It is important to keep learning about historical and current racism in order to build power and power awareness in progressive movements. Though the Reconstruction era and Jim Crow began in the second half of the nineteenth century, the disenfranchisement of Black voters is alive and well in the United States today, in large part through The New Jim Crow — mass incarceration. Share something that you learned this past year, or that you are learning currently, about white supremacy and voting rights in the United States.
MindfulHearts retrospective.
On this day 2019.
On this day 2018.
Celebrating two years of daily cartoons.
On this day 2019.
On this day 2018.
Celebrating two years of daily cartoons.
[image description: A group of hearts on the right each holding one ballot labeled, "VOTE," stand facing a heart on the left. The group of hearts all have angry and upset facial expressions and one of the hearts holds its ballot in a fist up in the air. On the ground between the group and the heart on the left is written the word "felony." The heart on the left has a stern facial expression and a palm up in the air in a gesture conveyed a barrier to entry. Behind the heart on the left is a large object with multiple labels: "POWER / DEFINITION OF CRIME / REPRESENTATION / DECISION MAKING." Text reads: "In 2016, half of the six million people who were stopped from voting in the U.S. by state felony bans had already completed their prison sentences."]