As a middle-aged, Black feminist, educator, activist who has been in movement spaces since high school, this conversation is sooo important and way too infrequent. Thank you! Please keep 'em coming🙂
Man, this is unbelievable. They are really afraid of our brilliance. We have to figure out the terminology to draw more black people in. Thank you, Amanda.
Amanda thank you for all you do. We ❤️ and support you very much. Stay strong and well. These are tough times. Thank you for being a wonderful, compassionate and intelligent human being. Keep doing your thing. 🙌🏼
Wow learned so much with this episode...our resilience def scares them and all we want is equality... but wanting equality to there perception is oppression absolutely INSANE!!!!!!
27:37 - 28:48 So looking forward to Sherrilyn Ifill’s up and coming book. Thank you for all of this interview and inspiration to subscribe to the Amandaverse to get fully oriented with sound historical markers.
As a Black Georgian who moved back to my state in 2020 and voted in the 2020 presidential elections and the various run offs, we were out there in them long ass lines every single time. When GA turned blue, it was clear the GOP in our state were SHOOK. Not even a month after national attention turned away from GA, they got to work. Voter suppression and disenfranchisement happens in the "off-season." That's why I get so annoyed when some people say "vote" but fail to acknowledge the voter suppression and disenfranchisement that happens between elections. Also because of the pandemic, more states did the mail in ballot option and we saw across the country big voter turnout numbers as a result. You can't tell me that wasn't one of the reasons there was a push for all of us to go back to work. We had too much time on our hands to do our civic duty vs be on the hamster wheel of work, work, work, with very little time to ourselves.
FYI - the Governor Bill Lee just deleted the Board of TSU. He’s planning to select a new Board- trying to turn TSU into a PWI- SPEAK ON IT - reach out - TSU Alumni- Mr Bears TSU IS OWED 5Billion
The state of black civil rights in this country are painfully stifled. Through the Judicial process, through medical access, through suitable housing and education. Not very Much has changed. It has just been dressed up to look a little better but the systemic racism is very much still alive. Prime example, the violation of the constitutional right to a district court judge. I could share some stories, including how I’ve litigated a federal lawsuit pro se for nearly a decade.
Life, Liberty and Pursuit of Happiness Citizenship: witness in court, enter contracts, build, lease, voting, jury service, POLITICAL RIGHTS, access to first class lifestyle (capitalism, consumerism) Civil Rights_ nothing should prevent a citizen from accessing resources, dignity and respect in order to achieve “success” Individualistic success vs Community success Individual success stories need to turn around and open the door for others to follow. Individual success should lead to build community success. Individual success is temporary. Use individual success to Pay it forward. Edward Bloom _ devoted life to reverse civil rights achievements (e.g., in 2013 voters rights act struck down, eliminate diversity and inclusion efforts)
Thank you for this discussion, but I must highlight one aspect which I found problematic in part 2 of this discussion, which is on the audio podcast version. Prof Ifill focuses too much on criticizing voters and individuals when she knows that it is the systems, policies and laws that should be criticized. Let me share a personal experience in the hope that Amanda Seales and her team will read this and incorporate stories like this in their coverage of elections and provide a space for US voters to not be hard on themselves. My engineer brother with zero debt, for at least 10 years through 2023, had to work 80 hours a week to afford to live in a 2BR New York City apartment with his wife and 2 children. Until recently, New York made it harder than other Democratic states to register to vote, didn’t have early voting and made it difficult to vote by mail. My brother has voted in New York for years by getting to the poll at 5 am so that he could get to his first full-time job on time after casting his vote. A typical Democratic politician would rightly praise my brother for his commitment to voting, but also wrongly use him to shame other voters who couldn’t push themselves the way my brother does. The system that requires my brother to live this stressful life is unfair, unsustainable and isn’t in the long-term interest of a country that needs healthy families to thrive. People in the USA are overworked and underpaid in a system with politicians paid by rich donors to keep us uninformed, fearful and in debt. No rich democracy treats its citizens as badly as the USA treats its citizens (other rich democracies come closer to USA standards for their citizens who are of African or non-Christian descent,but they still have tax-funded universal healthcare and university education!). When those rich democratic countries’ governments try to adopt USA policies (like taking away worker rights), the citizens take to the streets in protest because they don’t want the USA’s lifestyle of working to death to make the wealthiest 1% richer. Please ask your guests to 1. provide resources that make it easy for voters to be informed 2. identify what policies and laws Democrats implemented to make people’s lives better (example: who is being helped by education loan forgiveness) 3. list major fixes that are necessary for our system of government to better serve people; here are some but of course there are so many more a. change Election Day to Election Weekend,have nationwide early voting and easy mail in voting b.tax the richest 1% and corporations and reduce the USA’s war budget to fund public, universal pre K through university education and to fund universal healthcare c.take the for-profit private sector out of elections, wars, healthcare, infrastructure and prisons d.eliminate the slavery-era Electoral College and take out the pro-slavery language in the 13th amendment of the US Constitution e. build affordable, environment-friendly housing and public transportation f. restore the fairness doctrine in media, including the internet g. clean and protect air and water h.expand the size of the Supreme Court i. heavily restrict civilian gun ownership, ban civilian ownership of assault weapons and prosecute negligent weapons manufacturers j. stop interfering with violence in democratic processes around the world, including to get short-lived corporate profits
Thank you Thank you Thank you Thank you!
