a single white woman, while an interesting watershed moment, doesn’t change the injustice.  If you want to keep learning more of the history of the Movement and the black people who fought and died for it, Southern Poverty Law Center’s Facebook posts are worth a follow.

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