Oct. 31, 2025

SYMM (Sh*t You Might've Missed) 10-31-2025

SYMM (Sh*t You Might've Missed) 10-31-2025

Send the Session a Message We recap the week’s biggest stories through one lens: people pay when systems wobble and leaders dodge accountability. From shutdown fallout and sanctions to climate shocks, media gaps, and AI bias, we connect policies to real lives and ask who gets protected and who gets forgotten. • shutdown risks to SNAP and essential services • accountability for stalled benefits and broken promises • sanctions on Russia and migration policy trade-offs • climate disasters expos...

Send the Session a Message

We recap the week’s biggest stories through one lens: people pay when systems wobble and leaders dodge accountability. From shutdown fallout and sanctions to climate shocks, media gaps, and AI bias, we connect policies to real lives and ask who gets protected and who gets forgotten.

• shutdown risks to SNAP and essential services
• accountability for stalled benefits and broken promises
• sanctions on Russia and migration policy trade-offs
• climate disasters exposing fragile infrastructure
• cultural and heritage shifts shaping public memory
• reported MS-13 swap raising rule-of-law questions
• Texas emergency radio failure and shared responsibility
• Project 2025 impacts on Black communities
• newsroom underrepresentation and missing coverage
• AI bias in Black archives and preservation choices

Support the show

00:00 - Welcome And Week-In-Review Scope

00:40 - Federal Shutdown And Accountability

05:36 - Sanctions, Migration, And Human Costs

08:26 - Climate Disasters And Fragile Systems

10:08 - Arts, Heritage, And Power Moves

12:38 - Deals With MS-13 And Ethical Lines

15:28 - Emergency Comms Failure In Texas

17:52 - Project 2025 And Unequal Impacts

20:17 - Media Representation And Missing Stories

25:13 - AI Bias And Preserving Black History

30:22 - Closing Thanks And Sign-Off

WEBVTT

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Peace peace to all my good people out there.

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Welcome to another session with Shay.

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This episode is another episode of shit you might have missed or S Y M M.

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Yeah.

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Where I give a recap of stories in the news that you might have missed.

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I will be covering from October 22nd to October 28th, which is today.

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Firstly, the United States federal government shutdown enters uncharted territory.

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So as of today, the federal government has been shut down for 28 days.

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So it's the second longest shutdown ever.

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35 days is the record which was last uh set in 2019 under Donald J.

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Trump.

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Um, the reason why the government is shut down is because Congress failed to pass appropriations, which is the bill, which is a legislation to fund the government.

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Amid this, states are warning they may suspend November payments for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, better known as SNAP, which could affect millions of children, older adults, and people with disabilities.

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Now, what happens when millions of Americans depend on programs that make pause?

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How do we hold decision makers accountable when services essential to life are at stake?

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It's like, you know, millions of Americans rely on programs like Social Security, food assistance, or health care.

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And even a short or temporary pause can have a huge impact.

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It's hard enough to get these programs to work when the funding is there, but let there be a pause or a disruption of some sort in that funding, and it's a bad situation can get much, much worse.

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And these aren't just numbers on a balance sheet, these are actual people's lives at stake and their ability to eat and and pay rent and get medicine.

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These programs are like lifelines that that feed the people and and keep people housed and healthy.

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And when they're threatened, it it reveals just how interconnected we all are and how bullshit and fragile this whole system is.

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And you know, they say one thing to get elected and then don't do shit when they get there.

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I understand that, but while they're in there, we need to make their shit so uncomfortable for them, they'll think twice, or they'll make we'll just make their whole time there difficult before they want to run again.

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And we need to start putting them on blast and show the real consequences for their bullshit and for their fucking not their non-actions on things.

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It means asking tough questions and keeping track of promises and making sure people in power can't hide behind politics when real lives are on the line.

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And at the end of the day, accountability is it isn't just about blame, it's about insisting that keeping people safe and supported comes first because that's what humans are supposed to do, right?

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Humanity should be a thing, but lately it doesn't feel like it.

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Not to me.

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And accountability starts with transparency.

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Decision makers from Congress and locally must they just gotta be honest about consequences of their budget choices, and and journalists and advocates and even everyday people need to keep the pressure with the hard questions, with the hard stories.

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It means showing who's affected and tracking promises versus outcomes, and refusing to let political gridlock and red tape and bullshit like that become an excuse for human suffering.

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I don't know.

