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Arrested mobility, coined by author Charles T. Brown, threatens the ability for Black people to move freely in public.
Over the past 30 years, at least nine formerly Catholic properties in Buffalo have been sold for new uses by Muslims, who ...
Mass layoffs: A federal judge in California called for a two-week pause in the Trump administration’s mass layoff plans, ...
Most people who travel with their clubs would struggle to locate the country on a map. Even if they could identify it ... Armenia has been wracked by geopolitics and ravaged by genocide. Ethnic ...
Related: The Mouth-Watering Burgers at this Tiny Restaurant are Worth the Drive from Anywhere in Georgia Their rye bread deserves special mention for its perfect density and caraway punch that stands ...
Challengers tell a federal appeals court that Georgia lawmakers haven’t done enough to end illegal harms to Black voters.
Two ecologists explain why a misleading map is worse than no map at all, and how they have worked for years to track the emergences of 13-year and 17-year cicadas.
ATLANTA — Challengers on Thursday told a federal appeals court that Georgia lawmakers are still violating Black voters’ rights after redrawing the state’s congressional and legislative maps.
Lawyers for the challengers said there was no set standard, but that Georgia lawmakers hadn’t done enough. Abha Khanna, representing challengers in two lawsuits said the new map “laundered ...