Civil Rights for Black Americans Just Had the Best Month Ever

President Biden and the Department of Justice made a statement — but there’s still more work to be done

Bonsu Thompson
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Photo: Melina Mara/Getty Images

You’d be hard-pressed to find two weeks of American history more honorable to the civil rights and lives of Black people than the last 14 days. The 2020 murders of Breonna Taylor and George Floyd didn’t slow the rate of police killing Blacks; more than 200 have lost their lives to “bad apples” since former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin suffocated Floyd last May, according to data from research group Mapping Police Violence. That figure includes the six Black people killed by law enforcement since Chauvin’s second-degree murder and manslaughter conviction on April 20.

These despicable statistics illuminated the answered prayers in President Biden’s televised speech last Wednesday night. The 46th POTUS addressed Congress with a $1.8 trillion plan to upgrade the country with infrastructure and civil rights legislation, placing an emphasis on jobs and education from preschool through college. The highlight, though, was Biden’s acknowledgment of those whose civil rights have been and continue to be violated.

Biden demanded equality for Asian, Black, and transgender people, while calling out the metastasized…

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Bonsu Thompson
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Writer for

Bonsu Thompson is a writer, producer, Brooklynite and 2019 Sundance Screenwriters Lab fellow.