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Reckoning with Race, ICM Lawyers Up, and the China Conundrum Happy afternoon, and welcome back to The Daily Courant, our private email highlighting the most recent reportorial offerings at Puck.
Today, we lead with Baratunde Thurston's profound meditation on the state of race in America, from the heat of the George Floyd protests last summer to the explosion of corporate ass-covering that followed, and everything in between. Herewith, Thurston outlines five propositions to help guide America toward fulfilling its promise.
Plus, below the fold, William D. Cohan reports on the agita gripping Wall Street as Xi Jinping tightens his grip on the world's second-largest economy, driving a wedge through the business and financial ties that keep the U.S. and China bound together.
It’s hard enough sometimes just living in Black skin in America. But I’ve chosen to work as a sense-maker and storyteller to help others process this often nonsensical and maddening land we share. This piece is the first in a series. Back in the spring of 2019, I delivered my first original talk on the TED main stage. It was titled “How To Deconstruct Racism One Headline at a Time,” and in it, I dissected the barrage of news stories about white people calling the cops on Black people for no good reason. It was a talk born of the moment, during the summer of “BBQ Becky” and “Permit Patty,” before social media consolidated around the Karen epithet to describe such entitled and damaging behavior. Yet it was a talk that connected to our nation’s long history of racial terror lynchings and violent policing of Blackness from its inception.
I talk a lot. I was born with the gift of gab, and consider words to be the primary medium for my art, whether written or spoken. I’ve used that gift to lay a foundation of standup comedy for almost a decade in Boston and New York. I’ve used it on MSNBC. I’ve used it to tour the world as a public speaker and intellect. Words come easily after so much practice, but for that talk, I dug deeper. Both my wife and my TED speaking coach urged me to deliver something more personal. I could be superficial, clever and witty, they said, but this was a chance to offer a window into myself that I rarely do.
I trusted them and lifted the veil more than usual. I shared the profound fear I felt being pulled over in the suburbs of Milwaukee with my white wife in the passenger seat. I shared the exhaustion I feel just inhabiting this Black skin in a nation designed to destroy us. That exhaustion is not something I’d publicly acknowledged much. I’ve always come across as the consummate go-getter, high-stepper, optimist type. But the deeper truth is much of that is a mask I wear out of a sense of survival. It’s an instinct so honed that I sometimes forget it’s not completely me. In that TED talk I also acknowledged the parallel systems of oppression that I benefit from as a man in a society invested in misogyny. And more than most talks I give, I grounded myself emotionally to pull from a deeper well than usual...
FOUR STORIES WE'RE TALKING ABOUT The expectation is that most people—particularly those not attached to marquee TV creator clients or the coveted books and sports departments—will be cut loose in the transition. MATTHEW BELLONI Political journalists find themselves trying to cover a legislative process that is arcane, aggravating, and painfully normal. JULIA IOFFE Facebook’s dilemma is that it needs to hook a new generation of kids to survive—and its demographic crisis is getting worse. ALEX KANTROWITZ Serious China watchers fear that businesses have underestimated the gravity of Xi’s “regulatory crackdown”—but privately worry that Washington isn’t responding with nearly enough nuance. WILLIAM D. COHAN
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