Revolution Resolution with Anna Malaika Tubbs

Through Vicious Reminders

7 min · 30. juni 2026
episode Through Vicious Reminders cover

Beskrivelse

How do oppressive systems convince people to stay silent? One way is by making examples of those who refuse to comply. In this episode of The Revolution Resolution, Dr. Anna Malaika Tubbs examines how systems rooted in hierarchy preserve themselves through punishment, humiliation, fear, and what she calls "vicious reminders"—messages designed to warn others about the cost of challenging power. Through the story of Anita Hill and her testimony during Clarence Thomas's Supreme Court confirmation, this episode explores what happens when someone interrupts the script a system expects them to follow. This conversation is about more than one moment in history. It's about understanding why backlash often follows truth-telling—and why that backlash should not be mistaken for failure. Because sometimes the people who speak first make it possible for countless others to speak after them. If this episode resonates, share it with someone whose courage helped make honesty safer for others.

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Alle episoder

51 episoder

episode Refusing Erasure cover

Refusing Erasure

One of the most radical things a person can do inside an oppressive system is refuse to disappear. In this episode of The Revolution Resolution, Dr. Anna Malaika Tubbs explores the story of Chanel Miller and what it reveals about how systems of hierarchy attempt to silence, diminish, and erase those who challenge them. After surviving sexual assault, Chanel Miller was known publicly only as "Emily Doe." While much of the public conversation focused on the future of Brock Turner, Miller fought to reclaim her own identity, voice, and humanity through her memoir, Know My Name. This episode examines how oppressive systems often reinforce themselves not only through violence, but through erasure—asking survivors to become smaller while protecting those who hold power. But history also offers another possibility. When people refuse to disappear, they create language, recognition, and hope for others who believed they were alone. If this episode resonates, share it with someone whose courage has inspired you to live more fully and honestly.

2. juli 20267 min
episode Through Vicious Reminders cover

Through Vicious Reminders

How do oppressive systems convince people to stay silent? One way is by making examples of those who refuse to comply. In this episode of The Revolution Resolution, Dr. Anna Malaika Tubbs examines how systems rooted in hierarchy preserve themselves through punishment, humiliation, fear, and what she calls "vicious reminders"—messages designed to warn others about the cost of challenging power. Through the story of Anita Hill and her testimony during Clarence Thomas's Supreme Court confirmation, this episode explores what happens when someone interrupts the script a system expects them to follow. This conversation is about more than one moment in history. It's about understanding why backlash often follows truth-telling—and why that backlash should not be mistaken for failure. Because sometimes the people who speak first make it possible for countless others to speak after them. If this episode resonates, share it with someone whose courage helped make honesty safer for others.

30. juni 20267 min
episode What We Are Truly Up Against cover

What We Are Truly Up Against

What does it reveal about a system when a man who fed children and organized medical care was treated as a threat? In this episode of The Revolution Resolution, Dr. Anna Malaika Tubbs continues the story of Fred Hampton, the Rainbow Coalition, and the movements that proved another way of living was possible. This episode examines why systems rooted in hierarchy do not quietly step aside when people begin choosing solidarity, collective care, and shared humanity. They are protected through punishment, surveillance, fear, exhaustion, disinformation, division, and violence. Because Fred Hampton and the Rainbow Coalition were not dangerous because they caused harm. They were dangerous because they showed people they did not have to survive alone. This conversation is about understanding the stakes clearly — not to romanticize struggle, but to recognize why care, connection, and solidarity have always been powerful enough to threaten the status quo. If this episode resonates, share it with someone who helps you imagine a more connected and courageous world.

25. juni 20267 min
episode What Happens When People Recognize One Another cover

What Happens When People Recognize One Another

One of the greatest threats to hierarchy is people recognizing themselves in one another. In this episode of The Revolution Resolution, Dr. Anna Malaika Tubbs explores the power of solidarity through the story of Chicago's Rainbow Coalition — a groundbreaking alliance formed in 1969 between the Black Panther Party, the Young Lords, and the Young Patriots. These groups came from different racial, cultural, and geographic backgrounds. They faced different lived experiences. But they recognized a shared reality: many of the struggles affecting their communities were connected. Rather than allowing division to define them, they chose coalition. This episode examines what becomes possible when people move beyond inherited fears and recognize one another as companions in the work of survival, care, and transformation. Because some of the most powerful movements in history did not emerge from sameness. They emerged from solidarity. If this episode resonates, share it with someone who has helped you imagine community more expansively.

23. juni 20266 min
episode What We Learn About People Who Are Different From Us cover

What We Learn About People Who Are Different From Us

How do children learn to fear difference? Often, long before they encounter people who are different from them. In this episode of The Revolution Resolution, Dr. Anna Malaika Tubbs explores how the lessons we learn about belonging, scarcity, competition, and connection inside our homes shape the way we later understand community, diversity, and collective care. When children are taught that attention is limited, that worth must be earned, and that survival depends on standing apart, those lessons rarely stay confined to family life. They become the lens through which people view strangers, difference, and society itself. This episode examines how fear, scarcity, and individualism can make diversity feel threatening — and how experiences of secure connection, emotional safety, and shared care can make empathy, curiosity, and collaboration more possible. Because the home is not separate from society. It is often the first place society is rehearsed. If this episode resonates, share it with someone who helped expand your understanding of community, belonging, or connection across difference.

18. juni 20267 min