Report: 94% of Native Seattle women have experienced sexual violence Guy Nelson talks with Abigail Echo-Hawk about a 2010 survey of Native women living in the Seattle area. It found that 94% of the women had been raped or coerced into sex at some point during their lives. Echo-Hawk directs the Urban Indian Health Institute in Seattle. Andy Hurst
Only children of color are being kicked out of the Seattle Public Library Guy Nelson talks with journalist Erica C. Barnett about why a disproportionate number of people of color are being kicked out of Seattle Public Library branches. Andy Hurst
Long Before Facebook, The KGB Spread Fake News About AIDS In the '80s, the Soviet Union and allies participated in a widespread disinformation campaign: disseminating the theory that the AIDS virus had been manufactured by the United States. NPR Staff
Anand Giridharadas: Do Hateful People Deserve Forgiveness? Anand Giridharadas spent two years researching a man who committed a string of hate crimes after 9/11. Along the way, he uncovered a striking story of mercy from an unlikely source: the man's victim. NPR/TED Staff
Robin DiAngelo On White People's 'Fragility' NPR's Jennifer Ludden talks to author Robin DiAngelo about her latest book, White Fragility: Why It's So Hard For White People To Talk About Racism.
How we realized we needed to question other people's biases Everyday we encounter things we don’t question and just accept. Things like stop signs: why are they octagons? And fire trucks: why are they red? At... Braeden Swanson
Integrating Sunday Morning Church Service — A Prayer Answered The 11 o'clock hour on a Sunday morning is one of the most segregated hours in America, Martin Luther King famously said. Now, one church in Oakland is trying to change that. NPR Staff
New Context For Confederate Memorials Regina Phillips, director of the Lincolnville Museum, an African-American history center in St. Augustine, Fla., talks with NPR's Lulu Garcia-Navarro about how to add context to Confederate monuments.
Black Pastors And Trump NPR's Lulu Garcia-Navarro speaks with Eugene Scott, identity politics reporter for The Washington Post, about the public backlash against black pastors who met with President Trump.
Gerry and Martin Luther King, Jr. On April 4, 1968, civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. is assassinated at a hotel in Memphis, Tennessee, threatening to further strain civil unrest in America. Arwen Nicks