TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「In 2020, many Black Americans and members of other marginalized groups decided the time had come to stop selecting their words so carefully. George Floyd was killed in late May when the world was unusually tense, in the thick of mass unemployment and a global pandemic that disproportionately affected people of color. Almost immediately, activists sprang from their lockdowns to say, “Enough is enough.” Their work included the typical organizing of rallies, but the swell of public protests did something else too: it emboldened more people of color to speak truths they had understood for years but kept buried out of concern for repercussions. Suddenly, these stories gained traction unthinkable just a few weeks before. Office workers demanded their employers fess up to their own legacies of racial bias in the workplace. Everyday people demanded that friends and family come to grips with this history—and threatened to end relationships if they didn’t. “The Movement for Black Lives did a really good job,” says Oluchi Omeoga, co-founder of the Minnesota-based activist group Black Visions Collective. “They made it uncomfortable to be racist in this moment.” Omeoga and racial-justice organizers are TIME's 2020 Guardians of the Year. Read more, and see the rest of #TIMEPOY, at the link in bio. Photograph by @rahimfortune for TIME」12月21日 2時02分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 12月21日 02時02分


In 2020, many Black Americans and members of other marginalized groups decided the time had come to stop selecting their words so carefully. George Floyd was killed in late May when the world was unusually tense, in the thick of mass unemployment and a global pandemic that disproportionately affected people of color. Almost immediately, activists sprang from their lockdowns to say, “Enough is enough.” Their work included the typical organizing of rallies, but the swell of public protests did something else too: it emboldened more people of color to speak truths they had understood for years but kept buried out of concern for repercussions. Suddenly, these stories gained traction unthinkable just a few weeks before. Office workers demanded their employers fess up to their own legacies of racial bias in the workplace. Everyday people demanded that friends and family come to grips with this history—and threatened to end relationships if they didn’t. “The Movement for Black Lives did a really good job,” says Oluchi Omeoga, co-founder of the Minnesota-based activist group Black Visions Collective. “They made it uncomfortable to be racist in this moment.” Omeoga and racial-justice organizers are TIME's 2020 Guardians of the Year. Read more, and see the rest of #TIMEPOY, at the link in bio. Photograph by @rahimfortune for TIME


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