M any people who support the current social justice movement are drawn to it for deeply moral reasons, including a sense of compassion and a desire for fairness and justice. They are concerned with real racial problems such as police brutality, racial profiling, disparities in incarceration rates, and related issues. They feel horror and grief, as we all should, over our nation’s history of slavery, racial violence, and discrimination. They see other troubling forms of discrimination in addition to racism, such as sexism in the workplace, bullying due to sexual and gender identity, and so on. Critical social justice ideology is the worldview presented as the one true way to interpret these concerns. Informed by critical theory and postmodernism—ideas that developed in academia and then spilled out into society at large—this ideology is in opposition to traditional theory, which uses reason and logic to interpret the world, build on past progress, and address problems. Cert...
An Algorithm of Success: Understanding Black America , John Sibley Butler Education and entrepreneurship are the algorithm of success for minorities. Market economies are key. "Understanding the success model of America means understanding differences between segregation, homophily and different modes of adjustment to America, one of the greatest market economies that ever existed. We have over 150 years of data to help us understand strategies that lead to success in America under all kinds of circumstances. "So what is it that leads to success? "If we were to create a learning algorithm for group success, and indeed non-success, through the generations, we start with how groups enter market economies, either with an emphasis on wage labor or as entrepreneurs. The algorithm would tell us that, in the aggregate, those groups that entered by putting self-employment at its very center, and also created educational structures for success, have much better outcomes than tho...
World Poverty Since 1990 Since the early 1990s more than 700 million people have been lifted out of extreme poverty, six million fewer children die every year from disease, tens of millions more girls are in school, millions more people have access to clean water, and democracy—often fragile and imperfect—has become the norm in developing countries around the world. The Great Surge chronicles this unprecedented economic, social, and political transformation. It shows how the end of the Cold War, the development of new technologies, globalization, and courageous local leadership have combined to improve the fate of hundreds of millions of people in poor countries around the world.
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