Project 2025 Architect Russell Vought Is Using Shutdown to Gut Federal Agencies
Democracy Now!
October 21, 2025
VIDEO:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8748TR007Hk
Discourse that allows us to express a wide range of ideas, opinions, and analysis that can be used as an opportunity to critically examine and observe what our experience means to us beyond the given social/cultural contexts and norms that are provided us.
Project 2025 Architect Russell Vought Is Using Shutdown to Gut Federal Agencies
Democracy Now!
October 21, 2025
VIDEO:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8748TR007Hk
Lawrence Ferlinghetti (1919-2021)
Pity The Nation
Identified with the City Lights Bookstore in San Francisco (which he founded in 1953) as well as the poets of the Beat Generation, the then 88 year old Lawrence Ferlinghetti (b. March 24, 1919) who was still active as a poet at the time of this reading wrote and recited the following sadly timeless poem in 2007. Ferlinghetti died in 2021 at the age of 101.
VIDEO:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lKCblAJtzgE
We want to thank everyone who came out for “Why Authoritarians Fear Education” with Jason Stanley and Randi Weingarten, moderated by Kimberlé Crenshaw. This first entry of the Future of Democracy & Civil Rights lecture series focused on the ways in which attacks on racial justice had been used to sow distrust in education and other public institutions.
Our speakers reminded us of why this happens: authoritarians target education because it facilitates the critical thinking, shared empathy, and mutual understanding that are the key pillars to democracy.
(Photographer: Edoghogho Joy Ugiagbe)
The conversation concluded with a book signing with the speakers. We would like to thank the following co-sponsors for their partnership in making this event possible: AFT, Constitutional Democracy Initiative, Columbia Center for Contemporary Critical Thought, High School Law Institute, Racial Literacy for Racial Justice at Columbia Law School, and Education Policy and Social Analysis Department at Teachers College.
Critical Race Studies 25th Anniversary Symposium and Celebration | Thursday, October 23 - Saturday, October 25
The Critical Race Studies Program at UCLA School of Law celebrates its 25th anniversary this year with a landmark symposium. This three-day program will bring together leading scholars, students, advocates, and community members to honor CRS’s trailblazing contributions over the past quarter century—and to chart the future of racial justice in a moment of profound political and social challenge. Find out more here!
AAPF Executive Director Kimberlé Crenshaw will be speaking on the panel “Transform Racial Justice Advocacy” on Friday, October 24th at 5pm PT - 6:15pm PT alongside panelists:
Ahilan Arulanantham, Professor from Practice and Faculty Co-Director, Center for Immigration Law & Policy, UCLA School of Law
Sandy Hudson, Writer, Producer, and Activist, Founder, Black Lives Matter-Canada, CoFounder, Black Legal Action Centre, and Co-Owner, Above the Palace, UCLA Law JD ‘22
Caleb Jackson, Judiciary Counsel, U.S. Senate, UCLA Law JD ‘18
Saúl Sarabia, Founder and Director, Solidarity Consulting and Academic Coordinator, UCLA Institute for Research on Labor and Employment, UCLA Law JD ‘96
Moderated by Sunita Patel, Professor of Law, Faculty Director, David J. Epstein Program in Public Interest Law and Policy, and Faculty Director, Veterans Legal Clinic, UCLA School of Law
This panel convenes distinguished alums, advocates, and scholars to examine innovative approaches for implementing critical race studies in professional practice. This discussion will illuminate how legal advocates are reimagining racial justice work in response to rising anti-CRT sentiment and increasing authoritarian tendencies within contemporary American political culture. By connecting theoretical foundations with experience, this panel bridges academic scholarship and advocacy practice. Speakers will demonstrate how CRT principles inform strategic decision-making, coalition-building, and long-term movement sustainability, providing attendees with actionable frameworks for translating critical race scholarship into meaningful social transformation across diverse professional contexts.
American Agitators Screening at Columbia | Monday, October 27 at 6:30pm ET
American Agitators is a documentary that captures the remarkable story of organizing for social change in the U.S. through the work of Fred Ross Sr. and many other iconic organizers, such as Dolores Huerta, Fred Ross Jr., and many current ones, all of whom have devoted their lives to the pursuit of justice and equality. AAPF partner John Heffernan, who leads the Right to Learn Coalition, serves as executive producer on this timely documentary about the importance of community-based organizing. Join the Columbia University Labor Lab and Columbia World Projects Center for Political Economyfor the screening of the film at the Lee C. Bollinger Forum on
Monday, October 27th at 6:30pm ET
Hot Off the Press: The News You Can Use
Vote for AAPF for the 5th Annual Anthem Awards!
We’re excited to share that we’ve been named finalists for two Community Voice Anthem Awards, and we need your votes to win! Click here to vote for our Intersectionality Matters! with Kimberlé Crenshaw podcast, which has been nominated for the episode "Bloody Sunday, 60 Years Later". We were also nominated for our Story of Us Dispatch, which you can vote for here. It is a multimedia time-capsule of our 2025 Sundance Film Festival Story of Us event “The Role of the Artist in the Age of Censorship,” equipped with educational resources and performance footage of André Holland, Cassandra Freeman, DeWanda Wise, Dewayne Perkins, and Imani Lewis. Voting ends on Thursday, October 30th!
