racialized in A Sentence

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    North American-wide government cutbacks to social programs in the 1980s intensified Racialized policing and surveillance tactics.

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    Wealthy and upper middle-class parents work to keep their neighbourhood schools isolated from poorer, often Racialized, neighbours.

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    We don't want Killmonger to unleash the power of Vibranium on an unsuspecting world, but we recognize the need to end oppression and Racialized poverty.

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    Not only does it mean that Racialized people are expected to bear the belittling of their experiences, but ultimately that we are all worse off in the face of open white supremacy in Australia and across the Global North.

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    5

    Given the rise in hate crimes targeting Racialized and religious minority groups in Canada, the 2017 terrorist attack on a Quebec City mosque and the recent attack in Christchurch, New Zealand, the suspension of religious freedom rights should raise alarms.

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    Given the rise in hate crimes targeting Racialized and religious minority groups in Canada, the 2017 terrorist attack on a Québec City mosque and the recent attack in Christchurch, New Zealand, the suspension of religious freedom rights should raise alarms.

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    7

    In the 60s and 70s, as the general culture shifted away from Racialized narratives, the War on Drugs was born, targeting racial minorities without ever naming them as such, and leading to widespread acceptance of accelerating mass incarceration rooted in the very same unhealed hatred born of defeat.

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    8

    He needed to die because the philosophy of Racialized vengeance has to die, but we nevertheless see him(rightfully) as a victim of unfortunate circumstances he could not control and we can understand and even relate to his anger, even as we reject his vision for how to make things better.

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    9

    And to explain this“thug" behavior to white America, he once again parroted debunked Racialized myths- claiming that there are more black men in jail than in college and that having“no fathers” is placing our children at risk- while pathologizing low-income black communities at large and soft-pedaling the racism embedded deeply within U.S. policing tactics.

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    10

    Black History Month is an important and necessary time to showcase the many accomplishments of African-Americans/Black individuals, but as we recognize Black History Month, we must acknowledge that the limited numbers of mental health professionals from racial/ethnic minority backgrounds prevents ubiquitous implicit negative biases about people of color, resulting from America's historical and contemporary Racialized inequities, from being challenged and dismantled.

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