logo
Building a Moonshot for Racial Justice

Building a Moonshot for Racial Justice

Yahoo01-05-2025

(L-R) Gianna Floyd; daughter of George Floyd, looks on as Philonise Floyd, George Floyd's brother, and Attorney Ben Crump speak to reporters after a meeting with Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC) on Capitol Hill on May 25, 2021 in Washington, DC. Credit - Drew Angerer—Getty Images
My dissertation advisor, a veteran of segregated Chicago, liked to say that social science is not rocket science—it's a lot harder. Social systems and social progress have a lot more variables than physical ones and behave much less predictably.
The five years following George Floyd's lynching have demonstrated the wisdom of his words.
In 2020, after the largest protests in U.S. history, there was no shortage of outrage. No lack of political will. No confusion about what people wanted—accountability, dignity, safety. Police unions and politicians who once claimed racism was 'over' suddenly spoke publicly about the need to do something in response to such a grotesque event. For a moment, our nation had moral clarity, and it felt like we might finally be on the cusp of change that was as large as our collective outrage.
But then the variables changed, and the social systems largely did not. Perhaps that is because there is still a bit about large-scale social progress that is like a moonshot. The launch is hard enough—controlling the explosion of energy, the singular mission, the sense of purpose. But the magic comes in sustaining momentum long enough to stick the landing. And, in the wake of 2020, we have not stuck the landing.
There has been no lasting, federal changes in public policy. The burst of local reforms has slowed considerably, with progress haunted by promising programs disappearing. And the piecemeal change that seemed too small to match the outrage that erupted then would now be considered by many to be radical. Five years hence, we find ourselves living in the shadow of the second Trump administration, with a government that seizes immigrants off the streets and disdains not only efforts to redress racism but the proposition of equal justice itself. The rocket not only failed to land; it exploded.
How did that happen—and where do we go from here?
If history is any indication, big innovations depend on three pillars: A clear vision, often framed in morally appealing terms; people who obsess over understanding the details; and funding to sustain both, through failure and success.
Giant leaps like the 1969 moon landing were built on all three. Most remember the morally clarion calls of President John F. Kennedy marshaling the nation behind NASA's mission, or Buzz Aldrin's iconic words broadcast back down on Earth. But few recall the legions of dedicated technical experts behind the scenes, which included women like Katherine Johnson, a Black mathematician from West Virginia, who began her career in a segregated NASA research center before performing critical calculations on the Apollo mission. Not to mention the record-high funding the space program enjoyed through multiple false starts.
Social change operates on the same principles, but it is far harder to meet even one of these conditions. Funding tends to be the least stable pillar. There is also no money in trying to solve racism—at least, not for the people doing it. And, unlike a moon landing, vaccines that eradicate disease, or artificial intelligence that can fabricate art, most people cannot easily imagine what 'ending racism' looks like.
Having spent more than a quarter century studying the psychology and history of racism, and the past two decades merging social science with advocacy in more than 60 jurisdictions across the U.S. and abroad, I have seen the financial landscape grow bleaker than it has been at any time before in this century. Federal grants designed to study unnecessary police stops and uses of force have evaporated, philanthropy is being spread thinner, and I have seen financial support for changing public safety evaporate.
The fate of the space program illustrates the importance of robust, durable funding. Since the moon landing in 1969, we have seen comparatively minor innovations in space travel. Absent a clear next goal supported by consistent financing, signal events have all but disappeared.
Social problems without a clear vision for solving them experience a similar deceleration. With excruciating balance, however, we can succeed on the strength of the other two pillars: the moral clarity to mobilize people and the depth of knowledge necessary to achieve lasting change.
Racial justice advocates have pulled this off before. Just a century after slavery, activists, lawmakers, and everyday people dedicated to a more just nation secured passage of the Voting Rights Act. Civil Rights lawyers did it with Brown v. Board of Education, marking less than 90 years from slavery to the end of legal segregation.
In both cases, accomplishing progress required moral vision and technical expertise working in tandem; one cannot create durable progress without the other. We have seen this throughout history: Behind every landmark victory are numerous, often unnamed professionals who understand what levers to pull and how to find them—the mechanics who make change happen. Martin Luther King's famous 'I Have a Dream' speech, for instance, was made possible by the logistical and technical brilliance of advisor Bayard Rustin, who organized the March on Washington and other iconic protests. Achieving that balance has yielded successes under other banners as well, like the right to organize, for women to vote, and for consumers to be protected from harmful products. All of these landmark achievements followed a clear vision and leaders with deep expertise in how the systems they struggled to change—or topple—actually functioned.
Collective action needs moral clarity—simple, powerful calls to action that cut through apathy and inspire people. But that same clarity—so essential for mobilization—can obscure complexity and downplay technical expertise. The glare of a galvanizing vision means we often squint at problems and champion solutions that feel right in the moment but do not hold up under scrutiny or serve our long-term goals.
In other words, without delicate balance, we risk building around a goal without recognizing the means necessary to achieve it. Justice also faces an additional obstacle: Unlike with most aerospace research, there are often active enemies of social progress deeply invested, culturally or materially, in the status quo. That means that cycles of backlash must be included in the calculations of our moonshots for social change.
