Posted inOpinion

A new economic civil rights struggle: Disappearing data 

Eric Morrissette argues that the dismantling of federal economic data collection threatens the foundation of modern civil-rights enforcement by making discrimination harder to measure and prove. He warns that rollbacks affecting employment, lending and minority business data systems could obscure racial disparities and weaken accountability for inequitable policies and practices.

Posted inCommentary

The cost of war

By Eric Morrissette On Saturday, Feb. 28th, Americans woke up to find their country at war with Iran. Breaking news alerts carried word that the United States had joined Israel in an unprecedented joint military operation aimed at overturning the Iranian government. The human cost is already jarring: one week in, Al Jazeera’s live tracker […]

Posted inOpinion

The 47th president is hollowing out America’s only agency for minority business

The dismantling of the Minority Business Development Agency — the nation’s only federal agency dedicated to supporting minority and other disadvantaged entrepreneurs — threatens millions of small businesses that rely on its technical assistance and capital access. As the 47th president’s administration hollows out the agency’s remaining staff and infrastructure, experts warn that its loss would deepen economic inequities and undermine U.S. competitiveness.

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