It can be easy to mistake feelings like fear and anger as hate. When biases are acted out in harmful ways, however, speaking up can help stop hate from getting worse.
A KKK rally in Dayton, Ohio, on Sept. 21, 1923.
Dayton Metro Library
Latest figures show antisemitism in the UK is on the rise, with new expressions of anti-Jewish hatred merely reviving older ones.
A Palestinian protester uses a slingshot during clashes with Israeli soldiers at the northern entrance of the West Bank city of Ramallah on May 21, the day a cease-fire took effect after 11 days of heavy fighting between Israel and Gaza’s Hamas rulers.
(AP Photo/Nasser Nasser)
Hate-inspired violence is the cause of conflict around the world. It’s time to consider hatred as a serious public health issue and even a disease so it can be treated — and possibly prevented.
While mental health check-ins are important, there is more we can do.
(Shutterstock)
In the wake of anti-Asian violence in North America, we need to demand accountability and not just stop after performing mental health check-ins.
An academic expert on Islamophobia attended a ‘free-speech’ conference in Toronto, where she was assaulted after challenging speakers for promoting hatred against Muslims.
Shutterstock
Covert power brokers are using cultural, political and economic ideas to influence, shape and inform white nationalist views. They help circulate bigotry by dressing it up as patriotism.
A 1903 drawing by Louis Dalrymple depicts European immigrants as “rats” (in the magazine Judge).
New York Public Library