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    Check in - Oath keepers, Mississippi water & more

    enOctober 04, 2022
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    About this Episode

    Kelli Lemon and Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Michael Paul Williams return for another episode of After the Monuments where this week they're talking about white supremacy in law enforcement, Mississippi's drinking water and more. Presented by Massey Cancer Center and supported by Team Henry Enterprises. 

    Support the show: https://richmond.com/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Recent Episodes from After the Monuments

    New mindsets, new cycles, new futures - Pt. 2

    New mindsets, new cycles, new futures - Pt. 2

    Kelli and Michael Paul continue their conversation with Allan-Charles Chipman, Executive Director of Initiatives of Change USA. In this portion of the the interview, the three talk about the death of Irvo Otieno, a young man in a mental health crisis who died at the hands of nearly a dozen prison personnel, and why such untimely and misdiagnosed deaths persist and how to prevent them.

    Support the show: https://richmond.com/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    New mindsets, new cycles, new futures - Pt. 1

    New mindsets, new cycles, new futures - Pt. 1

    Kelli and Michael Paul welcome Allan-Charles Chipman to the show. Chipman is the Executive Director of Initiatives of Change USA, a global network of people of diverse cultures and backgrounds committed to healing historical harms, whose mission is to inspire, equip, and accompany changemakers in the pursuit of a just, connected, and peaceful world.

    In this conversation, the trio talk about Chipman's work in Richmond and beyond to create new mindsets, new cycles and new futures for people of color across the country.

    Support the show: https://richmond.com/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Virginia's position on DEI & antisemitism vs. racism

    Virginia's position on DEI & antisemitism vs. racism

    Kelli and Michael Paul catch up on the news out of Virginia of the state's chief of diversity, equity and inclusion referring to DEI initiatives as "it's dead." The pair also discuss Governor Glenn Youngkin's ceremonial recognition of Jewish people and that, "hate is wrong. Love is right." and omitting any reference to racism in that ceremony or statement which came a week after his own official had said that DEI is dead.

    Support the show: https://richmond.com/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Three years after George Floyd's murder

    Three years after George Floyd's murder

    Kelli Lemon and Pulitzer Prize winning writer Michael Paul Williams are back with a new episode of After the Monuments where the duo discuss the social and cultural progress, or lack thereof, in the three years since the murder of George Floyd and the protests and cultural-awakening it sparked.

    Read more from Michael Paul Williams on Richmond.com and in the Richmond Times-Dispatch.

    Support the show: https://richmond.com/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Check in - Metal health & policing, School renaming, can Buckhead secede from Atlanta

    Check in - Metal health & policing, School renaming, can Buckhead secede from Atlanta

    Kelli and Michael Paul are checking in on some of the topics Michael Paul has been writing about including the death of a inmate in mental health crisis at the hands of nearly a dozen law enforcement officials, renaming a Virginia school and the topic of whether Buckhead can secede from Atlanta.

    After the Monuments is presented by Massey Cancer Center.

    Support the show: https://richmond.com/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Throwback: Under the Skin: Racism, Inequality, and the Health of a Nation

    Throwback: Under the Skin: Racism, Inequality, and the Health of a Nation

    In this episode, Kelli and Michal Paul talk with The New York Times Magazine and 1619 Project contributor Linda Villarosa about her new book, Under the Skin: Racism, Inequality, and the Health of a Nation. In the conversation and book, Linda shares troubling statistics that college-educated Black mothers are more likely to die, almost die, or lose their babies than white mothers who haven’t finished high school.


    Linda also shares that some of today’s medical texts and instruments still carry fallacious slavery-era assumptions that Black bodies are fundamentally different from white bodies, causing disproportionate suffering. After the Monuments  is supported by Massey Cancer Center.

    Support the show: https://richmond.com/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Pt. 2 - Building urban gardens and farms to develop community power

    Pt. 2 - Building urban gardens and farms to develop community power

    Kelli and Michael Paul are talking with urban agriculturalist Duran Chavis to hear about environmental justice and developing community green spaces. As Duron points out, some of the issues that Black communities faced before the monuments came down still persist today. After the Monuments is presented by Massey Cancer Center.

    Support the show: https://richmond.com/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Building urban gardens and farms to develop community power

    Building urban gardens and farms to develop community power

    Kelli and Michael Paul are talking with urban agriculturalist Duran Chavis to hear about environmental justice and developing community green spaces. As Duron points out, some of the issues that Black communities faced before the monuments came down still persist today.

    After the Monuments is presented by Massey Cancer Center.

    Support the show: https://richmond.com/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Throwing some shade in the less fortunate communities

    Throwing some shade in the less fortunate communities

    Kelli and Michael Paul welcome Sheri Shannon to studio to talk about her work as the co-founder of Southside ReLeaf, a volunteer-run organization committed to building a healthy, equitable and sustainable environment for all residents in South Richmond.

    After the Monuments is sponsored by Massey Cancer Center.

    Support the show: https://richmond.com/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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