Julian Bond and Bayard Rustin at the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago. (Getty / Bettmann)
In May of 1969, Ebony magazine ran a profile of Julian Bond, the activist and civil rights leader who had recently been reelected to the Georgia House of Representatives. With the United States mere weeks away from putting a man on the moon and the war in Vietnam still raging, the magazine wanted to take stock of where Black America found itself at the end of the decade. It was a moment of both retrospection about the civil rights movement and excitement about what the future held for African American politics. Yet Bond had been fighting for freedom and justice for more than a decade, and it showed. Ebonys David Llorens wrote, Attractive cat that he is, Julian Bond looks tired.1Ad Policy Books in Review
The profile sought to examine what it meant for a radical stalwart, struggling against a broken system from the outside, to become a politician struggling to effect change from within it. Bonds shift from protest to politics, as Bayard Rustin put it in an article earlier in the decade, was a measure of how far the movement had changed Southern society. That Bond was one of the first Black people to serve in the Georgia legislature generations after Reconstruction was also a measure of how much further the nation as a whole had to go.2
After describing Bonds work as a state representative, his speaking tours at colleges, and his deepening involvement in the Democratic Party as its New Deal coalition started to unravel, Llorens moved on to discuss the twin pillars of pride and ambivalence that supported Bonds new role. These were the same pillars that held up the aspirations and fears of so many African Americans in the immediate aftermath of the civil rights movement. As Llorens wrote, Julian Bond, as a politician, represents hope for the freedom of black people, but it was a hope entirely dependent upon the possibility that white people are capable of a humane and non-racist America. For Llorens, this hope was real and somewhat tangible. But as he noted at the end of the passage, it depended on a radical change in the thought and action of white Americanssomething that in 1969 still appeared far off because of a continuation of the backlash politics that had defined American political, social, cultural, and intellectual discourse ever since Reconstruction.3
That mix of felt urgency and anxious uncertainty about how much change could be made in American society would define Bonds efforts for much of his career. His time in office, like his time as an activist, would be characterized by both his hopes for greater social equality and the continuing need to fight for such change when these hopes were too often thwarted. This tension was central to nearly all of his writing, much of which is now collected in a new book, Race Man, edited by the historian Michael G. Long.4
Race Man captures the full output of Bonds long and distinguished career, first as an activist with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, then as a member of the Georgia legislature (in the House and later in the Senate), then as a traveling academic who taught about his experiences in the social upheavals of the 60s, and finally as a writer and aging lion of the civil rights movement still fighting to hold on to the ideals of his youth. Along the way, the book also makes clear a set of themes and quandaries that have troubled so much of the history of the American left: What is lost in the movement from protest to politics? How can lasting change be achieved in the face of unsatisfying compromise? How can radicals and activists carry the torch of emancipation and equality in an age in which both major parties and many voters appear, at best, apathetic to meaningful change and, at worst, downright hostile to it?5
Bonds years as an activist also offer a guide through the intellectual and political history of the left in the second half of the 20th century. As Long argues in his introduction, Bonds importance to the history of the United States and the American left in particular is nearly impossible to overestimate today. Very few Americans, he writes, had sought more consistently and doggedly to establish solid connections between the black civil rights movement and the many progressive movements it sometimes unpredictably inspired.6
Julian Bond was born in 1940 in Nashville. His father, Horace Mann Bond, was the first president of Fort Valley State University in Georgia and later became the first Black president of Lincoln University in Pennsylvania, both historically Black institutions. While serving as a college president, Horace Bond participated in the intellectual ferment of the World War II and early Cold War years. He did considerable research to support the NAACPs arguments in the landmark Brown v. Board of Education case of 1954 and served as a prominent civil rights advocate during the period. The elder Bonds participation in the rarefied world of African American educators and intellectuals meant that his son was exposed to many of the leaders of Black America from an early age. A famous image of Julian Bond as a young boy, for example, shows him side by side with the actor, singer, and activist Paul Robeson. The photograph itself is a testament to the intergenerational links between the different civil rights cohorts.7Current Issue
Subscribe today and Save up to $129.
