Civil Rights Leader James Lawson Used Nonviolent Resistance and the ‘Power of Love’ to Challenge Injustice
Lawson, who died on June 9, was among the most important figures in the nonviolent civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s.
Lawson, who died on June 9, was among the most important figures in the nonviolent civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s.
Saturday’s event at Puck Live is to simultaneously celebrate and support local music and public education in Central Bucks School District.
A review of Arthur Goldwag’s “The Politics of Fear: The Peculiar Persistence of American Paranoia.”
He does a masterful job of toggling between the local story of Southlake and the big picture nationally in the right’s war on public education.
Halyna Kruk’s “A Crash Course in Molotov Cocktails” documents the carnage of war, but does not exclude the things that refuse to be extinguished by suffering.
“We took their land, their resources, their lives and then we took their children through boarding schools and adoptions.”