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Bell, also a prolific podcaster and an ACLU Celebrity Ambassador for Racial Justice, is part of the robust slate of presenters assembled by UCSB Arts & Lectures for its season-long look at systemic racism and its impact on society.
Race to Justice is a suite of events featuring leading activists, creatives and thinkers, meant altogether to expand our understanding of the issues and to inspire an expansive approach to advancing racial equality.
“W. Kamau Bell manages to make us laugh while having tough conversations or as he says, awkward conversations around race, identity and more,” said Celesta M. Billeci, A&L executive director. “We’ve had a lot of very serious presentations on our Race to Justice series, and those have been important and powerful, but we’re looking forward to taking a different approach with Bell.
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When Rihanna took out trash flaunting diamonds and heels
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When Rihanna took out trash flaunting diamonds and heels
By CBS News Scott Winters/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
A Native American rights group is planning a protest on Sunday urging the Kansas City Chiefs to retire the team s name and stop fans from using an in-game tomahawk chop ahead of Super Bowl LV in Tampa.
Alicia Norris, co-founder of the Florida Indigenous Rights and Environmental Equality (FIREE), is one of the people leading the demonstration set to take place near Raymond James Stadium, where the Chiefs will play the Tampa Bay Buccaneers for the championship. Norris told CBS News that the use of the name and chop are dishonorable and disrespectful.
Friday, February 5th 2021, 12:54 pm
By: CBS News
A Native American rights group is planning a protest on Sunday urging the Kansas City Chiefs to retire the team s name and stop fans from using an in-game tomahawk chop ahead of Super Bowl LV in Tampa.
Alicia Norris, co-founder of the Florida Indigenous Rights and Environmental Equality (FIREE), is one of the people leading the demonstration set to take place near Raymond James Stadium, where the Chiefs will play the Tampa Bay Buccaneers for the championship. Norris told CBS News that the use of the name and chop are dishonorable and disrespectful.
By Christopher Brito Symbolic Justice
A Native American rights group is planning a protest on Sunday urging the Kansas City Chiefs to retire the team s name and stop fans from using an in-game tomahawk chop ahead of Super Bowl LV in Tampa.
Alicia Norris, co-founder of the Florida Indigenous Rights and Environmental Equality (FIREE), is one of the people leading the demonstration set to take place near Raymond James Stadium, where the Chiefs will play the Tampa Bay Buccaneers for the championship. Norris told CBS News that the use of the name and chop are dishonorable and disrespectful. The Indigenous people of this land have already had a mass genocide approach with regard to their culture and way of living, she said. And when you further dehumanize them and objectify them, it just kind of falls in line with that extinction of who they are.