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The Archive
​Unfiltered stories of Black resistance, erased heroes, and hidden truths. We connect the past to today’s fights so the next generation never has to ask “why didn’t they teach us this?”


How American Schools Were Built to Separate and Starve
American public school inequality is rooted in historical segregation and property-based funding systems. Although Brown v. Board of Education ended legal segregation, schools continue to rely on local property taxes, reinforcing disparities shaped by redlining and exclusionary zoning. District boundaries often mirror racial and economic divisions, making educational inequality structural rather than accidental.
smartbrowngirlllc
Feb 222 min read
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The System Was Designed Before You Ever Made a Choice
We often talk about poverty and inequality as if they are the result of individual choices. Work harder. Save more. Make better decisions. But what if the most significant economic outcomes in this country were shaped long before anyone made their first financial choice?
smartbrowngirlllc
Feb 174 min read
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Housing Segregation Was Designed
Housing segregation in the United States was shaped by federal housing policy in the twentieth century. Government agencies created redlining maps that restricted mortgage access in Black neighborhoods. The Federal Housing Administration insured loans primarily in racially homogeneous suburbs. The GI Bill expanded homeownership but was unevenly administered, limiting access for Black veterans. These policies structured long-term disparities in home equity and wealth accumulat
smartbrowngirlllc
Feb 163 min read
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