Yet Bonds early exposure to the intellectual creativity and political activism of Black America would hardly shield him from the racism and violence spawned by white supremacy. In the Jim Crow South, Bond saw racism and discrimination all around hima radicalizing experience that never left him, even after he and his family moved to Pennsylvania when his father became the head of Lincoln University. Bonds growing politicization throughout the 50s was only deepened by his years at the George School, a prep school founded by Quakers, where he began to develop his long-term fascination with pacifism.8
In 1957, Bond returned to Georgia to attend Morehouse College. Long a hotbed of Black struggle and uplift, the school helped launch his career in civil rights activism. He met Martin Luther King Jr. in 1960 while at Morehouse, and that year he cofounded, with fellow student Lonnie King, the Committee on the Appeal for Human Rights, which eventually led to his involvement in the creation of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Bond immediately understood the significance of SNCC and the role that students could play in expanding the civil rights movement. The younger generation of Black Americans was ready to use new tactics to fight for the kind of social change their parents and grandparents sought in previous eras. Reflecting on the rise of these new organizations, Bond wrote, The struggle for human rights is a constant fight, and one which the students do not plan to relinquish until full equality is won for all men.9
Against the backdrop of African nations declaring their independence abroad and civil rights agitation growing at home, 1960 saw a wave of sit-ins, starting in Greensboro, N.C. Four students at North Carolina A&T, a Black college, decided to stage a sit-in, adopting the tactics of nonviolent direct action already being used by various civil rights organizations. Word of the sit-ins spread across the South, spurring even more sit-ins as well as Bonds participation in Atlanta. Why dont we make it happen here? Lonnie King said to Bond in February 1960. That brief conversation, between two young men who yearned to be part of the great moral and political issue of their age, sparked Bonds lifelong service to the movement.10
Bond participated in the sit-ins in Atlanta that year and in a whirlwind series of campaigns across the South as the communications director of SNCC. Leaving Morehouse to dedicate himself to this work full-time, Bond, like many other young Black Americans, accepted that he would have to relinquish the comforts of the college campus and risk life and limb in the fire of activism. At this time, he began to think in broader terms about the idea of human rights, looking beyond Americas shores to recognize the violence and oppression that the country inflicted on various peoples of color elsewherean internationalism that he would soon marry to his domestic egalitarianism.11Related Article
By the mid-60s, after five years of working with SNCC, Bond began to grow frustrated. While he recognized the changing nature of struggle, he had always imagined SNCC as an organization that would embrace everyone, and he became worried about its increasingly separatist politics. I didnt like the direction it seemed to be taking, he recalled, especially as SNCC embraced the idea of becoming an exclusively Black organization.12
Despite Bonds ambivalence about SNCCs separatist turn, the organization continued to exert a major influence on his life, especially with its anti-imperialist politics in the middle of the decade. SNCC denounced the Vietnam War, and Bond grew increasingly active in anti-war efforts. He also began to consider running for office. In early 1965, Rustin made his appeal to civil rights activists to turn from protest to politics, arguing that the problems they would continue to face, even after the passage of the Civil Rights and Voting Rights acts, required more than demonstrations. By then, Bond was preparing a run for the Georgia House of Representatives, and he was joined by the many different strands of the Black freedom strugglethe mainstream civil rights movement, Black nationalists, and the growing number of African Americans active in the Democratic Partythat were also making the move.13
After his election, Bond found himself at a curious intersection of local, national, and international politics when the state House refused to seat him because he had endorsed SNCCs anti-war stance. SNCC, Martin Luther King Jr., and other activists rallied to defend Bonds right to represent his constituency in Atlanta. Eventually the Supreme Court ruled, 90, in Bond v. Floyd that his right to free speech had been violated by the state Houses vote to deny him a seat.14
After Bond became a legislator, he found that more of his peers were following in his footsteps. People like John Lewis, Marion Barry, and Jim Clyburn, after years in the streets demanding change, were now running for office as they sought to secure and extend the gains they had helped win. It seemed the logical next step, even if the change that could be achieved in state legislatures sometimes appeared small compared with what could be done at the federal level. And yet, as Llorens wrote in Ebony, that kind of work mattered as well: Basic services like streetlights, garbage removal, sewage, repairing roads, and draining water from flooded basements were some of the things we need as Julian sees it, and he takes pride in being able to use his political weight to deliver them. Those are things my constituents werent always able to get in the past, he says. Nor are most of his constituents, whoare victims of poverty, apt to forget the water removed or the street repaired.15