Failing to account for this phenomenon can breed catastrophe. My first exposure to this idea came in May 1985, as a kid growing up in Philadelphia. The city tried to evict members of MOVE, a Black liberation group that had sparked neighborhood complaints of noise, trash, and threatening behavior, by using a police helicopter to drop a bomb on the West Philly rowhomes where members lived. The bombs started fires that killed 11, including five children within a few years of my age; displaced 250 people; and destroyed two city blocks.
I was seven years old when the bombs dropped. I could not understand the context that led then-Mayor W. Wilson Goode, Philadelphia's first Black Mayor, to that catastrophic decision, but I was terrified by the images. One of those victims, a child named Phil 'Little Phil' Africa, even shared my first name.
A few years later, my parents brought me along to a dinner hosted by a close family friend, Lucius Outlaw Jr., a brilliant professor of philosophy who retired from Vanderbilt University in 2023. Uncle Lou, as I called him, would often host Black academics and activists at his table, including an up-and-coming professor named Cornel West. When I asked the adults about the bombing, there was outrage—but also shame and regret.
These luminaries were not naïve. They believed in their revolutionary vision and the forward trajectory of racial justice. There was a sense around that table, and throughout my formative years, that those who planned for change had an obligation to include the cycles of backlash into their calculations—and that failing to do so sufficiently was part of the way 'we ended up here.' In retrospect, the MOVE bombing was part of a backlash cycle that yielded tough-on-crime policies and mass incarceration. Not least was the 1994 Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act—legislation that still shapes the way law enforcement operates around the country.
Failing to account for backlash against racial progress at this point feels negligent precisely because it is so historically predictable at this point. Reconstruction gave way to Jim and Jane Crow. Brown v. Board and the victories of the 50s and 60s gave way to the racially regressive politics of Nixon, Ford, and eventually Reagan. The election of the nation's first Black president catalyzed the Tea Party and, eventually, Donald Trump.
Given the reliability of these cycles, the only option is to treat moments when public opinion and progress align as narrow windows when change is possible. The task must be to wield fleeting power effectively for durable gains. Get what you can while you can, then come back for the rest. That means there is little time for clarity and expertise to be at odds.
In the wake of Floyd's death, there were calls to mandate less police violence, hire more diverse police forces, track police performance, and make it easier to hold officers and departments accountable. Advocates and police chiefs largely agreed that police are tasked with too much and that we should have alternatives to police in many cases and focus on preventing crises rather than just responding to them where possible.
But there were also loud disagreements on whether improving police behavior was a fool's errand. So, collectively, we didn't. Advocates and elected leaders debated whether short-term improvements to our public safety systems were counterproductive to a long-term goal—as if, absent violent revolution, a clear goal married to technocratic change has not always been the path that racial progress traveled in this country.
Consider the failure of the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act. The legislation was not close to everything the nation needed to end racism in public safety, but it aligned with public opinion and, despite the critiques of some activists, represented real progress. Measures such as a national database that would have kept corrupt cops from securing jobs in other jurisdictions, a national ban on chokeholds, or a new legal standard that would make it easier to pursue claims against police—all on the table at one point or another—would have saved lives.
2020 failed to produce the balance between moral clarity and policy complexity that might have led to durable gains. And so infighting flourished while momentum faded. The money (such as it was) dried up and 2020 did not produce the changed nation so many wanted.
Working within systems may not be enough. But those who walk away from the table in service to a sense of moral purity are often leaving lives in the balance. To outlast the backlash and achieve more than symbolic gains, both vision and progress are required—even if the progress is unsatisfying.
So, how do we honor the spirit of 2020 without losing hope when the progress is slow to materialize?
The first step is recognizing that progress cannot be sustained by moral clarity alone. To be clear, the language that engages communities and brings supporters off the sidelines is a necessary ingredient to progress. Lasting solutions, however, require both that clarity that inspires action and the knowledge of how systems work.
The second step is understanding that moral clarity is not the enemy of complexity. We do not have to abandon a bold vision of the type of society we want to live in—but we do have to ground our long-term demands in the rigorous, strategic work that ensures they lead to substantive change. People who dreamed of going to Mars do not call NASA traitors for landing on the moon. Nor should positive changes to public safety be maligned for being too small or working within systems that should not exist. The systems do exist. And if we want to save lives, we cannot walk away from every table that does not feature our preferred moral centerpiece.
The third step is abandoning the idea that justice is a single achievement—a moon landing, one legislative win, one landmark court ruling, one budget reallocation that will fix everything. Justice is not a single scheme. It is not a destination. It is a sustained effort, something that must be secured over and over again. Insufficient gains are still gains. While legislation documenting habitually abusive police is not enough, neither is it meaningless.
We do not launch rockets once and say that space is conquered. We keep building. We reach for new frontiers. Those striving for progress must attempt the same. Every victory is a step, not the final destination. We do not get to rest long. We do not aim to be permanently satisfied. We win a battle, then we get back to work. Because, as history keeps reminding us, the moment we stop pushing upward is the moment gravity starts pulling us down.
Solomon is the Carl I. Hovland Professor of African American Studies and Psychology at Yale. He is co-founder and CEO of the Center for Policing Equity
This project was supported by funding from the Center for Policing Equity.
Contact us at letters@time.com.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Iran launches more than 100 drones at Israel in retaliation for striking nuclear sites: IDF
Iran launches more than 100 drones at Israel in retaliation for striking nuclear sites: IDF