As a middle-aged, Black feminist, educator, activist who has been in movement spaces since high school, this conversation is sooo important and way too infrequent. Thank you! Please keep 'em coming🙂
We definitely need to reignite the community component of our culture.
Man, this is unbelievable. They are really afraid of our brilliance. We have to figure out the terminology to draw more black people in. Thank you, Amanda.
Two intelligent sisters just educating the community. Thanks I appreciate this interview...I have so much respect for both of you.
Amanda thank you for all you do.
We ❤️ and support you very much. Stay strong and well. These are tough times. Thank you for being a wonderful, compassionate and intelligent human being. Keep doing your thing. 🙌🏼
Share, share, share!!! When Amanda says she’s on a mission, you better get out of her way 👏🏽👏🏽 thank you so much Amanda for this great conversation.
Thank you for this Amanda. Also, thank you Sherrilyn for your wealth of knowledge. Just wow. Amazing episode.
Amanda you are a national treasure! Thank you for all you do🙌🏽
Amanda your show is awesome!
thank you so much! i'm doing my best to give yall the goods!
@@TheAmandaSeales Keep up the good work.👏❤❤❤
Thank you so much Amanda for this conversation, and so excited for part two. "we gotta have discourse to get on course" brilliant!
Important content. IMPORTANT.
So much truth to money & conformity being a facet of success; especially in corporate America.
Much Love ❤❤❤
I loved this episode so much. I had meany aha and sobering moments. Thank you 💝
You've lit a fire; thank you!
Wow learned so much with this episode...our resilience def scares them and all we want is equality... but wanting equality to there perception is oppression absolutely INSANE!!!!!!
❤ such a great conversation!!
I was just discussing the fact that despair isn't an option with a friend.
I love when you have experts in their fields on the show! It’s a fun and relatable space to learn from them and you!
wow cant wait for part 2, thank you!
27:37 - 28:48 So looking forward to Sherrilyn Ifill’s up and coming book. Thank you for all of this interview and inspiration to subscribe to the Amandaverse to get fully oriented with sound historical markers.
Wow. Sending, sharing and gonna listen again with my partner later. ❤
This makes so much sense now. They needed us so we could make these other folks look good.
This is such a good and important discussion. Thank you!
Fav Episode thus far 💐😫
As a Black Georgian who moved back to my state in 2020 and voted in the 2020 presidential elections and the various run offs, we were out there in them long ass lines every single time. When GA turned blue, it was clear the GOP in our state were SHOOK. Not even a month after national attention turned away from GA, they got to work. Voter suppression and disenfranchisement happens in the "off-season." That's why I get so annoyed when some people say "vote" but fail to acknowledge the voter suppression and disenfranchisement that happens between elections.
Also because of the pandemic, more states did the mail in ballot option and we saw across the country big voter turnout numbers as a result. You can't tell me that wasn't one of the reasons there was a push for all of us to go back to work. We had too much time on our hands to do our civic duty vs be on the hamster wheel of work, work, work, with very little time to ourselves.
Absolutely loved your company today, ladies ❤
Please keep doing what you’re doing and introduce my “all over the place brain” to more brilliant minds
Remember when a Black Women turned a red state blue. W S be shaking in their Boots.
This lifted my spirit 🎉
Thank you for this conversation!
Thank you 🙏🏽
Pls clip and post the Fulton GA "If voting didn't matter" part.
I’m studying this right now in history and WWII double V ideas is how Medgar Evers entered the civil rights movement as a vet.