The essays in Race Man nicely illustrate this trajectory from college activist to elected official (and beyond). Broken into 10 sections, the book traces Bonds political formation throughout these periods of his life. The problems of white supremacy, capitalism, imperialism, and misogyny were his fights throughout, even if they all changed shape. From the struggle against Jim Crow to the battle for LGBTQ rights, he remained convinced that it was necessary to agitate on behalf of the powerless outside the halls of power, but as he got older, he became convinced one had to do it from inside them as well. Whether as an activist struggling for voting rights or as a politician in the Georgia legislature redrawing district boundaries, Bond insisted that only through a combination of movements and policy could social change be achieved.16
Bonds essays capture the intellectual world that inspired him and that he helped inspire in turn. Though dedicated to egalitarian politics, he often found himself in heated debate with other elements of the left. This was especially true in the late 60s, as the hope of nonviolent civil disobedience peacefully changing American society began to buckle under the strain of Vietnam, the half-hearted War on Poverty, and the ever-present specter of white backlash. The rise of the Black power movement offered Bond and other civil rights activists a unique challenge: They embraced many key components of this more radical turn but also struggled to find their way among its constituency, one that increasingly seemed to view the gains they had won as limited and incomplete.17
Of course, in many ways those gains were incomplete, and reading Bonds response to his more radical contemporaries, one can see that he might have missed how their militant spiritnot to mention their ability to continue to find common cause with social movements all over the worldhelped, in the long run, to solidify the reforms he and his colleagues had won. An example of this is seen in his writings about South Africa and the growing movement to divest from the apartheid state, in which Bond sounded far more like his more radical peers. There is an inseparable connection between black Africa and black America, he argued in 1978 while participating in a protest against a Davis Cup match between the United States and South Africa in Nashville. This was not a coincidence: After all, Bond was also in pursuit of an equality far greater than the federal government was willing to offer, and the civil rights liberalism that their protest spawned was, in their view, only the beginning, not the end point. Likewise, Bond, who hewed steadfastly to pacifism early in his public life, also began to doubt, with his more radical colleagues, its efficacy in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and while he lauded the achievements of the sit-ins, he came to recognize the clear limits of early civil rights activism. Indeed, that was one of the reasons he turned to electoral politics.18
Bonds ambivalence about the growing radicalism of SNCC was also rooted in his desire for more concrete action. Intimately aware of the organizations internal discord, he concluded that it had become mired at times in what he called too much democracy and a lack of decision-making by its leaders. He did not appear to question SNCCs democratic goals, but he felt that by 1967 its leadership was no longer taking responsibility for the groups decisions, in terms of both immediate tactics and long-term strategies.19
One policy change in particular frustrated him: the separatism that no longer sought to build a multiracial membership in SNCC. Bond opposed this separatism on principle as well as for practical reasons, writing in 1967 that it would lead to near unanimous condemnation and cause SNCC activists to narrow the scope of their activities, effectively contained by their own unwillingness to trust the outside world. For Bond, part of the lesson of the 60s was that activism alone was not enough; one had to have a programmatic plan of action for both grassroots organizing and building political power in the face of rampant white backlash.20 MORE FROM Robert Greene II
Once in office, that was exactly what Bond attempted to do. He wanted to find a way around the dead end that movement politics appeared to face in the late 60s and the political weaknesses of white liberal complacency in the early 70s. While serving in the Georgia legislature, he amassed a national reputation, and by 1972, he began contributing serious ideas to the political ferment of that era.21
Bond participated in the discussions across the South that led to the 1972 National Black Political Convention in Gary, Ind. His criticism of both the American left and mainstream liberalism grew more pointed as the decade progressed, when he repeatedly expressed his deep ambivalenceif not outright hostilitytoward the presidential campaign and then presidency of former Georgia governor Jimmy Carter. Southern Baptists are fond of saying that prayer changes things, Bond wrote. Jimmy Carters religiosity has certainly had that effect on him, in fact has changed him from left to right to center so many times that converts to the Carter cause ought to take a cue from an earlier apostle, Thomas, who doubted. In the end, Bond was one of the few mainstream Black civil rights activists turned politicians who refused to back Carter during his 1976 run.22
