Greetings again from the Dallas heat dome.

I’m preparing to go back to Tulsa, a town I’ve reported from a few times over the past two years. You might know about the Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921, when White mobs slaughtered Black residents of the Greenwood district. More than 100 years later, the living survivors of that massacre and descendants of victims have been engaged in a legal battle with the city, fighting for reparations. I’ve been writing about the efforts at repair and justice there, taking several trips to Tulsa to document the centennial as well as the search for the remains of massacre victims.

In August 2022, Tulsa County District Court Judge Caroline Wall issued a historic decision to let the reparations lawsuit proceed — a move that gave many people hope that justice could be served not only in Tulsa but also in other places where massacres occurred.

Last week, however, Wall issued a stunning decision in the reverse direction: She tossed out the reparations case altogether, with little explanation. So, I’m Tulsa-bound again, to get the story of where the road to justice goes from here.

Meanwhile? A few words about men …

  • @aidanM
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    11 year ago

    I don’t disagree with the argument, but I think its very tribalist to talk about “men”-this “women”-that. For many groups it’d be clear that’s ridiculous and I think it’s just as ridiculous now.

    • @YoBuckStopsHereOP
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      01 year ago

      These type of men were raised to a standard that no longer exists. They are unable to change there ways and have been left behind in society. So they connected to violent right wing groups to pledge force women to be there servants, to punish POC for being successful, and for putting the white male back into an elite status.

      Of course that is all BS and won’t happen. Society has moved on.