In his work with black teenagers, pastor and mental health caseworker Darnell Hill teaches an unofficial guide to what he calls “living while black.” Though many black families have their own sets of rules to navigate others’ racist assumptions, Hill says he hopes that following his “do’s and don’ts” will allow kids to survive as unscathed as possible to realize their life ambitions. “Let’s just make it home,” Hill tells them. (Cara Anthony/KHN)
Top Posts & Pages
- Reworking Don McLean's "American Pie" YouTube creators The Founding Fathers post "The Day Democracy Died"
- Federal agencies have spent millions on KN95 masks, often without knowing who made them
- Four types of scandals utility companies get into with money from your electric bills
- If Native Americans are “home,” then where am I?
- About Crater Radio
- As threat of Valley Fever grows beyond the Southwest, push is on for vaccine
- Inside the utility company lobbying blitz that will hike electric bills
- 'Small Signs', Flagstaff resident releases documentary on summer of protests in Flagstaff, AZ
- You're Fired!
- Most profitable US companies fired workers, enriched shareholders during pandemic
Tag cloud
2020 elections ACORN Arizona Bailout 2020 Black Lives Matter Business Climate change community Community Organizing Coronavirus Corporate shenanigans Courts Elections energy Environment Health health care immigration Indigenous peoples Investigations Justice Labor Mitch McConnell steps in it Off the Plateau On the border Organizing Police brutality Police Riot Policing Politics Public Health Race for the White House Racism Rathke Restart 2021 Right Wing Militias Safety Net Science supplemental unemployment Sustainability The Conversation Trump steps in it Vote suppression wash your hands Wire