Babylon Makes The Rules
Dr. Negus sits down solo on Babylon Makes The Rules to trace a harrowing line from the 1944 execution of 14-year-old George Junius Stinney — the youngest person ever executed on death row in the United States — to the systemic discrimination facing African-American men today.In this episode, Dr. Negus unpacks how structural racism, compounded by “double discrimination” — being Black and carrying a criminal record — continues to exclude millions from economic opportunity. With 6 million jobs open across the country, countless qualified Black men remain shut out, illustrating how America wastes both human potential and moral responsibility.Listeners will learn:George Junius Stinney’s story: A 14-year-old boy executed for a crime he did not commit, and the chilling historical context surrounding his death.Crime and structural racism: How systemic barriers have historically shaped disproportionate rates of incarceration and surveillance of African Americans.Double discrimination today: The intersection of race and criminal records in employment, and why the U.S. economy is failing millions of workers.Resilience despite oppression: How communities survive, adapt, and resist even when “Babylon makes the rules.”This episode is a hard but necessary conversation about history, justice, and the ongoing consequences of systemic inequity. It challenges listeners to confront the past while understanding the moral and economic costs of letting talent go to waste.Part of Babylon: Unearthed, this solo episode is as urgent today as when it was recorded.Key Timestamps00:01:07 | George Junius Stinney: The youngest person executed on death row00:04:25 | Crime rates and structural racism in America00:11:57 | Millions locked out of opportunity00:12:42 | “Double discrimination”: complexion plus criminal record00:18:43 | “Babylon makes the rules, but yet we live on”
35 episodios
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