
Jimmy Carter, 39th U.S. President & Humanitarian Icon, Dies at 100 🌎✌️
Jimmy Carter, the 39th U.S. president known for humanitarian work and environmental advocacy, dies at 100. From peanut farms to global peacemaking, his legacy endures.
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Jimmy Carter, the 39th U.S. president known for humanitarian work and environmental advocacy, dies at 100. From peanut farms to global peacemaking, his legacy endures.
President Biden issues a formal apology for the US Indigenous boarding school system, addressing historical trauma and outlining steps toward healing.
The U.S. commemorates Juneteenth, marking the end of slavery 159 years ago. The federal holiday highlights progress and ongoing struggles for equality. 🇺🇸✊
During the Vietnam War, the U.S. dropped more bombs on Laos than on Germany and Japan in WWII, leaving a legacy of unexploded ordnance. 🌍💣 #HiddenHistory
18 years after Hurricane Katrina, Black communities in New Orleans still face systemic racism & unequal recovery. A filmmaker shares their untold story. 🌊✊
The remains of nine Lakota children, sent to a forced assimilation school in 1879, finally return home – shedding light on systemic U.S. policies targeting Indigenous communities. 🌍 #TruthAndHealing
Cecilia Muñoz and NYC communities highlight how understanding America’s racial history is crucial for progress—and why ignoring it holds the nation back.
The 1875 Page Act, the first U.S. law targeting Asian immigrants, banned Chinese women under racist pretenses. A look back at its lasting impact. ✊🌍
From building railroads to facing racial violence, Chinese laborers in 19th-century America endured systemic hate—a history that mirrors modern struggles. 🌏✊ #StopAsianHate
Two decades after 9/11, survivors share harrowing yet hopeful stories of loss and resilience. 🇺🇸 #NeverForget