Scenarios about 'racial justice'
The ongoing struggle for equality, dignity, and fair treatment of all racial and ethnic groups in society. Racial justice movements have historically challenged systemic discrimination, segregation, violence, and unequal access to resources and opportunities. These efforts shape alternate histories by examining how different outcomes in civil rights movements, colonization, or social policies might have created more equitable societies or exacerbated racial hierarchies.
What If Black Lives Matter Never Formed?
Exploring the alternate timeline where the Black Lives Matter movement never coalesced, dramatically altering the trajectory of racial justice activism, police reform efforts, and American social politics in the 21st century.
What If Brown v. Board of Education Was Decided Differently?
Exploring the alternate timeline where the U.S. Supreme Court upheld 'separate but equal' in 1954, profoundly altering the trajectory of civil rights, constitutional law, and American society.
What If Japanese Americans Were Never Interned?
Exploring the alternate timeline where the United States government did not authorize the mass incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II, fundamentally altering the nation's civil rights trajectory and Japanese American community development.
What If Martin Luther King Jr. Lived Longer?
Exploring the alternate timeline where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. survived the assassination attempt in 1968, continuing his leadership in the civil rights movement and potentially reshaping American politics and race relations through the late 20th century.
What If Martin Luther King Jr. Wasn't Assassinated?
Exploring the alternate timeline where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. survived the events at the Lorraine Motel in 1968, potentially reshaping American civil rights, politics, and social justice movements for decades to come.
What If Slavery Was Abolished Earlier in The United States?
Exploring the alternate timeline where the United States abolished slavery decades before the Civil War, fundamentally altering the nation's development, politics, and social fabric.