Sexism in Scouting

Pictured above: 1950’s posters for boy scouts and girl scouts by Normal Rockwell. Put together here in a collage to show the seriousness portrayed by BSA compared to GSUSA’s more playful attitude. There is a reason why the Girl Scouts of the United States of America (GSUSA) have had a century-long identity crisis on their […]

Wilderness: White & Wealthy

The lack of diversity is a major problem in most spaces and institutions within the United States, but it is especially prevalent within the outdoor industry, which is dominated by wealthy white people. In 2015, people of color, who comprise 40% of the U.S. population, only accounted for about 20% of the visitors to national […]

Redlining and Gentrification in Manhattan

Redlining was the historical practice of denying loans and services to those who lived in areas that were deemed of low economic value. Minorities (African Americans and immigrants) often lived in these redlined districts and were subjected to inequality, while the wealthy, white, majority were able to afford areas that were deemed safe and desirable. […]

School Shootings: Where Does the Accountability Lie?

 Even though shootings are frequent and even normalized by some people, there are many misconceptions about the circumstances that create a school shooter.  In sharing this graphic, I hope to bring awareness to these misconceptions and the realities of how school shooters can go unnoticed.   Nowadays, school shootings are so common in the United States […]

The Contagion of Hate

“I was walking through the subway a couple weeks ago and a gentleman came up to me and just started yelling racial slurs, most of them directed toward my Chinese ethnicity.” This statement made by Dr. Chen Fu, a hospitalist at NYU Langone Medical Center, exemplifies the bigotry experienced by members of Asian communities who […]