From Charleston to Charlottesville to Pittsburgh to Poway to DC to El Paso to Buffalo, each of these people was a victim of racists emboldened by replacement conspiracy myths to commit mass murder. They were victims of a subculture of scapegoating, masterfully repurposed by supremacist politics, politicians and shock jocks seeking to retain their power over an inflamed base, at all costs. They were victims of our ancient, obstinate refusal to be our brothers’ and sisters’ keepers.
Rev. Eric S.C. Manning says that his community in Charleston, S.C., and others traumatized by racist violence, need more from political leaders than displays of “false grief.”
Dylann Roof s appellate attorneys want the US Supreme Court to decide on how to handle disagreements over mental health evidence between lawyers and clients.
A federal jury awarded $25 million to nine people who said they were injured and maimed at the "Unite the Right" rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in August 2017.