-
The State Attorney General recently came to Marin County to announce the first settlement to desegregate a California school in five decades. Meanwhile,…
-
Did you know that Richmond, Milpitas, and Palo Alto all had subdivisions where it was illegal for African Americans to own a house? Those are some of the…
-
Did you know that Richmond, Milpitas, and Palo Alto all had sub-divisions where it was illegal for African Americans to own a house? On this edition of…
-
Aeeshah Clottey grew up black in segregated Louisiana. Her journey has taken her from the black church to the Nation of Islam, living in between the…
-
Does racism persist today because of the bigotry of individuals or hate groups or are racist policies actually embedded in American law? What role have…
-
August 3, 2015: On our next show, host David Onek will be one-on-one with the Superintendent of San Francisco Unified School District, Richard Carranza.Is…
-
On the April 17, 2015 edition of 99% Invisible:Cities are great. They have movement, activity and diversity. But go to any city and it’s pretty clear, a…
-
On the January 5th, 2015 edition of Your Call, we'll speak with Richard Rothstein, research associate at the Economic Policy Institute and fellow at UC…
-
On today’s Your Call, we’ll conversation about the 1964 Supreme Court decision, which ended federally sanctioned racial segregation in public schools. A…
-
Life of the Law: “Bad Constitution” Alabama has the longest constitution, not just in the country, but in the world, with 885 amendments and counting.…