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+Part 1 is the Framing |
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+We must look towards policies that can change the material impacts of Black/Brown people but also implement value reorientations |
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+Dr. Tommy J. Curry 1The Cost of a Thing: A Kingian Reformulation of a Living Wage Argument in the 21st Century. 2014 |
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+Despite the pronouncement of debate as an activity a |
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+currently justify the living wages in under our contemporary moral parameters. |
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+In order to talk about the issues, we have to examine the relation between blackness and nuclear prohibition. People of color have already faced the impacts of nuclear conflicts and wastes. It’s time to disrupt that cycle. Omolade 84 Barbara Omolade received her bachelor’s degree from Queens College, her master’s degree from Goddard College, and her PhD from the City University of New York. She has worked extensively for women’s and activist organizations and in academia “Women of Color and the Nuclear Holocaust” August 1984 PDF. |
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+To raise these issues effectively, the movement for nuclear dis- armament must imperialism, cultural integrity, and nuclear arsenals and housing? Who will stand up? |
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+Part 2 is the Solvency |
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+I affirm the resolution. Countries ought to prohibit the production of nuclear power. |
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+And, This is about how communities of color can better their lives. Countries need to find ways to make the material conditions better by actually prioritizing the communities their plans affect. Governments have a communal obligation to helping their countries Hartman 97 Saidiya Hartman is a professor at Columbia University specializing in African American literature and history. She grew up in Brooklyn and received her B.A. from Wesleyan University and Ph.D. from Yale University. Scenes of Subjection: Terror, Slavery, and Self-Making in Nineteenth-Century America. Oxford University Press 1997 |
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+The pleasure associated with surreptitious gatherings was due, in part, |
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+create fleeting and transient lines of connection across those differences. |
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+Black Leadership forum website: |
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+History Founded in 1977 by Vernon Jordan, Dr. Dorothy Height, Coretta Scott King, Dr. Benjamin Hooks, Dr. Joseph Lowery |
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+African American Community is not only expressed but also met through Public Policy. |
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+ |
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+Eurocentric countries and other dominant bodies have levied nuclear power as a way to divert the conversation around antiblackness and create a mode of dominance within those communities |
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+Welch 98 Sharon Welch is Provost and Professor of Religion and Society at Meadville Lombard Theological School (Unitarian Universalist). “The Feminist Ethic of Risk” PDF |
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+Bambara provides a concise, clear discussion of the connections between racism, sexism, and the dangers of war |
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+crackers and your everyday macho pain the ass from the block?” (242) |
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+Part 3 are the impacts |
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+ |
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+It’s time to unveil the stories that governments have been hiding. People of color, like those in Georgia, have been facing a Flintian nuclear crisis. It’s time to put two and two together and realize that the SQ has a serious problem. Willis 16 “Shell Bluff: Georgia’s Own Flint Water Crisis” Regina Willis is an up-and-coming freelance reporter rooted in the South. They most recently worked as a statehouse reporter, covering politics under Georgia’s gold dome for two local publications. With a formal background in economics, they are a data junkie drawn to local politics and social justice movements. April 12, 2016 http://bettergeorgia.org/2016/04/12/shell-bluff-georgias-own-flint-water-crisis/ |
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+The stories of towns with contaminated water supplies are always disturbing: strange rashes, stunted growth, unexplained illnesses |
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+and every dose of radiation increases cancer risks,” according to the National Academy of Sciences. |
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+ |
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+And, the repercussions of nuclear waste affect Blacks on both physical and psychological levels Peterson 16 Josh Peterson is a reporter who works Urban News Service at the Missouri Department of Natural Resources “Near Ferguson, Nuclear Waste Fears Haunt Burning Landfill and Community” April 13, 2016 http://afro.com/near-ferguson-nuclear-waste-fears-haunt-burning-landfill-and-community/ |
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+Outside Ferguson, Missouri, another issue burns. This time, it’s environmental. An underground fire smolders toward radioactive w |
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+impact these people at any time 24/7. The landfill odors don’t care if it is day or night, hot or cold, a holiday or your birthday.” |
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+ |
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+Nuclear waste occurs globally affecting citizens like those in India Levy 15 Adrian Levy trained on the Burton Daily Mail now known as the Burton Mail, working also for the Bolton Evening News and as a chief reporter on the Yorkshire Post before becoming a staff reporter on The Sunday Times in 1994. There he became deputy editor of its investigative Insight Section, before being posted, in 1998, as a foreign correspondent in South Asia. He left to join The Guardian in 2001. “India’s nuclear industry pours its wastes into a river of death and disease” December 14, 2015 https://www.publicintegrity.org/2015/12/14/18844/india-s-nuclear-industry-pours-its-wastes-river-death-and-disease |
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+The name means streak of gold and for centuries prospectors around Ranchi, the traffic-choked capital of Jharkhand state, have |
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+shining an unusual light on India’s nuclear ambitions and placing a cloud over its future reactor operations. |
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+ |
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+Global hegemons all over the world use their power to take advantage of Black and Brown people |
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+Helen Caldicott 1 2015(“Crisis Without End: The Medical and Ecological Consequences of the Fukushima Nuclear Catastrophe”, January, 2015, Founder of the Cystic Fibrosis Clinic at the Adelaide Children’s Hospital, Pediatrics Instructor at the Harvard Medical School,) |
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+In essence, the two Gulf wars have been nuclear wars because they have scattered nuclear material across the land, |
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+by enriching their uranium beyond 50. America set the example years ago, and the world follows.22 |