Word: racialization
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...becoming increasingly clear that racial discrimination is much more than a subject for speeches and learned essays. It is no longer a regional or even a national problem, but is rather international in its importance. The impact of the war, with its struggle between ideologies diametrically opposed with regard to race, makes racial discrimination in America a gross paradox. And more than this is the cold fact that we must make full use of our manpower if we are to meet fully the requirements...
...view of these facts, the John Reed society has opened a new campaign at Harvard to get support for the proposed Army volunteer inter-racial unit a unit to be made up of men who have expressed their willingness to serve in a mixed unit. This is an especially decisive moment for such a campaign, since many men are preparing for entrance into the armed forces now or in the near future. It is they who, with other men from all, over the country, can do much to put into operation now something highly expressing our democratic faith. Samuel Stuart...
Hooton recently defended himself against the charge of being a Nazi by saying that for years he had opposed the new German doctrine of the supremacy of Nordic peoples. He is an advocate of racial improvement by biological means...
Walt Disney will shortly come to Cambridge to confer with Earnest A. Hooton, professor of Anthrology, on the subject of Nazi racial theory, in preparation for his new movie which will blast the myth of Nordic supremacy, according to a news release from the Disney publicity office in New York...
...thing about Wells was his refusal to accept the social inferiority to which he seemed to have been born. ... He was a liberal democrat in the sense that he claimed an unlimited right to think, criticize, discuss and suggest, and he was a socialist in his antagonism to personal, racial or national monopolization. . . . Wells was a copious and repetitive essayist upon public affairs and a still more copious writer of fiction. . . . The question whether he was to be considered a 'humorist' was discussed but never settled...