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☐ ☆ ✇ Dissent MagazineDissent Magazine

A New Path to Diversity

By: Richard D. Kahlenberg — March 23rd 2023 at 14:19

The Supreme Court is poised to overturn race-based affirmative action. But preferences based on socioeconomic disadvantage—which are both politically popular and legally sound—could produce similarly high levels of diversity.

☐ ☆ ✇ Salon.com

For Idris Elba's sake, let "Luther" retire

By: Melanie McFarland — March 12th 2023 at 19:30
Neil Cross loves reviving Elba's vigilante detective, but maybe it's time for him to carry a different franchise

☐ ☆ ✇ The Rumpus.net

From the Archives: Rumpus Original Poetry: Three Poems by Luther Hughes

By: Luther Hughes — February 16th 2023 at 17:00

 

 

 

This was originally published at The Rumpus on June 6, 2019.

 

 

The Wind Did What the Wind Came to Do

You’ve seen the tired ceremony of felled trees.
You’ve seen the sparrows toss their dignity aside
for the hollow howl at evening’s edge,
and the humble earth saying, Here, have the night,
do with it what you please
, the perfect moment
of love where an offering requires nothing in return.
Though it wasn’t love. There was the bowed trees.
There was the black clouds galloping across the sky.
There was the wind that moved as if the definition
of hunger, going and going, but going only out of habit,
nesting into that habit as we do when reaching
a familiar field, the natural gust of the body responding
to what it finds filling; patterned; rested in the chore
of passion. What if this were love, if the wind bargained
for beauty, let go of its kingdom? It must have a thirst
for tenderness—stillness in the heart. Oh surely
the distance is closing ever so slightly.
Stay inside me until the storm dies down.

 

Such Things Require Tenderness

Into the rain, he walks—
the rain falling like light
falls before a storm—
                        and he never looks back.

About storms, truly, what did I know?
I knew beauty. The clouds gathering
gray as infidelity
or the taste of it in my mouth.

No, that’s not beauty.

Before the storm, birds.
Before the birds, a discarded shirt,
a black hat with a dead rose.

This is the last time, he said.
I did what storms do: held
against the long night, made longer
by my howls and crashing,
which, by now, as he dissolves
into the cadence of rain, is only a memory.

One day, when I’m alone
and the birds make use of their boredom,
I’ll return to this place
to watch him walk again
and again into the rain
knowing I must forget such turmoil
if, by the laws of nature,
I want to grow.

                        —The rain is clearing.
I hold out my hand.

 

The Dead Are Beautiful Tonight

Even the trees are moaning.
Black bark, black faces,
and winter’s stern hand at the neck.

They say it’s the worse one yet,
but they’ve all been the same.
The dead die every year

and I think I’m too good
for such repetition. The truth is,
I’ve gained so little this season

that the things I’ve lost paint the day
a rough stillness. I don’t tell him this,
but I want my life to end.

He wants another hallelujah
in bed with me
and I don’t blame him.

Our lives are so ridiculed with desire
sometimes. I used to want the romance
of trees, the subtle blue conversation

between the sky and crows. I can’t help
but study the things that bare
my resemblance and that makes me selfish.

But the crow, headless in the bush,
has been there all week
and if I can’t bring it back to life,

what else am I supposed to do?
So much is my want
for everything black around me to live.

Where does want get me?
I have my limits, my childish dreams
barreling into the mind’s fog.

I want, but I must be careful.
A shower here or a shower there,
the trees will still be

a spider’s web of what was.
It’s true what they say about the day
disrobing into a sudden stroke

of sorrow—the poor moon,
I hear, is dying. As are the stars,
although many of them are dead already.

I unthread the evening
and he arranges on the bed
how he see fits, ready to love me

the blackest way he knows how—
salt in my mouth
light in the corners of my eyes.

☐ ☆ ✇ Public Seminar

Biden and Pelosi Speak at NAN’s MLK Day Breakfast

By: Jo Freeman — January 19th 2023 at 18:03
President Biden and former Speaker Nancy Pelosi were the featured speakers at the annual MLK day breakfast sponsored by the National Action Network....

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☐ ☆ ✇ Boing Boing

It's Martin Luther King, Jr. day in the United States

By: Jennifer Sandlin — January 17th 2023 at 00:18

It's Martin Luther King, Jr. day in the United States. And Marc Lamont Hill took to his twitter to make sure we keep it real. He tweeted: "Today, let us remember Martin Luther King as he was: A Black radical anti-capitalist, anti-imperialist, revolutionary Christian internationalist who was deemed an enemy of the State and assassinated for his radical work. — Read the rest

☐ ☆ ✇ MacRumors

Apple Honors Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. With Website Homepage Tribute

By: Sami Fathi — January 16th 2023 at 14:56
On Martin Luther King Jr. Day in the United States, Apple is paying tribute to the American civil rights movement leader with a full-page tribute on its website.


On the company's home page, a picture of King is shown alongside one of his quotes: "This is no time for apathy or complacency. This is a time for vigorous and positive action."

"Today and every day, we honor his life and legacy of service," Apple notes. Apple also includes a link to Apple Books, where users can read King's book Stride Toward Freedom for free. Apple CEO Tim Cook also paid tribute to King on Twitter today.

Dr. King said, "We must come to see that human progress never rolls in on the wheels of inevitability. It comes through the time and persistent work of dedicated individuals." Grateful to everyone carrying on the legacy of Dr. King and making a difference in their communities. pic.twitter.com/TKA0fniWVv

— Tim Cook (@tim_cook) January 16, 2023

This article, "Apple Honors Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. With Website Homepage Tribute" first appeared on MacRumors.com
☐ ☆ ✇ Salon.com

We need Martin Luther King Jr.'s lessons in resistance — that's why the right wants to erase them

By: Chauncey DeVega — January 16th 2023 at 11:00
Right-wingers want to refashion Martin Luther King Jr. in their own image — because the truth is still dangerous

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