The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court at the heart of the "Nunes memo" debate is controversial at best. That makes the discussion of transparency and the protection of intelligence sources particularly complicated.
It鈥檚 not the stuff of big dreams: an African-American sharecropper family struggling in the Jim Crow South. Illiterate parents. Ten kids.
Yet, as Dorothy Ngongang The Washington Post, 鈥淥ur mother 鈥 encouraged us to learn or 鈥榞et something in our heads that no one could take from us.鈥 鈥
They listened. And two years ago, the siblings, who hold seven college degrees and three master鈥檚, bought the land where they once picked cotton 鈥 and, separately, the large house opposite that once represented a life far from their reach. They played as children with its white owner, Peggy Wheeler McKinney, who reached out when she wanted to sell. They celebrated Christmas there.
As Sharon Austin, director of African studies at the University of Florida, , 鈥淧rogress has been made. Just not as much as many of us would like.鈥 Witness, for example, actress Jessica Chastain鈥檚 shock when she heard the salary Oscar nominee Octavia Spencer for their upcoming movie.
But, Ms. Austin adds: "To put it in [Martin Luther King Jr.鈥檚] , 'Lord, we ain鈥檛 what we oughta be. We ain鈥檛 what we want to be. We ain鈥檛 what we gonna be. But, thank God, we ain鈥檛 what we was.' 鈥
That鈥檚 because of the powerful mental seeds planted by people like Ms. Ngongang鈥檚 mother. 鈥淚 felt I wasn鈥檛 going to be there picking cotton my whole life,鈥 Ngongang said. She was right.
Now to our five stories, showing equity, innovative thinking, and the democratic process at work. 聽