Intersectionality Matters! With Kimberlé Crenshaw: How Anti-Blackness Destroys Democracy
On the latest episode of Intersectionality Matters! with Kimberlé Crenshaw, Melanie Campbell, Evelynn Hammonds, Lisa Coleman, and Kaye Wise Whitehead join our host to discuss the country’s slide into autocracy, and how anti-Blackness has served as a catalyst for the dismantling of American rights and freedoms. Crucially, they also unpack what can be done. Listen here.
This
classic book tells the remarkable story of Robert F. Williams
(1925-1996), one of the most influential black activists of the
generation that toppled Jim Crow and forever altered the arc of American
history. In the late 1950s, Williams, as president of the Monroe, North
Carolina, branch of the NAACP, and his followers used machine guns,
dynamite, and Molotov cocktails to confront Klan terrorists. Advocating
“armed self-reliance,” Williams challenged not only white supremacists
but also Martin Luther King Jr. and the civil rights establishment.
Forced to flee during the 1960s to Cuba — where he broadcast “Radio Free
Dixie,” a program of black politics and music that could be heard as
far away as Los Angeles and New York City — and then to China, Williams
remained a controversial figure for the rest of his life.
Radio
Free Dixie reveals that nonviolent civil rights protest and armed
resistance movements grew out of the same soil, confronted the same
predicaments, and reflected the same quest for African American freedom.
As Robert Williams’s story demonstrates, independent black political
action, black cultural pride, and armed self-reliance operated in the
South in tension and in tandem with legal efforts and nonviolent protest.
The Memoirs of Robert and Mabel Williams: African American Freedom, Armed Resistance, and International Solidarity
by Robert and Mabel Williams
The University of North Carolina Press, 2025
Edited by: Gloria Aneb House, Akinyele K. Umoja, and the late John Bracey, Jr. (1941-2023)
[Publication date: June 17, 2025]

Negroes with Guns: Rob Williams and Black Power
California Newsreel
Original post: October 28, 2009
VIDEO TRAILER:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jiEo6fN_ALw
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To watch the entire documentary, to read background information and to order DVDs, visit: http://newsreel.org/video/NEGROES-WIT...
"Negroes
with Guns" is the story of a forgotten Civil Rights fighter who dared
to advocate armed self-defense in the face of racist terrorism of the
Jim Crow South. This remarkable film tells of the life and times of
Robert F. Williams, the forefather of the Black Power movement, who
broke dramatic new ground by internationalizing the African American
struggle. http://www.newsreel.org/nav/title.asp...
California Newsreel
OAH Erik Barouw Award Winner Best Feature Audience Award, Detroit Docs UrbanWorld Film Festival Winner Official Selection, Big Sky Film Festival Robert F. Williams was the forefather of the Black Power movement and broke dramatic new ground by internationalizing the African American struggle. Negroes with Guns is not only an electrifying look at an historically erased leader, but also provides a thought-provoking examination of Black radicalism and resistance and serves as a launching pad for the study of Black liberation philosophies. Insightful interviews with historian Clayborne Carson, biographer Timothy Tyson, Julian Bond, and a first person account by Mabel Williams, Robert's wife, bring the story to life. Robert Franklin Williams was born in Monroe, North Carolina in 1925. As a young man he worked for the Ford Motor Company in Detroit until he was drafted into the United States Army in 1944 where he learned to take up arms. Back in Monroe, Williams married Mabel Robinson, a young woman who shared his commitment to social justice and African American freedom. After the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision, Klan activity in Monroe skyrocketed, successfully intimidating African Americans and nearly shutting down the local chapter of the NAACP. Williams revived it to nearly 200 strong by reaching out to everyday laborers and to fellow Black veterans - men who were not easily intimidated. When repeated assaults on Black women in the county were ignored by the law, Williams filed for a charter from the NRA; the Black Armed Guard was born. During a 1957 integration campaign that faced violent white resistance, Williams' armed defense guard successfully drove off legions of the Klan and electrified the Black community. In 1961, Freedom Riders came to Monroe, planning to demonstrate the superior effectiveness of passive resistance over armed self-defense. They were bloodied, beaten and jailed, and finally called on Williams for protection from thousands of rioting Klansmen. Despite the threatening mobs, Williams sheltered a white family from violence, only to be later accused of kidnapping them. Fleeing death threats, Rob and Mabel gathered their children, left everything behind and fled for their lives pursued by FBI agents on trumped-up kidnapping charges. Williams and his family spent five years in Cuba where he wrote his electrifying book, Negroes With Guns and produced Radio Free Dixie for the international airwaves. They later moved on to China, where they were well received but always longed for their forbidden home. In 1969, Williams exchanged his knowledge of the Chinese government for safe passage to the States. Rob and Mabel lived their remaining days together in Michigan where he died in 1995. His body was returned at long last to his hometown of Monroe, N.C. Negroes with Guns is a presentation of the Independent Television Service (ITVS), with funding provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Film Trailer & Producer's website Radio Free Dixie Biography by Timothy Tyson, Ph.D. Freedom Archives Audio CD and Resource Guide "The Social Organization of Nonviolence" (1959) by Williams, from the Martin Luther King Papers Project Discussion Guide Facilitator Guide ITVS Presents Broadcast Independent Lens/PBS website | ||||
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