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

Iran launches more than 100 drones at Israel in retaliation for striking nuclear sites: IDF

Iran has launched more than 100 drones toward Israel in retaliation for the Jewish state's latest effort to destroy Tehran's nuclear program through a wave of preemptive airstrikes. 'In recent hours, Iran has launched more than 100 drones toward Israeli territory,' IDF spokesman Brigadier General Effie Defrin confirmed Friday. 'We are working to intercept the threats.' The Israeli military has already started to shoot down some of the drones outside of Israeli territory, an IDF spokesman told CNN. 'The IDF has begun intercepting UAVs fired from Iran, outside of Israeli territory,' the official said. 3 Iranian-made Shahed-136 'Kamikaze' drone flies over the sky of Kermanshah, Iran on March 7, 2024. Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images The retaliation attack by Tehran comes after Israel's Operation 'Rising Lion' targeted several sites across the Iranian capital to dismantle the country's nuclear infrastructure, ballistic missile factories, and military facilities Thursday night. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the mission was carried out to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons and ensure the 'survival' of Israel after 'decades' of Iranian leadership, 'brazenly' calling for his country's destruction. 'We can't leave these threats for the next generation,' Netanyahu said during an address shared on YouTube. 'Because if we don't act now, there will not be another generation. If we don't act now, we simply won't be here. We have internalized the lessons of history. When an enemy says he intends to destroy you — believe him,' he continued. 3 This picture shows the empty al-Aqsa mosque compound in Jerusalem's Old City, on June 13, 2025, after Islam's Friday prayers have been officially canceled. AFP via Getty Images 3 A girl runs to a bomb shelter in an apartment building in Hadera, Israel, Friday, June 13, 2025. AP 'When the enemy develops the capabilities to destroy you — stop him.' Netanyahu vowed to continue strikes 'for as many days as it takes to remove this threat.' The IDF said that approximately 200 Israeli fighter jets participated in the operation, targeting around 100 sites. Iranian officials vowed to deliver a quick retaliation in response to the attacks as the country's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said Israel 'should await a harsh response.' with Post wires

Pepper-balls vs. tear gas: How 2020's Black Lives Matter protest in Spokane compares to the immigration demonstration of 2025
Pepper-balls vs. tear gas: How 2020's Black Lives Matter protest in Spokane compares to the immigration demonstration of 2025

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Pepper-balls vs. tear gas: How 2020's Black Lives Matter protest in Spokane compares to the immigration demonstration of 2025