For Bond, Carters candidacyas well as his backing by so many prominent African Americanswas less a betrayal than a reminder of how weak the Black vote was as a bloc within or, if need be, outside the Democratic Party. American politics has always been group politics, Bond wrote in 1977, during the first year of Carters administration, and Black movements and politicians needed to embrace this fact and form a cohesive electoral faction.23
Bonds arguments mirrored those put forth a decade earlier in the book Black Power by Charles V. Hamilton and the future Kwame Ture about the necessity for independent political action, now applied to electoral politics. And he was not wrong, either. During Reconstruction, Southern Black men formed the backbone of the Republican Party below the Mason-Dixon Line and thus wielded considerable power. During the New Deal era, both major parties sought Black voters while carefully trying to not antagonize pro-segregation white Southerners. In the 70s, with the New Right on the rise and liberalismas well as the broader ideas of social democracyunder threat across the Western world, Bond believed it was more urgent than ever for Black Americans to acquire sustained political power. The sooner we realize the difference between elections and governing, the better able well be to form ourselves into a political bloc, he wrote.24
This came, ironically, after Bond argued in 1972 that coalition politics always weakens at least one partner in the coalition rather than strengthens both partners (a fear Hamilton and Ture also voiced). Such questions, of course, are still with us, especially concerning the direction of the Democratic Party and whether it has taken generations of Black voters for granted.25
One of the advantages of Race Man is that instead of shuffling Bonds writings together by theme, Long presents them in chronological order so we can chart Bonds evolution as well as his consistency. We can see his thinking change over time on a wide variety of topicssometimes dramaticallyand while we can see the shifts in his tactics and strategies, we also see just how consistent his principles remained. However, the books chronological structure slightly overdetermines Bonds changes: We lose sight of the complicated nature of the broader civil rights and Black power movements, and at times it can be difficult to situate his arguments in the context of national politics and international tumult. From almost the outset of his career, Bond was writing from within the milieu of a Black freedom movement that inspired and was inspired by other movements in pursuit of freedom, justice, and equality elsewhere in the world.26
This is why Bonds seamless movement from domestic campaigns to international policy mirrored a broader awareness among Black Americans of the need to get more involved in global affairs. It was also why there were sometimes moments of fierce friction, as displayed in the arguments Bond had in the 70s with the growing environmental movement. Pleading with its champions to look past a narrow politics of conservation and local resistance, he insisted, much like climate change activists today, that environmental pollution is only a symptom of the moral and political pollution at its core. Long before industrial filth fouled the rivers, lakes, and air of this continent, the bitter salt of slaves sweat and tears soured the [once] fertile soil and the blood of noble red men soaked the fields and plains.27
Bonds insistence that the environmental movements rhetoric about a ticking population bomb was equally misguided anticipated the birth of a more diverse and robust movement that sought to think more systemically about environmental problems. The growth of the environmental justice movement in the 70s and 80sa Blacker, poorer relative of the better-known movement that spawned Earth Day in 1970ameliorated Bonds fears by tapping into long-held concerns by Black Americans and others about the relationships between racism, land ownership, and environmental waste. This more sophisticated environmentalism also drew Bond into its movement, and he got arrested in 2013 at the White House while protesting the Keystone XL pipeline alongside members of the Sierra Club and in defiance of the nations first Black president.28
Bond was likewise concerned about a growing disconnect between activists and ordinary people in the 1970s. As Black power gave way to a Black liberalism safely ensconced in the Democratic Party, he continued to wonder if activists had lost their way. It suggests that the supposed and alleged security of the college campus is not the proper place from which to engage in social criticism of people who seldom see any book but the Bible from year to year, he warned, critiquing what he saw as an activism that had become too comfortable in the ivory tower, far removed from the everyday needs of working people.29
By the late 70s and early 80s, Bond had become, for many Americans, an avatar of the civil rights movement and its legacy. He lent his voice to the groundbreaking miniseries Eyes on the Prize, serving as a one-man Greek chorus for the now-iconic struggle. He hosted an early episode of Saturday Night Live, cementing his status as a national public figure. But there was an increasing sense that Bond had failed to live up to his early promise on the political stage and that as his celebrity grew, so did his distance from his constituents in Georgia. In a bruising 1986 race for the US House of Representatives that pitted him against his friend and colleague from the civil rights movement John Lewis, Bond was criticized for having lost his way. Rumors that he used drugs were whispered about in Atlanta and were blown wide open when Lewis challenged him to a drug test. I love Julian like a brother, Lewis said in a 1990 profile of the two men in Atlanta magazine. But he fumbled the ball. He had unbelievable opportunities. He just didnt take advantage.30
