Uncontainable*
By Jessica Mehta
My body gleams the same
shining cost
as a new car. Gilded in gold.
Punctuated in gems. You ask,
What would your mother think?
(She thinks nothing, she
is dust), but
if she were to rise up, gather
her ashen self once more, then
I say,
she’d delight in my adornments, diamond
’round daith, topaz to tragus. Trace
these inky birds sprung from skin
Captive: Mass Incarceration as Modern Slavery: A Zine by Chloe Takara Simpson
“Slavery became a permanent system through constitutional law. The 13th Amendment is commonly thought to have abolished slavery, but it actually solidified the practice in the country. The full amendment says, “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude” except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been fully convicted, shall exist within the United States, of any place subject to their jurisdiction” (United States Constitution, Amed. XIII).
This means that slavery is completely legal under certain circumstances and is almost expected to be used to punish convicted individuals.”
Re-envisioning Ferguson, Missouri: On the Killing of Michael Brown
By Halford H. Fairchild, Ph.D.
On August 9, 2014, 18-year-old Michael Brown was shot and killed by officer Darren Wilson in Ferguson, Missouri. According to eyewitnesses the unarmed Brown was standing relatively close to Wilson; some even noted that Brown had his arms up, as if in surrender. Nevertheless, Officer Wilson shot the unarmed Michael Brown 12 times. Sadly, it was only the final of those 12 shots that was lethal. Since that shot entered the top of Michael Brown’s head, it suggests that he was facing the ground when Wilson fired it. Brown’s dead body was then left in the street – in full view – for more than four hours.
Social Justice and Self-Doubt: Pandemic Edition
By Sienna Bland-Abramson
Racial injustice and police brutality lie at the core of American history, in a country that beguilingly promises equal justice under law: a lofty oath that was arguably never true, despite its eternal inscription atop the West Pediment of the U.S. Supreme Court. Yet, if we can ignore history, but otherwise take this truth to be self-evident, it’s not the guarantee that I find problematic; but the failure to make good on the explicit promise that continues to inflame me.
I asked myself, what can I do to make a difference? How can I, as a 26-year-old white college student majoring in psychology, foster social justice in a truly meaningful way? While contemplating my alternatives, opportunity unexpectedly came knocking; in a pandemic, no less. I was approached about a job that would allow me to contribute to altering the life trajectory of a disenfranchised person of color who had been wrongfully convicted of murder. I responded with a resounding YES, when can I start?
The Root of the Matter: A Zine by Milen Aklilu
We have made progress in this country. But we still have a long way to go in attaining equality not only for Black people, but for all people of all intersections and backgrounds.
How have we not achieved the same level of equality
amongst black and white people?
Well since the beginning of slavery and the founding of this country, systems were and still are put into place in an effort to oppress black people and prevent them from attaining the same level of equality as their white counterparts.
Two Poems: Making a Stand & An American Nightmare
By John Grey
MAKING A STAND
that’s either your neck
with the life squeezed out of it
or you are on the side
of the knee
AN AMERICAN NIGHTMARE
been no lynching in your lifetime,
yet those executions follow you,
on streets like branches
stretching high and far
from a trunk that goes back years,
dangling nooses that weren’t there yesterday