Jun. 12—Over the course of 10 hours in Spokane Wednesday, an impromptu display of civil disobedience became a showdown of smoke and hundreds of fleeing protesters, leading to more than 30 arrests outside an ICE facility near Riverfront Park. The smoke has since cleared, leaving some protesters questioning the efficacy of law enforcement's de-escalation tactics and crowd control strategies as well as finger-pointing about who escalated what. To Spokane Mayor Lisa Brown, that depends on where you're standing. "People's perspectives vary dramatically, and it can be based on literally how many feet away they were in different locations, and their experience is very directly related to what they personally experienced and observed," Brown said in an interview Thursday. To some, Brown said the escalation began when a handful of federal agents started shoving a human chain of protesters blocking their exit from the ICE facility's gated parking lot. To others, it was the arrival of Spokane Police about an hour later, or their use of PepperBalls and smoke grenades an hour after that, Brown said. Maybe it was when hundreds of other protesters joined the smaller group, marching up Washington Street toward a police skirmish line, the mayor said. The protest involved hundreds of people occupying the streets and solicited the response of 185 Spokane Police officers, as well as around 50 Spokane Sheriff's office deputies, Sheriff John Nowels said. The 9:30 p.m. curfew Brown called was the first time a Spokane mayor has issued a curfew since May 2020, when a peaceful protest of thousands turned into a riot in downtown Spokane in the wake of the killing of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police. Floyd's killing morphed into a larger Black Lives Matter protest against police brutality disproportionately targeting Black men. Then-mayor Nadine Woodward issued an all-night curfew at the time, an order that many defied. Through the night, people looted, vandalized and destroyed windows of downtown businesses, including the downtown Nike store, the first target of looting. Rioters smashed windows of several businesses, and some business owners boarded their stores with plywood during the chaos. Then-County Sheriff Ozzie Knezovich had asked for the assistance of the Washington National Guard. That night, downtown Spokane was enveloped in a haze of tear gas and flash bangs that Spokane Police fired at protesters and looters in an attempt to quell the riot and disperse crowds. The Spokesman-Review reported multiple injuries as police projectiles like rubber bullets and bean bags struck people, including a 13-year-old girl. Countless people inhaled the tear gas. For some protesters on Wednesday, the memory still stung as they implored nonviolence from fellow protesters in their acts of civil disobedience in defying law enforcements' orders. By 7:13 p.m., law enforcement declared the protest an "unlawful assembly" and ordered people to disperse. The orders were announced repeatedly over an intercom as well as from individual law enforcement personnel as they talked to demonstrators. Some protesters peeled away at this order, while others remained and were later joined by a separate mass of hundreds from another protest nearby. Defying the order to disperse was an apparent matter of empathy for Ben Stuckart, the former city council president who organized the earlier protest in an attempt to prevent federal agents from taking two detained refugees he knew to the ICE processing facility in Tacoma. "The crux of the matter is, like yesterday, do I go home, or do I stand up for my friend? And that's, you stand up for your friends and your loved ones, and I think we all need to think of ourselves as one big community," he said. Nowels said Wednesday's demonstration wasn't a riot, but there was plenty of "unlawful activity" that warranted the law enforcement response and then some, ultimately resulting in more than 30 arrests, including two facing felony charges for "unlawful imprisonment." Spokane Police requested help from the Kootenai County Sheriff's Office, but by the time approximately two dozen deputies arrived in Spokane, police said they no longer needed their backup around 8 p.m. "We were there just to offer bodies if needed or any sort of assistance they needed, but they said, 'Actually it's pretty quiet and peaceful here,' so we could leave," said Lt. Jeff Howard, spokesperson from the Kootenai County Sheriff's Department. The hundreds of protesters who stayed for hours after law enforcement's orders to disperse were breaking the law, Nowels said. There were also more serious criminal actions committed by those blocking exits and obstructing ICE vehicles, ultimately preventing federal employees from leaving the building and vehicle in one instance, which is a class C felony, he said. "When you're there blocking doors and windows and exits ... that's a felony," he said. The first orders to disperse came at 7:13 p.m., with the first arrests made around 7:30 p.m. of those surrounding one of the ICE vans with agents inside. At around 8 p.m., law enforcement deployed PepperBalls and smoke canisters that sent stinging smoke and sparks through the streets, prompting protesters to scatter, holding their shirts to their face while coughing and gagging. While still in a preliminary review of law enforcement's reports of the protest, Nowels said his deputies fired at least four rounds of less-lethal munitions at four protesters, including three bean bag canisters and one blue nose foam projectile. Each of these protesters threw recently deployed smoke canisters back to the line of law enforcement, Nowels said. When identified, the four protesters will face felony assault charges, Nowels said. Some Sheriff's deputies on the skirmish line wore bulletproof vests and baseball caps. Others patrolling the scene dressed more tactically in riot gear, carrying firearms and crowd control projectiles with orange tips, as well as other munitions. "Some of the typical things we have would be 40-millimeter blue nose rounds that are foam and potentially bean bag munitions," Nowels said. Nowels said his deputies are trained in de-escalation tactics to verbally subdue the crowd, in his limited review of some video footage, he was pleased to see it put to use by deputies talking with protesters on skirmish lines. "I saw officers and deputies verbally communicate in a very calm way, interacting with the protesters ..." he said. "Our people did everything they could to prevent this from being a violent interaction." Some protesters disagree — including Stuckart, who came prepared to be arrested. He and 15 or so others planted themselves around two federal vans in an attempt to stop the transport. Stuckart said he believes the tension ratcheted up significantly when local law enforcement arrived, and that he hopes they and elected officials are "having a very deep conversation and looking inwardly on how their actions are the ones that escalated the situation." Fellow protester and progressive candidate for City Council Sarah Dixit agreed; she said when law enforcement split the crowd in two, some clad in riot gear, it doesn't inspire calm among the protesters. "It feels difficult to experience de-escalation when folks are fully fitted with rubber bullet guns, I don't know what the correct term is, and fully armed," Dixit said. "Upon seeing that, that doesn't make me feel any safer." Some of the 30 or so arrests were done through conversation between police and protesters, some willingly placing their hands behind their back as police walked them through their arrest. Others were more forceful, pushing protesters to the ground as they resisted officers' handcuffs. "I watched someone get thrown to the ground," Dixit said. "No one was doing any sort of activity that even remotely I could see someone justifying that response." There were several stark differences between this year's demonstration and those from five years ago. The riot of 2020 involved thousands, whereas Wednesday saw hundreds of people. Law enforcement's response also differed; Brown said she had a conversation with Spokane Police Chief Kevin Hall "specifically around not using tear gas," she said in an interview Thursday. Spokane Police also didn't use rubber bullets like in 2020, Hall said at a press conference Wednesday night. While each event prompted a mayoral curfew, Brown's was less enforced by Spokane Police. Some protesters remained at the intersection of Washington Street and North River Drive long after the 9:30 p.m. order to vacate, though police made no moves to disperse the crowd with more projectiles or make any arrests of those defying the curfew. On Saturday, Riverfront Park will become the site of a "No Kings" protest planned around the nation in defiance of a military parade on President Donald Trump's 79th birthday and the U.S. Army's 250th anniversary. At that gathering, expected to draw thousands, Nowels and Stuckart both implored disciplined nonviolence. "Please help the police by discouraging anyone trying to break the law," Nowels said. "No matter how frustrated you are, always be non-violent," Stuckart said. Spokesman-Review Reporters Nick Gibson and Emry Dinman contributed to this report. Elena Perry's work is funded in part by members of the Spokane community via the Community Journalism and Civic Engagement Fund. This story can be republished by other organizations for free under a Creative Commons license. For more information on this, please contact our newspaper's managing editor.