Part of what hurt Bonds campaign, as The New York Times pointed out after his defeat, was the concern that his thousands of speaking engagements and television appearances elsewhere hampered his ability to be an effective voice in the Georgia Senate. That lost him the trust and goodwill he needed to win what turned out to be his toughestand finalpolitical campaign. After the election, Bond accepted teaching positions at several distinguished institutions, including Harvard and American University, and he reflected on the charge that he had failed to live up to his potential as the man who could have been the nations first Black vice president, perhaps even its first Black president. I cant do what other people want me to do, he said. Im absolutely content and fulfilled right now [teaching and lecturing]. Its enough for me. Im confused as to why its not enough for anyone else.31
Bond remained active in left political circles for the rest of his life, and he continued to consider how one could be radical and yet work within the system, sounding the alarm during George W. Bushs and Barack Obamas presidencies on a range of issues, especially the erosion of voting rights and the need to fight for LGBTQ rights.32
It is difficult to imagine a thorough history of the American left after 1960 that doesnt include Bond and the many roles he played: as a communications director for SNCC, as a state legislator for 20 years, as the first president of the Southern Poverty Law Center (a position he assumed in 1971), as the voice that millions of people associated with the civil rights movement thanks to Eyes on the Prize, and as an elder statesman of the movement before his death in 2015. His balancing act between radicalism and reform, between movements and party politics, still speaks to the divides and the cohesiveness of the left. Fighting for freedom in the streets, in the classrooms, and in the halls of power was all part of Bonds tool kit. Reading his essays, we are reminded that the challenges of forging a principled yet practical path forward are nothing newand that Bond is someone who might serve as a guide in our own uncertain times. We cannot be afraid of difficult debates or of changing tactics when necessary. Julian Bond proved that, time and time again.33
See more here:
Julian Bonds Life in Protest and Politics - The Nation
- Haringey: Further tales of Labour Party discontent on the 'Corbyn... - onlondon.co.uk [Last Updated On: June 22nd, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 22nd, 2020]
- West Bengal- The Israel for Hindu Bengalis? Its time to redeem the pledge on the day Bengal was partitioned - OpIndia [Last Updated On: June 22nd, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 22nd, 2020]
- Rocked to the core: Mining giants confront an ancient, incalculable risk - Sydney Morning Herald [Last Updated On: June 22nd, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 22nd, 2020]
- Flag flap: Retired UA prof says the American flag on Flattop is abuse of power by Dunleavy Administration - Must Read Alaska [Last Updated On: June 22nd, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 22nd, 2020]
- Perhaps We Don't Understand?- The End of the West - Visegrad Insight [Last Updated On: June 22nd, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 22nd, 2020]
- Beijings violent rise must be checked - The New Indian Express [Last Updated On: June 22nd, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 22nd, 2020]
- When riot cops came to Bowral - Red Flag [Last Updated On: June 22nd, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 22nd, 2020]
- From Prison to the Halls of Power: A Politician's Son Lobbies to Let People on Parole Vote - Lost Coast Outpost [Last Updated On: June 22nd, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 22nd, 2020]
- The remarkable life and legacy of indigenous leader Berta Cceras - Salon [Last Updated On: June 22nd, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 22nd, 2020]
- Move to annex parts of West Bank could come as early as July 1 - jewishpresstampa [Last Updated On: June 22nd, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 22nd, 2020]
- President says he will renew effort to end DACA protections - - KUSI [Last Updated On: June 22nd, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 22nd, 2020]
- Delhis urban planners must stop ignoring the shoddy infrastructure in its 135 urban villages - Scroll.in [Last Updated On: June 22nd, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 22nd, 2020]
- Japan to revise security strategy with halt to Aegis Ashore system : The Asahi Shimbun - Asahi Shimbun [Last Updated On: June 22nd, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 22nd, 2020]
- How my colonial smugness evaporated with one explosive revelation - Stuff.co.nz [Last Updated On: June 22nd, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 22nd, 2020]
- With the World Focused on the Pandemic, Israel Prepares to Annex Large Swaths of the West Bank - The Intercept - First Look Media [Last Updated On: June 22nd, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 22nd, 2020]
- Trump is about to land his 200th federal judge. The impact will last 'generations.' - NBC News [Last Updated On: June 22nd, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 22nd, 2020]
- Tribune Editorial: Make DACA the law of the land - Salt Lake Tribune [Last Updated On: June 22nd, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 22nd, 2020]
