The Podcast


Who We Are: A Chronicle of Racism in America

Sponsored by Ben & Jerry’s and Vox, this 7-part series with host and writer Carvell Wallace and The Who We Are Project founder and CEO Jeffery Robinson explores everything from reparations to Black infant mortality rates. Drawing a throughline from anti-Black racism from past-to-present.

Episode 1


Desire, Prosperity, Fortune, Hope

Episode 2


The Failure of the Great “Compromise”

Episode 3


A Home and a Country

Episode 4


Broken Bootstraps

  • “To pull oneself up by one’s bootstraps” was originally a metaphor for the impossible. It’s now one of the most American of American idioms — encapsulating a belief that one’s fortunes and failures hinge on individual responsibility alone. It simultaneously obscures the systemic economic theft of Black people and other people of color in the US by state and commercial interests, as well as the systemic economic enrichment of white populations by those same forces. In this episode, Carvell Wallace and Jeffery Robinson explore how Black wealth has been routinely destroyed, using the example of a 1919 massacre in Elaine, Arkansas, where Black sharecroppers organizing for better financial conditions were killed by a white mob. We’ll also hear from law professor and scholar of banking history Dr. Mehrsa Baradaran on how discriminatory housing policies, unequal access to credit, and predatory banking continue to hinder attempts at wealth-building, even among the Black middle class.

  • “13th Amendment - Abolition of Slavery.” National Constitution Center. Accessed October 5, 2020.

    “1921 Tulsa Race Massacre,” Tulsa Historical Society & Museum. Accessed October 3, 2020.

    “A Massacre of Blacks Haunted This Arkansas City. Then a Memorial.” The Washington Post, August, 30, 2019. Accessed October 5, 2020.

    Agyeman, Julian, Kofi Boone. “Land Loss Has Plagued Black America since Emancipation—Is It Time ...”, The Conversation, June 18, 2020

    “Blacks in the U.S. Face a Huge Gap in Homeownership Rates.” The Washington Post, July 23, 2020.

    Coates, Ta-Nehisi. “The Case for Reparations.“ The Atlantic, June 2014

    “The Emancipation Proclamation.” National Archives, issued January 1, 1863

    Fan, Andrew, Linda Lutton, Alden Loury. “Where Banks Don’t Lend”. June 3, 2020. WBEZ.org

    “The Freedman’s Savings and Trust Company and African American.” Federal Records and African American History (Summer 1997, Vol. 29, No. 2)

    George, Alice. “The 1968 Kerner Commission Got It Right, But Nobody Listened.” The Smithsonian Magazine, March 1, 2018

    Merritt, Keri Leigh. “Land and the Roots of African-American Poverty.” Aeon, March 11, 2016. Accessed October 3, 2020.

    Meyer, Stephen Grant. As Long As They Don’t Move Next Door: Segregation and Racial Conflict in American Neighborhoods. Lanham, Md: Rowman & Littlefield, 2000.

    Sani, Christina Sturdivant. “Homes in Black Neighborhoods Are Vastly Undervalued, Costing ...”, Greater Greater Washington, accessed October 3, 2020.

    Sisson, Patrick. “The Fair Housing Act: An Explainer,” Curbed. April 11, 2017

    “The Story of SNCC.” SNCC Digital Gateway

    Uenuma, Francine. “What Was the Elaine Massacre?” Smithsonian Magazine, August 2, 2018.

    Washington, Booker T. “The Awakening of the Negro”. The Atlantic, September 1896.

    Baradaran, Mehrsa. The Color of Money: Black Banks and the Racial Wealth Gap. Cambridge, MA and London, England: Harvard University Press., 2017

Episode 5


How We Arrive

Episode 6


The Myth of Post-Racial America

Bonus Episode


Revisiting Reparations