Blog
Juneteenth: What Is Freedom?
Juneteenth marks the day in 1865 when the last enslaved Black Americans were officially freed, more than two years after the Emancipation Proclamation. It’s a day of jubilation and grief, a celebration of delayed liberation that still echoes today in the lives of...
Letters From Prison: Bradley in Colorado
Every day, we receive letters from people in prison. Our Letters From Prison series is a raw and unfiltered look into life behind bars, and these short excerpts speak for themselves. Just people, writing from inside. https://youtu.be/cMlpAsiWCUw Our Linktree is...
Your Sunday Read: Weekly Recap
Pour something warm and settle in. Catch up with the week’s stories about justice, resistance, policy, protest, and the power of difference. These weekly recaps are emailed to followers on Sundays. If you’d like it in email form (just once a week, no spam ever), you...
When All the Other Is Gone
This post explores what we lose when we erase the “other,” and what we gain when we protect it.
🔍 Fact Check Friday: “They’re just doing their jobs.”
Masked agents. No warrants. Rubber bullets. This isn’t immigration enforcement, it’s illegal, state-sanctioned terror. On this #FactCheckFriday, we break down what’s really happening in cities like LA and Nashville, and what your rights STILL are.
Locking People Up for Unpaid Fines or Fees
In some courts, missing a payment can still land you behind bars. This post breaks down how “pay or stay” policies function as modern-day debtor’s prisons — punishing people not for crimes, but for being poor.






