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Latinx-founded Insurtech Startup Sigo Raises $1 5M in Seed Funding to Spearhead Affordable Access to Auto Insurance
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NAIC Report - 2021 Spring National Meeting | Eversheds Sutherland (US) LLP
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Black BYU professor urges Latter-day Saints to end âsin of racismâ
Ryan Gabrielâs devotional speech was the first from a Black faculty member in 14 years.
(Screenshot) Ryan Gabriel, an assistant professor at Brigham Young University, gives a devotional address online on Tuesday, April 6, 2021.
  | April 7, 2021, 12:00 p.m.
For the first time in more than a decade, a Black faculty member addressed students Tuesday at Brigham Young University during one of the religious schoolâs devotional talks, and he pointedly spoke about the âsin of racismâ that Latter-day Saints must reconcile.
âOur church has made clear that racism does not fit a disciple of Christ,â said Ryan Gabriel, an assistant professor of sociology. But even with warnings from the prophets, he suggested, there still exists âhatred toward oneâs brothers and sisters, which is ultimately hatred toward God.â
Asian Americans are facing a crisis. Random acts of violence against individuals have escalated, as the recent mass shootings in Atlanta and the wave of street attacks perpetrated particularly against older people have made clear. But beyond the headlines, as an online webinar on Thursday illuminated, the problem is deeper: centuries of entrenched racism, much of which has been fostered, if not engendered, by the media and the fears of white America.
“These conditions we are experiencing now are not new,” said Vivian Shaw, a Harvard College fellow and co-principal investigator of the AAPI COVID-19 Project, a partnership between the Department of Sociology and the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). “They are embedded in the history of the U.S., in the history of racism, and the history of imperialism.”
Should we support the CRED Report? By Joshua Reuben Last week saw the publication of the report by the Committee on Race and Ethnic Disparities, chaired by Tony Sewell. Many of the more controversial conclusions were leaked and attacked in advance, including downplaying the impact of institutional racism, disagreeing with many of the concepts of critical race theory (“CRT”), and discouraging the use of the term BAME (black and minority ethnic). While Jews were not mentioned in the report, some of the fallout may well affect the Jewish community. How should we react? Many Jews feel that any attempt to downplay the impact of racism will come back to haunt us in the end and that we should support the lived experience of those who claim that the UK is structurally biased against racial minorities. Jews suffered disproportionately from Covid, with fatality rates comparable with ethnic minorities. Within the lifetime even of our parents Jews have been excluded from profession
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