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In the end, holding leaders accountable isn't just about calling them out when things break down, it's about demanding that they prioritize stability and compassion in the first fucking place.

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Because when essential services like like hang out there in the balance, it's not politics as usual because people's lives are fucking affected.

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But anywho, next story.

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U.S.

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foreign policy and military posture shift.

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The U.S.

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slapped further sanctions on Russia's two largest oil companies, Rosneft and Luke Oil, citing Moscow's war in Ukraine and the need to cut funding to it.

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Meanwhile, the U.S.

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canceled a planned meeting between President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

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Vladimir Putin.

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On another front, civil and human rights groups called for an end to the jailing of pregnant immigrants in detention and cited severe uh medical neglect in ICE facilities.

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So in a world that feels like there's multiple crises going on, how do we keep track of like the US?

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The US is shifting global posture and the domestic migration policy, and what are the human costs of both?

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I know that's a whole lot of words, but look at it like this the way the US is shifting its approach abroad and changing its its migration policies looks a certain way to the rest of the world, right?

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Because we we used to be the country that opened everybody or opened their arms to everybody, but now it seems like our country is only opening us arms to certain somebodies and kicking out other somebodies, and that's just what it looks like from the inside looking out.

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From the outside looking in, I'm sure it looks much worse, but keeping track of it all means paying attention and and seeing the shit happen because at the end of the day, these just aren't lines on policy paper either.

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These are people whose lives are being shaped, and sometimes dramatically by decisions about from people far, far away.

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So both of these things, these both of these uh stories intertwine with each other because decisions are being made that are affecting so many people's lives indirectly and directly.

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And who are the people making these decisions?

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We know who that is.

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The strongest storm to hit the island since records began in 1851.

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Over half a million people are without power, massive flooding, hospitals damaged, and at least three deaths in Jamaica, seven in Caribbean, and that's as of today, October 29th.

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So climate events aren't just happening somewhere, some sometime somewhere else anymore.

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They're hitting close to home all the time.

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Geographically, it's all there's always something affecting somebody, whether it's in the south or in the southwest or in the west or in the northwest or in the east or in central, like there's always something happening to somebody all the time.

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Hurricanes, wildfires, floods, they don't just damage property anymore.

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They they're they reshape global risks and it drives up costs and it exposes weakness in infrastructure we all rely on.

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And then looking at disasters overseas can teach us a lot about what might be coming here and how do our communities recover?

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What systems fail first?

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What's the real cost for people and economies?

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And paying attention to those lessons isn't just about being informed, it's about being prepared before the next storm hits our own doorstep, which depending on the disaster, could be any day.

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Um, next story.

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Trump's review of the arts and heritage sector, heritage sector.

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The administration is reported to be dissolving the first fine arts commission overseeing building projects and preserving preservation of groups.

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Preservation groups are warning about the demolition of the White House East Wing to build a large ballroom and a cultural agenda shift.

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Now I have another um podcast, and uh I haven't started actually recording any episodes, but I'm gonna plug it here a little self-promo um for myself.

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But the show is called Offbeat Conversations and Casual Curiosities.

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And while I have you, and this is ad break mode, I have a show that actually has episodes out right now, and it's called Grounded and Ready for Whatever, and it's a prep show, it's a mental um awareness show, self-awareness show.

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Just the title explains it all to me grounded and ready for whatever.

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So uh you can check those episodes out right now, but the um off-beat conversations, I haven't gotten that one together, but whenever I do, appreciate it if you give it a watch or I'm sorry, a listen and share it if you can.

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But uh back to this show.

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In the conspiracy streets conversations right now, they are saying that the demolition of the East Wing is to build a bunker, which is to ensure that when it is time to transition power, it's gonna be a lot harder because you have to have a peaceful transition of power, and if the other side isn't available, that transition won't happen.

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And what do all the games and the movies and all those things say?

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Some people are just gonna dig in until they're forced out.

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But that's another conversation for another podcast.

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So, next story.

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Secret MS-13 role in US El Salvador deal.

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According to a Washington Post expose, Marco Rubio, U.S.

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Secretary of State, offered to return nine MS-13 gang leaders from the U.S.

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custody to El Salvador in exchange for migration detention cooperation.

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If true, it suggests U.S.

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diplomacy may be negotiating with transnational criminal elements, raising serious questions about transparency and whose interests are being advanced.

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So, if a foreign government asks for a gang leader in exchange for migration cooperation, should the American public be okay with that?

