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This Week in Oklahoma Politics discusses Gov. Kevin Stitt refusal to renew hunting and fishing licenses for Oklahoma tribes and a bill banning Oklahoma schools from teaching curriculum based off "The 1619 Project" regarding the Black experience during and after slavery.
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A Republican Oklahoma lawmaker is proposing a ban of the 1619 Project curriculum, which centers on Black Americans' experience before and after slavery, in the classroom.
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While the Census Bureau's set to have its first director who's Latinx, an NPR analysis finds people of color are underrepresented in the top rank of civil servants at the country's main data producer.
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In Alabama, the co-founders of Black Homeschoolers of Birmingham say membership is growing as parents try to shield their children from racism in education and teach them about their own heritage.
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State Rep. Matt Krause launched an inquiry into school library books on topics like race and gender earlier this fall. A San Antonio district says it's reviewing some 400 titles that were on his list.
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The inductees include Bud Fowler, who played against white players before baseball segregated, and Buck O’Neil, player and founder of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum.
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Community leaders saw early in the pandemic that the city's residents of color were being hit hard by COVID-19. They worked with data analysts to show just how hard, where and why.
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'Reparations' is the final episode of The Battle for Greenwood, a three-part series from Focus: Black Oklahoma.
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The episode features reports on capital punishment, reproductive rights and Black WWII veterans.
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In a new interview airing on Monday with Tucker Carlson of Fox News, Rittenhouse says that the case had "never had anything do with race, it had to do with the right to self-defense."