April 10, 2025

Systemic injustice and its ongoing impact on Black Americans – Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder

For 90 years, the MSR has been more than a newspaper—it’s been a trusted voice for Black stories, struggles, and triumphs.
Your support today ensures that our legacy of empowerment and truth continues for the next generation. Together, we can keep our stories alive.
Your contribution is appreciated.

Make a contribution to support community journalism today.  All levels of support are greatly needed and appreciated.
Your contribution is appreciated.
We also welcome support in the form of checks to the MSR office at 3744 4th Avenue South, Minneapolis, 55409. The MSR is a for-profit business. Your support is not tax-deductible.
Get your daily dose of community news, info, events, exclusive deals and more!
Register today for your daily dose of community news, info, events, exclusive deals and more!
Privacy Policy
Thank you for registering!
An account was already registered with this email. Please check your inbox for an authentication link.
Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder
As It Is Spoken, Let Us Record – Inform, Inspire & Impact
Black Americans have survived what no other group in the United States has had to endure — a targeted, generational campaign of systemic injustice that spans slavery to the present day. The historic African American experience includes Black Codes, convict leasing, Jim Crow, redlining, sundown towns, COINTELPRO, mass incarceration, and the calculated destruction of over 60 thriving Black towns. 
Stay in the know. Sign up for our newsletter!
Get your daily dose of community news, info, events, exclusive deals and more!
The pain is historical, but the oppression is ongoing.
A striking image circulating on social media drives home this point. It lists horrors that Black communities have endured: the assassination of Black leaders, CIA-linked crack cocaine flooding neighborhoods, police lynchings, denial of GI Bill benefits, FHA loan exclusion, media demonization, and the theft of land from Black farmers. The post ends with a haunting question: “And you still ask why we’re not ‘equal’?”
Despite this irrefutable record of injustice, the Trump administration and its allies have not only refused to reckon with the truth — they’ve launched a full-fledged assault on any progress toward justice.
Once considered essential to workplace fairness and civic equity, diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) has now been made into a political target. In Trump’s rhetoric and in his policies, DEI is no longer a path forward but a so-called threat to traditional America. The term has been villainized to the point where, for many on the right, it’s become the new curse word. 
In addition, for many Trump supporters and members of the GOP, the word “woke” has taken on the weight of the N-word — weaponized to silence and shame those who demand equality.
Trump has repeatedly mocked the idea of anti-racism, attacking education and corporate programs that seek to rectify centuries of bias. Under his influence, state governments have banned discussions of race, critical race theory, and Black history from classrooms. And that war on memory has now moved from the classroom to the cemetery.
In one of the most chilling moves to date, the Trump administration has purged Black military legends from the Department of Defense website and Arlington National Cemetery tributes. These weren’t just names. They were patriots who served a country that too often failed to serve them. 
Their erasure is not coincidental — it’s ideological. It signals a return to a sanitized version of American history where Black contributions are omitted and white supremacy is coddled.
And while the erasure is symbolic, the policy consequences are all too real. Black veterans were denied GI Bill benefits after World War II, cutting off access to the middle class. Black families continue to be denied home loans at far higher rates than white families. Black farmers have had millions of acres stolen or taken through discriminatory USDA practices — losses that ripple through generations.
Meanwhile, Trump and many in his party continue to peddle dangerous racial tropes. His rallies are filled with dog whistles and overt calls to “take our country back.” Cities with high Black populations are routinely labeled “crime-ridden” and “lost.” News outlets that challenge these narratives are dismissed as biased, and those who speak out are told to “go back” where they came from.
It’s not just rhetoric — it’s a strategy, one that seeks to delegitimize Black pain, erase Black history, and destroy the tools designed to close racial gaps.
The question isn’t why Black people aren’t “equal.” It’s why this country is still doing everything in its power to make sure they never are.
The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. once warned that “the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.” But in Trump’s America, that arc is being yanked backward — pulled by those who see equality not as a goal, but as a threat.
And as the social media post so painfully reminds us, until this country confronts its past — and stops repeating it — equality will remain a promise still denied.
The post “BROWN: Why We’re Not Equal — A Painful American Truth Black Communities Still Endure” appeared first on The Washington Informer.
Make a contribution to support community journalism today.  All levels of support are greatly needed and appreciated.
Your contribution is appreciated.
We also welcome support in the form of checks to the MSR office at 3744 4th Avenue South, Minneapolis, 55409.
The MSR is a for-profit business. Your support is not tax-deductible.
Stacy M. Brown is the NNPA Newswire senior national correspondent.





Sign in by entering the code we sent to , or clicking the magic link in the email.
Privacy Policy. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Get the best of Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder directly in your email inbox.
Sending to:

source

About The Author

Past Interviews

Download Our New App!

Umoja Radio Amazon Mobile AppUmoja Radio Amazon Mobile AppUmoja Radio Android Mobile AppUmoja Radio iPhone Mobile AppUmoja Radio iPhone Mobile App