✊
Respectfully, I would like to see examples of that in the present day.
then get to googling. You are not a court of law and your ignorance can be cured independent of our efforts.
FYI - the Governor Bill Lee just deleted the Board of TSU. He’s planning to select a new Board- trying to turn TSU into a PWI- SPEAK ON IT - reach out - TSU Alumni- Mr Bears
TSU IS OWED 5Billion
Thank you for sharing. I had no idea, definitely going to look into this!!
The state of black civil rights in this country are painfully stifled. Through the Judicial process, through medical access, through suitable housing and education. Not very
Much has changed. It has just been dressed up to look a little better but the systemic racism is very much still alive. Prime example, the violation of the constitutional right to a district court judge. I could share some stories, including how I’ve litigated a federal lawsuit pro se for nearly a decade.
The family court system! I’m learning it’s a misogynistic system. So imagine adding being black in an oppressive court system. 🤦🏽♀️
Life, Liberty and Pursuit of Happiness
Citizenship: witness in court, enter contracts, build, lease, voting, jury service, POLITICAL RIGHTS, access to first class lifestyle (capitalism, consumerism)
Civil Rights_ nothing should prevent a citizen from accessing resources, dignity and respect in order to achieve “success”
Individualistic success vs
Community success
Individual success stories need to turn around and open the door for others to follow. Individual success should lead to build community success. Individual success is temporary. Use individual success to Pay it forward.
Edward Bloom _ devoted life to reverse civil rights achievements (e.g., in 2013 voters rights act struck down, eliminate diversity and inclusion efforts)
Political rights are civil rights
A shift happening in the 40s; post Marcus Garvey, makes sense.
Thank you for this discussion, but I must highlight one aspect which I found problematic in part 2 of this discussion, which is on the audio podcast version. Prof Ifill focuses too much on criticizing voters and individuals when she knows that it is the systems, policies and laws that should be criticized. Let me share a personal experience in the hope that Amanda Seales and her team will read this and incorporate stories like this in their coverage of elections and provide a space for US voters to not be hard on themselves.
My engineer brother with zero debt, for at least 10 years through 2023, had to work 80 hours a week to afford to live in a 2BR New York City apartment with his wife and 2 children. Until recently, New York made it harder than other Democratic states to register to vote, didn’t have early voting and made it difficult to vote by mail. My brother has voted in New York for years by getting to the poll at 5 am so that he could get to his first full-time job on time after casting his vote. A typical Democratic politician would rightly praise my brother for his commitment to voting, but also wrongly use him to shame other voters who couldn’t push themselves the way my brother does. The system that requires my brother to live this stressful life is unfair, unsustainable and isn’t in the long-term interest of a country that needs healthy families to thrive. People in the USA are overworked and underpaid in a system with politicians paid by rich donors to keep us uninformed, fearful and in debt. No rich democracy treats its citizens as badly as the USA treats its citizens (other rich democracies come closer to USA standards for their citizens who are of African or non-Christian descent,but they still have tax-funded universal healthcare and university education!). When those rich democratic countries’ governments try to adopt USA policies (like taking away worker rights), the citizens take to the streets in protest because they don’t want the USA’s lifestyle of working to death to make the wealthiest 1% richer.
Please ask your guests to
1. provide resources that make it easy for voters to be informed 2. identify what policies and laws Democrats implemented to make people’s lives better (example: who is being helped by education loan forgiveness)
3. list major fixes that are necessary for our system of government to better serve people; here are some but of course there are so many more
a. change Election Day to Election Weekend,have nationwide early voting and easy mail in voting
b.tax the richest 1% and corporations and reduce the USA’s war budget to fund public, universal pre K through university education and to fund universal healthcare
c.take the for-profit private sector out of elections, wars, healthcare, infrastructure and prisons
d.eliminate the slavery-era Electoral College and take out the pro-slavery language in the 13th amendment of the US Constitution
e. build affordable, environment-friendly housing and public transportation
f. restore the fairness doctrine in media, including the internet
g. clean and protect air and water
h.expand the size of the Supreme Court
i. heavily restrict civilian gun ownership, ban civilian ownership of assault weapons and prosecute negligent weapons manufacturers
j. stop interfering with violence in democratic processes around the world, including to get short-lived corporate profits
👀🔥
As long as the pile of disenfranchisment remains beneath you, you can be shoved back down into it.
in the words of DR CLAUD ANDERSON" who is CIVIL" 🤣🤣