Residents began sifting through the rubble after a tornado plowed through suburban Omaha, Nebraska, demolishing homes and businesses as it moved for miles through farmland and into subdivisions. People gathered
Residents began sifting through the rubble after a tornado plowed through suburban Omaha, Nebraska, demolishing homes and businesses as it moved for miles through farmland and into subdivisions. People gathered
Residents began sifting through the rubble after a tornado plowed through suburban Omaha, Nebraska, demolishing homes and businesses as it moved for miles through farmland and into subdivisions. People gathered
Residents began sifting through the rubble after a tornado plowed through suburban Omaha, Nebraska, demolishing homes and businesses as it moved for miles through farmland and into subdivisions. People gathered
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Black people’s concerns about festering racism are often dismissed. Will this ever change?
By Courtland MilloyThe Washington Post
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Adjacent to the U.S. Capitol is a Senate office building named in honor of Sen. Richard B. Russell Jr. of Georgia. Russell served in the Senate from 1933 to 1971 and led his white Southern segregationist colleagues in a devilish, decades-long opposition to civil rights legislation.
Trump supporters face off with U.S. Capitol Police outside the Senate chamber Jan. 6.
Manuel Balce Ceneta/Associated Press
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
During one of his early re-election campaigns, he declared:
“As one who was born and reared in the atmosphere of the Old South, with six generations of my forebears now resting beneath Southern soil, I am willing to go as far and make as great a sacrifice to preserve and ensure white supremacy in the social, economic and political life of our state as any man who lives within her borders.”