In the first 100 days of Donald Trump’s second term, his administration launched an aggressive effort to upend democratic norms and institutional structures, pushing policies rooted in white nationalist, theocratic and xenophobic ideologies. While the assault on democracy sparked widespread alarm, resistance emerged through the judiciary, institutional pushback and a rapidly organizing public.
At the same time, within Black Governance thought, a counter-narrative is taking shape—reflected in cultural works like the film Sinners—that challenges the myth of American unity.
Drawing on Africana Movement and Memory, this perspective reclaims power not just through knowledge, but through collective cultural shaping, asking a deeper question: What does it mean to resist through remembrance and intentional movement across time?
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