Resisting biometric surveillance requires more than opting out.
Social media has the power to fuel鈥攐r foil鈥攕ocial movements.
Sharing our stories online enables us to define who we were, who we are, and who we will be as Indigenous peoples.
LGBTQ people are creating queer churches where no one鈥檚 identity is a sin.
We must honor our foods as the wisdom keepers they are.
Social media demands that we navigate the fine line between connection and envy.
Our data has real impacts on the planet and its people.
Everyone deserves access to the devices, affordable internet, and knowledge to participate in our digital world.
The stolen souls aboard the Clotilda slave ship鈥檚 final, illegal voyage remained suspended across space and time.
X, the platform formerly known as Twitter, still exists more than a year after Elon Musk acquired it, but it鈥檚 a shell of its former self. Rather than a real-time
Thanks to pop culture, more couples than ever are seeking professional help in service of better sex.
Reina Sultan is a Lebanese American Muslim journalist and one of the co-creators of 8 to Abolition. She is a prison industrial complex abolitionist and anarchafeminist, working to disrupt systems
Dear Reader, I love every YES! issue, but this one is special. It addresses what I鈥檝e come to believe is the overarching challenge (and opportunity) of our time. For more
Tulsa鈥檚 Greenwood District is measuring its wealth in bonds between people and generations, even as reparations for the 1921 massacre remain elusive.
California is closer than any other state to realizing reparations for Black people. Now, the state faces a make-or-break moment.
Cities like Evanston, Illinois, and Asheville, North Carolina are paving the way for local reparations in the absence of a federal plan.
Centering healing justice in the filmmaking process offered this creator鈥攁nd everyone involved in the film鈥攁 powerful way to begin to heal core wounds.
Investing in programs, resources, and physical spaces by and for Black youth is critical to narrowing generationally inherited disparities in wealth, health, and beyond.
As the movement for reparations gains steam, mainstream and independent content creators continue to find new ways to advance the idea of reparative damages for Black people on screen.
An exclusive digital series exploring the leading edges of the reparations ecosystem鈥攁nd revealing a path toward healing and reconciliation.
Can 鈥渞eparationist鈥 be a distinct identity, akin to feminist or abolitionist, a label worn with pride by progressives who believe in reparative compensation for Black聽people?
After a 2021 leak at the U.S. military鈥檚 Red Hill fuel storage facility poisoned thousands, activists, Native Hawaiians, and affected military families have become unlikely allies in the fight for accountability.
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