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The Black Movement to Come
A vibrant vision of radically inclusive blackness resolves when movement leaders imagine freedom and autonomy for black people of all marginalized identities and not just for themselves. Zoe Samudzi writes.
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What Abigail Fisher’s Affirmative Action Case Was Really About
The plaintiff in the Supreme Court case challenging the use of race in college admission looks to be the perfect argument. But the case barely mentions her. Instead, the agenda is much broader: To fight race-based policies everywhere.
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How Do We Achieve an Open, Secure, Trustworthy, and Inclusive Internet?
The Global Commission on Internet Governance met in Mexico to ask an important question: How can everyone ensure that the Internet lives up to its egalitarian promises? Jeremy Malcolm explores their report.
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Sunday Comics
The Star’s Sunday Comics, standing up for the ideals the “other” Americans believe in: inclusion-ism and the questioning of the status quo.
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The Not-So-Innocent LEGO Brick
Exploring the history of the LEGO brick, Andreas Vilhelmsson is troubled by the increasing number of violent toys in the collection.
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Racial Bias and Arrest Tech
Of the many disappointing decisions about surveillance, the recent SCOTUS decision in Utah v Strieff disappoints more than most. Jennifer Lynch and Adam Schwartz reveal the racist bias in contemporary street surveillance.
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Does a Fitbit Make You More Active?
Peter Janiszewski looks at his wife’s Fitbit and asks how helpful it can really be.
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A Sideways Glance
And now for something completely different. Some young adult fiction by Amanda Lawrence Auverigne, in which two friends ask: is it love, or just low blood sugar?