- Visualizing the True Size of Land Masses from Largest to Smallest - Visual Capitalist [Last Updated On: June 22nd, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 22nd, 2020]
- Harris's path on police reform littered with land mines | TheHill - The Hill [Last Updated On: June 22nd, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 22nd, 2020]
- Elon Musk denies threesome with Amber Heard and Cara Delevingne - Page Six [Last Updated On: June 24th, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 24th, 2020]
- Column: Tesla's reluctant commitment to cobalt a warning to others - Andy Home - Reuters [Last Updated On: June 24th, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 24th, 2020]
- Why Intelligent Minds Like Elon Musk and Steve Jobs Embrace the Rule of Awkward Silence - Inc. [Last Updated On: June 24th, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 24th, 2020]
- Elon Musk Bitcoin vanity addresses used to scam users out of $2 million - ZDNet [Last Updated On: June 24th, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 24th, 2020]
- Artist turns Elon Musks viral tweets into illustrations that are now part of a colouring book - The Indian Express [Last Updated On: June 24th, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 24th, 2020]
- Elon Musk Is Attempting to Revolutionize HVAC Systems - ACHR NEWS [Last Updated On: June 24th, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 24th, 2020]
- How to land a job at Elon Musk's SpaceX, according to the rocket company's software team - CNBC [Last Updated On: June 24th, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 24th, 2020]
- Leaked Elon Musk Email, Plus Tesla Firmware 2020.24.6 and Texas Gigafactory Hearing - TheStreet [Last Updated On: June 24th, 2020] [Originally Added On: June 24th, 2020]
- Photos: Why The Gypsum Hills Are The 'Best Kept Secret' In Kansas - KMUW [Last Updated On: July 10th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 10th, 2020]
- A Powerful Chief And Unexpected Splits: 6 Takeaways From The Supreme Court Term - HPPR [Last Updated On: July 12th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 12th, 2020]
- One key solution to the world's climate woes? Canada's natural landscapes - The Narwhal [Last Updated On: July 12th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 12th, 2020]
- 245 homes could be built on greenbelt land in the 'last village in Gloucester' - Gloucestershire Live [Last Updated On: July 12th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 12th, 2020]
- From the Archives, 1995: Flagging reconciliation - The Age [Last Updated On: July 12th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 12th, 2020]
- Navigating the Self: African Student Experiences in U.S. Higher Education - The Yale Politic [Last Updated On: July 12th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 12th, 2020]
- What 9 GOP Campaign Consultants Really Think About Republicans Chances in November - Rolling Stone [Last Updated On: July 12th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 12th, 2020]
- COMMENTARY: I propose changing the name of Jackson County to Jackson County - The Cherokee One Feather - Cherokee One Feather [Last Updated On: July 12th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 12th, 2020]
- The end is now in sight for the fight to preserve west basin - The Canberra Times [Last Updated On: July 13th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 13th, 2020]
- Beyond the Crossroads - bellacaledonia.org.uk [Last Updated On: July 13th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 13th, 2020]
- Friction between liberal ideology and tribal sovereignty comes to the fore - Washington Examiner [Last Updated On: July 13th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 13th, 2020]
- The General Election of 2020 - ft.lk [Last Updated On: July 14th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 14th, 2020]
- WILLY MUTUNGA - Saba Saba at 30: The Struggle for Progressive Alternative Political Leadership in Kenya Continues - The Elephant [Last Updated On: July 14th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 14th, 2020]
- Four traveller groups arrive in the Black Country - expressandstar.com [Last Updated On: July 14th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 14th, 2020]
- America may vote Trump out, but will it ever lose his legacy? - Shout Out UK [Last Updated On: July 14th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 14th, 2020]
- An international student's perspective on race relations on campus - University of Dallas University News [Last Updated On: July 14th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 14th, 2020]
- TALKING POINT TUESDAY: Party representatives give their views on homelessness in the city - In Your Area [Last Updated On: July 14th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 14th, 2020]
- Convoys mark 30th anniversary of Oka crisis as land dispute... - Todayville.com [Last Updated On: July 14th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 14th, 2020]
- The fact that Peter Beinart 'no longer believes in a Jewish State' tells us a lot - Middle East Monitor [Last Updated On: July 14th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 14th, 2020]
- Controversial decision to sell off land for 110 homes at Lakeside to be reconsidered by committee - Burnham and Highbridge Weekly News [Last Updated On: July 14th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 14th, 2020]
- Supreme Court says eastern half of Oklahoma is Native American land - CNBC [Last Updated On: July 14th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 14th, 2020]