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Because our leaders say we should.

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And what trade-offs are acceptable in national security?

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We've seen several trades for POWs and captives that don't seem very balanced for one side or the other.

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So, if a foreign government says we'll cooperate on migration, if you hand over certain gang leaders, should the American public just accept that?

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On one hand, national security and body border management are serious things, like they're real big business, but on the other hand, trading people, even criminals, raises huge ethical and legal questions because how can you trade a person legally, even if they are a criminal?

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That's still a person.

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So, how do you have a right to trade a person for a person?

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I mean, it gets at the heart of what trade-offs we're willing to make in the name of security, like who is really that important and who is worth giving up so much?

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And how much compromise is too much?

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At what point do deals like this undermine the rules of law or our values as a country?

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I mean, I don't have the answers to these kind of questions, I really don't, but they're ones we need to figure out and grapple with because the decision, these decisions and these answers affect real lives and the integrity of our institutions, which speaks to do you really trust these institutions anymore?

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Based on all the shit that's been happening, do you really trust them?

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Communication failure after Texas flash flood.

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A$7 million emergency radio system in Kerr County, Texas failed during a deadly summer flash flood, leaving gaps in coverage when lives were at stake.

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But when lives depend on communications, these gaps reveal systematic risk and oversight failures.

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The question is: if emergency systems purchased to protect us don't work when we need them the most, who do we hold accountable for that?

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We spend billions of dollars on emergency systems and early warning networks and flood barriers and power grids and all this shit to keep us safe.

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But what happens if those systems fail when we need them?

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Like when we really need them, and who do we actually you know go to to say, hey, you fucked that up, they fucked that up.

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Now what?

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And it's not just a technical failure, it's a human one, right?

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Engineers and policymakers and leaders all share responsibility when shit like that happens and when shit like that fucks up.

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It's not solely the engineers' fault because a thing fails, it's not solely the policymakers' fault because they didn't follow through with a plan.

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It's not the leaders' fault because they didn't plan think thoroughly enough ahead for these things.

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It's all of them.

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And when nobody takes ownership for the things, it erodes public trust and leaves people paying the price with their homes and their health or their lives.

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It's the kind of question that makes you lean in and ask, are we investing wisely?

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And are the people in charge prepared to answer all these questions when shit goes wrong?

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Do you have trust in the people in your local or state or federal government to make sound decisions when shit goes real left?

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Do you?

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If you do, shout out to you for having that.

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Not everyone can say yes.

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Project 2025's blueprint disproportionately affects and impacts on black communities.

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A report finds that Project 2025's policy proposals on dismantling the Department of Education's early childhood programs, restructuring DEI efforts, and scaling back federal oversight would disproportionately disproportionately harm black Americans.

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Many policy debates talk about all Americans, but this one zeroes in on how specific communities could face heavier burdens, especially in education, policing, and health care.

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So, how do we weigh policy blueprints when their impacts aren't evenly distributed?

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And should more attention be paid to who gets hit or affected the hardest?

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When we talk about big policy blueprints, it's easy to get lost in numbers, right?

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Billions of dollars saved, millions of people affected, right?

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All that other good shit.

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But those numbers can hide the real story.

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The impacts aren't evenly distributed.

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Take, for example, changes to healthcare or housing policy.

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A new rule might lower costs on paper, but for low-income families in a rural area, it could mean losing access to the nearest clinic or affordable housing.

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Meanwhile, wealthier urban neighborhoods might barely notice a change at all.

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Or think about an environmental policy.

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A carbon tax might reduce emissions overall, but without safeguards, communities near industrial sites, often historically marginalized, could bear a heavier burden of pollution or higher energy costs.

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These are real people in real neighborhoods dealing with very real consequences.

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That's why asking who gets hit hit hardest isn't just a moral question, it's a smart policy question.

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And we need politicians to think about shit like that when it comes to policy proposals and development.

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It helps reveal blind spots and prevent harm before it happens, and design programs that actually work for everyone.

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The takeaway is this don't just look at averages or the headlines.

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Look at the human stories behind the numbers.

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When policymakers consider who feels the pain most, the whole country benefits.

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And when we get policy that's not only effective, but fair for everybody.

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According to a recent study, only about six percent of journalists in the US newsrooms are black, despite black Americans making up twelve percent of the population.

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This matters for what stories get told and how they're framed and whose voices are actually heard.

