”, recalls the deaths of Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown and Sandra Bland, and chronicles the changes that communities have demanded as a result. Although the song was written a year ago, it is still harrowingly relevant today.spoke with the renowned musician about advocacy, unity and the need for art during times of unrest“The collective rage has existed for a long time. I don’t know if it’s quite existed in the consciousness that has reached so many people at one time — that’s what feels new.
“We know that as women, we have to always double, triple and quadruple [the] fight. As black women, we have the quintuple, sextuple fight. It’s all part of what we’re seeing as needed dialogue.”“That’s something that a group of us have been focusing on. [We] are all truly committed to Breonna Taylor not being forgotten and justice being served. For her particularly, because there wasn’t a video, it made it a little bit more feverish. With videos, you couldn’t ignore the clear awfulness.
Blackness is facing a lot right now. Not only do we have to be at the frontlines of an uprising, but we are also“We keep calling Covid-19 a pandemic, but really, this injustice, this racism is the major pandemic. It’s the pandemic we’ve been dealing with for hundreds of years. It’s an all-out assault. For the first time, people of every colour, background, and upbringing can bear witness to the assault and feel the pain of it. It’s time to see as clearly as we possibly can to stop all of this.
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Source: Daily Mail Online - 🏆 135. / 51 Read more »