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Communities of color here face a burden of medical debt that dwarfs what white people experience, and what people of color experience in many other states
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Online racism tied to a Lubbock school might have greater implications for students and parents than imagined.
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The Texas State Board of Education is fielding proposals to update the state’s public school social studies curriculum this summer.
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Statistics collected in some cities show Black drivers are pulled over by police disproportionately, but not every department tracks the data.
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A new anti-racist toolkit from the Farmers Market Coalition is designed to help managers of farmers markets think about messaging, vendor support and product availability.
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Tiny Highland Community College in northeast Kansas attracts students from all over the country who attend on athletic scholarships. But in the last couple of years, the school has been sued for alleged hostility toward its Black student-athletes. Then the college president compared a Black football player to Hitler.
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Controversy about the video centers on its mention of white privilege, a phrase that refers to inherent advantages that white people have over people of color on the basis of their race.
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Under a proposed Parents' Bill of Rights, Kansas K-12 schools and libraries would no longer be exempt from obscenity laws, opening them to potential criminal charges if they distribute material found to be harmful to minors.
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The president of Highland Community College compared a Black football player to Hitler, whom she praised as “a great leader.”
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The episode illustrates an ongoing debate over lessons about racism and discrimination in Kansas schools.