Iran Retaliates Against Israel: Latest Updates
Iran Retaliates Against Israel: Latest Updates

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Iran Retaliates Against Israel: Latest Updates

The sun rises over Jerusalem on June 13, 2025, following Iran's warnings that it will respond harshly to Israel's attack. Credit - Ahmad Gharabli—AFP/Getty Images Iran began its retaliation campaign against Israel on Friday, after warning Israel that it would pay a 'heavy price' for its earlier strikes targeting military leaders, civilian officials, and nuclear sites across the country. Israel Defense Forces spokesperson Effie Defrin said, according to CNN, that Iran had launched more than 100 drones toward Israeli territory. 'All [aerial] defense arrays have been operating to intercept the threats,' Defrin was quoted as saying. 'This is a different event to what we've experienced thus far, and we're expecting difficult hours. We should show resilience and patience.' The Times of Israel reported that Tel Aviv's municipal authorities cancelled a scheduled Pride parade for Friday. Israel's National Security Council also warned Israelis overseas to 'take precautions' as 'terrorist elements will seek to carry out acts of revenge against Israeli and Jewish targets around the world.' Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz earlier said Israel should expect an 'immediate' retaliation from Tehran following the strikes, which came a day after the U.S. began evacuating embassy personnel across the Middle East amid concerns of possible escalation of conflict. The State Department on Thursday evening directed embassy employees and their families in Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza to take shelter. Jordan announced early Friday that its airspace would be closed in light of the 'military escalation' in the region. Iran, Israel, and Iraq have similarly closed their respective us at letters@

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store