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Underrepresentation in newsrooms can contribute to blind spots in coverage of black and marginalized communities.

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When the people telling our stories don't reflect the diversity of the communities being written about, the picture we get is incomplete, or it's often skewed toward the perspective of those in power or the majority culture.

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That means we're missing the voices of people who live different experiences and have different perspectives.

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Immigrants navigating new lives and rural communities facing economic decline or young people of color growing up in neighborhoods underrepresented in media and policy discussions.

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Without that representation, stories about education and healthcare and climate change or criminal justice can leave out the people most affected.

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And policies may be designed based on partial understanding and audience only see one side of the picture.

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For example, we might only hear about rising housing costs in a city, but not hear how a single mother in a marginalized neighborhood struggles to keep her kids in school while juggling multiple jobs.

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So when a storyteller's don't reflect the full spectrum of experiences, we're not just missing perspectives, we're missing solutions.

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And it's a reminder that we need to seek out those underrepresented voices and ask whose stories are being left out and why does it matter?

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Another example.

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Though the issue is longstanding, it continues to receive far less media attention than it deserves.

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Black women and girls are disproportionately victims of disappearance or homicidal violence.

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Yet many cases remain unsolved or ignored altogether.

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And without coverage and public pressure systems of accountability, investigations and prevention may stagnate, meaning lives, families, and communities can continue to suffer in silence.

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And what does it say about a community when entire category of victims remain largely invisible in our media landscape?

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It says a lot about whose lives society values and whose struggles get attention.

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Think about communities affected by poverty, marginalized groups facing systematic violence, or people in remote areas hit by disaster.

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Their stories often don't make the headlines if they ever.

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This invisibility doesn't just erase individuals, it shapes public perception, influences public decisions, and it can allow systematic problems to persist unchecked because who's going to check them?

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If the media only highlights certain victims, the public may assume others are less important or less deserving of help.

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The takeaway is this representation matters not just for fairness, but for accountability.

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When victims are made visible, society is forced to confront the realities they face.

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And policymakers and journalists and the public are challenged to respond.

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Because ignoring these stories leaves entire communities unsupported and perpetuates cycles of in fucking justice.

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Lastly, AI and archival technology bias in preserving black historical records.

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A new research paper shows that digitizing historical black newspapers and archives face significant structural challenges, layout issues, degraded prints, lack of annotated data, and that AI-based OCR systems tend to underperform for these black targeted archives.

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This matters because historical memory and cultural preservation matter.

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If black archives are less accessible or harder to digitize, future generations may lose access to vital cultural and historical records.

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Now, we often talk about what's happening now with the administration um trying to change the perception of how history is portrayed to school systems and history books and how history is actually being preserved.

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We see what's happening or what's happened at the Smithsonian Museums and the African American Museum.

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Not at the Holocaust Museum, though, but another story.

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And the American Indian Museum and all of these individual museums in states and the statues?

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We see all of these things happening, but what we often talk about what's happening now, but what about what's being preserved or lost for the future?

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And a much more important question: who decides what history gets to be saved?

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History isn't just what happened, it's what we choose to remember.

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And those choices aren't neutral.

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Who decides which stories, which artifacts, and which cultural moments are saved?

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Museums and archives and schools, and yes, even government institutions pay a huge role in shaping our collective memory.

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So why do you think that this administration is trying to tell all of the Ivy League schools, the Harvards, the Yales, the Princetons, all of them, they have to get on board with this policy of taking certain DEI actions or taking away certain DEI actions or taking away certain funding.

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If you don't do these things, we're going to take away your funding.

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Why do you think that is?

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Because they're trying to reshape the way history is being taught.

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They're changing the way some voices get amplified.

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And they're leaving others to silence.

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Because how we remember the past shapes who we are today.

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And what kind of society we're going to lead for the next generation.

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Because I am so curious.

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To see how this story of life gets played in history books 50 years from now, 100 years from now, hell, even 20 years from now, because there's so many stories I just talked to about or talked about here to you, and it's only October.

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But that's all the stories I have for you all today.

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I appreciate each and every one of you all for hanging with me.

00:30:31.279 --> 00:30:37.200
Um, and yeah, thank you all for being here.

00:30:37.759 --> 00:30:44.079
I wish all of you a great rest of your day, rest of your evening, and I'll catch you on the next session with Shay.

00:30:45.119 --> 00:30:46.079
Peace.