People with problems are not problem people.

Having a monolithic view of feminism is suffocating.

Some of the worst racist tragedies in history have been perfectly legal.

The empowerment of black women constitutes the empowerment of our entire community.

Social media makes it possible to go underneath a story, which sometimes abruptly ends.

The point of feminism is you shouldn't have to be a man to be treated with equal respect.

If we aren’t intersectional, some of us, the most vulnerable, are going to fall through the cracks.

Sexism isn't a one-size-fits-all phenomenon. It doesn't happen to black and white women the same way.

The struggle against patriarchy and racism must be substantively robust and inextricably intertwined.

When you ask people to name victims of police brutality, for the most part, nobody will give you a woman's name.

All too often, girls are ignored because their challenges aren't thought to be as serious as those faced by boys.

I think the O.J. Simpson trial was a revelation about the ongoing patterns of racial difference in American society.

Our democracy cannot be left in the hands of those who would rather watch or participate in a train wreck than stop it.

I think it's important for the American people to know that the position of originalism isn't itself an originalist position.

Intersectionality has given many advocates a way to frame their circumstances and to fight for their visibility and inclusion.

Censorship is certainly not the answer to controversial material and is inconsistent with our most basic constitutional values.

What many people, I think, don't really understand is how much their rights really turn on the interpretation of the Supreme Court.

We have to move back to the idea that education isn't about teaching people to bow to rigid rules. That's not what democracy is about.

We're never going to come to a moment where all of us who claim to be feminists can agree about what the first priority of feminism is.

To never think about race means that it doesn't really shape your life, or more specifically, the race that you have is not a burden to you.

We might have to broaden our scope of how we think about where women are vulnerable, because different things make different women vulnerable.

Antiracists must acknowledge that patriarchy has long been a weapon of racism and cannot sit comfortably in any politic of racial transformation.

A lot of people think that intersectionality is only about identity. But it's also about how race and gender are structured in particular workforces.

The better we understand how identities and power work together from one context to another, the less likely our movements for change are to fracture.

Black women's intersectional experiences of racism and sexism have been a central but forgotten dynamic in the unfolding of feminist and antiracist agendas.

At the core of conservative social policy about race are old ideas that link racial inequality to non-traditional family formation and its attendant culture of poverty.

We must all stand against both the continual, systematic, and structural racial inequities that normalize daily violence as well as against extreme acts of racial terror.

'Separate but unequal' didn't work in respect to race, it doesn't work in respect to gender, and it especially doesn't work when looking at the intersection of race and gender.

Clearly, we must denounce militaristic approaches to global unrest and find life-affirming ways to end repressive cycles of violence rooted in discrimination, humiliation, and despair.

I think it's useful to recall that a lot of these statutes like 'disrupting the classroom' or 'disturbing the peace' have long been historically used to oppress and criminalize black people.

Suspension and expulsion are tied to a host of short- and long-term consequences. For some students, zero-tolerance policies in schools lead directly to involvement in the criminal justice system.

If you don't have a lens that's been trained to look at how various forms of discrimination come together, you're unlikely to develop a set of policies that will be as inclusive as they need to be.

Ideally, schools should be supportive environments for students. Unfortunately, zero-tolerance policies tend to funnel vulnerable students out of schools and into prisons, low-income jobs, and poverty.

It's not about supplication, it's about power. It's not about asking, it's about demanding. It's not about convincing those who are currently in power, it's about changing the very face of power itself.

Cultural patterns of oppression are not only interrelated but are bound together and influenced by the intersectional systems of society. Examples of this include race, gender, class, ability, and ethnicity.

The way we imagine discrimination or disempowerment often is more complicated for people who are subjected to multiple forms of exclusion. The good news is that intersectionality provides us a way to see it.

When people talked about O.J. Simpson being race-neutral, that was a race card. It just meant we don't think of him as black. But race-neutral is just like flesh-tone Band-aids. It's not neutral; it's white.

When feminism does not explicitly oppose racism, and when antiracism does not incorporate opposition to patriarchy, race and gender politics often end up being antagonistic to each other and both interests lose.

'Formation' and 'Lemonade' speak to experiences that are too under-represented in our culture. But there are costs to certain forms of visibility. I don't think it is a bad thing to discuss what these costs are.

When feminism does not explicitly oppose racism, and when anti-racism does not incorporate opposition to patriarchy, race and gender politics often end up being antagonistic to each other, and both interests lose.

Intersectionality is not easy. It's not as though the existing frameworks that we have - from our culture, our politics, or our law - automatically lead people to being conversant and literate in intersectionality.

Black girls are punished, many times violently so, for questioning and challenging authority, which is something that is often celebrated and encouraged as a sign of intelligence and critical thinking in white boys.

We are a society that has been structured from top to bottom by race. You don't get beyond that by deciding not to talk about it anymore. It will always come back; it will always reassert itself over and over again.

There are many, many different kinds of intersectional exclusions - not just black women but other women of color. Not just people of color, but people with disabilities. Immigrants. LGBTQ people. Indigenous people.

Feminists must denounce the use of white insecurity - whether in relation to white womanhood, white neighborhoods, white politics, or white wealth - to justify the brutal assaults against black people of all genders.

Justice Scalia was a person who effectively bludgeoned the life out of the living Constitution, the Constitution that gave us desegregation, that gave us women's rights, that gave us environmental protections and political access.

I have a wonderful, diverse, and young staff at the AAPF who pretty much work around the clock trying to figure out how we promote the idea that social justice requires us to be intersectional in our thinking and in our scope of vision.

Nonwhite and working-class women, if they are ever to identify with the organized women's movement, must see their own diverse experiences reflected in the practice and policy statements of these predominantly white middle-class groups.

Intersectionality draws attention to invisibilities that exist in feminism, in anti-racism, in class politics, so, obviously, it takes a lot of work to consistently challenge ourselves to be attentive to aspects of power that we don't ourselves experience.

I think that the same kind of openness and fluidity and willingness to interrogate power that we, as feminists, expect from men in alliance on questions of class should also be the expectation that women of colour can rely upon with our white feminist allies.

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