- Ontario premier won't say if province will cover $1.35B deficit faced by Toronto - CTV News [Last Updated On: July 18th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 18th, 2020]
- Being a nation and the bogey of self-determination - The Tribune India [Last Updated On: July 18th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 18th, 2020]
- Mompremier happy to land with Sun - News from southeastern Connecticut - theday.com [Last Updated On: July 18th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 18th, 2020]
- Book World: How elites distorted the meaning of populism - The Advocate [Last Updated On: July 18th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 18th, 2020]
- Eriksmoen: North Dakota mother and daughter represented people they cared about in 'Wizard of Oz' and the real-life Emerald City - Grand Forks Herald [Last Updated On: July 18th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 18th, 2020]
- Supreme Court ruling expanded tribal land. What does that mean for Arizona? - AZCentral [Last Updated On: July 18th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 18th, 2020]
- Column: Should Slave Owner Jefferson Be a Hero? - Southern Pines Pilot [Last Updated On: July 18th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 18th, 2020]
- Murder hornets, unexpected court rulings and nasty politics: 2020 has it all - Bangor Daily News [Last Updated On: July 19th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 19th, 2020]
- Liberal Zionism begins to make the journey towards a one-state solution - Middle East Eye [Last Updated On: July 19th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 19th, 2020]
- Renaming the Army Bases - The New York Times [Last Updated On: July 19th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 19th, 2020]
- Trump opponents' worst traits are Trump's fault | News, Sports, Jobs - Minot Daily News [Last Updated On: July 21st, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 21st, 2020]
- Here's how much men and women earn at every age - CNBC [Last Updated On: July 21st, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 21st, 2020]
- From fighting Covid-19 to locusts, drones showcase their potential and wide user-applications - DNA India [Last Updated On: July 21st, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 21st, 2020]
- Anglin: History illuminated as the sun sets on Ranger - San Antonio Express-News [Last Updated On: July 21st, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 21st, 2020]
- Art for trying times: reading Richard Ford on a world undone by calamity - The Conversation AU [Last Updated On: July 21st, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 21st, 2020]
- Kelly Hawes column: Supreme Court holds government to its word - The Herald Bulletin [Last Updated On: July 21st, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 21st, 2020]
- The Care of our COMMON HOME fires up Priests of Goa - Oherald [Last Updated On: July 21st, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 21st, 2020]
- Mandryk: Pandemic concerns should have trumped Buffalo grievances - The Province [Last Updated On: July 21st, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 21st, 2020]
- If Democrats Win, They Must Show Israel That Unilateral Annexation Has Consequences - Foreign Policy [Last Updated On: July 21st, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 21st, 2020]
- Controversial Lakeside land decision to be reconsidered at virtual meeting this month - Burnham and Highbridge Weekly News [Last Updated On: July 21st, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 21st, 2020]
- Unable to land hits on Biden, Trump paints him as socialist Trojan horse - NBC News [Last Updated On: July 21st, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 21st, 2020]
- Do we need to stop eating meat? - Telegraph.co.uk [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2020]
- The Forgotten History of the Jewish, Anti-Zionist Left - Jacobin magazine [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2020]
- Israeli Settlements in the West Bank: Why Palestine is More Vulnerable Than Ever - International Policy Digest [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2020]
- Whose natural resources are they anyway? - Deccan Herald [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2020]
- 'Vande Mataram': My Shock Recognition About Claims to the Matrubhoomi - The Wire [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2020]
- Great American Outdoors Act heads to Trump as Cory Gardner leans on measure in reelection bid - The Colorado Sun [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2020]
- Opposition calls for Sixfields deal to be open to scrutiny but council denies agreement is reached with Cobblers - Northampton Chronicle and Echo [Last Updated On: July 29th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 29th, 2020]
- In the News: Wednesday, July 29 - capitalcurrent.ca [Last Updated On: July 29th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 29th, 2020]
- Militias' warning of excessive federal power comes true but where are they? - Thehour.com [Last Updated On: July 29th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 29th, 2020]
- Supreme Court ruling a reminder of how badly Native Americans have been treated | Quigley - nj.com [Last Updated On: July 29th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 29th, 2020]
- Ethics commissioner expands probe of Morneau on eve of PM's WE testimony - The Outlook [Last Updated On: July 30th, 2020] [Originally Added On: July 30th, 2020]