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Gary Younge

Bylines

  • Tuskegee Airmen, Ramitelli, Italy, March 1945; photograph by Toni Frissell. From left to right: Richard S. ‘Rip’ Harder, unidentified airman, Thurston L. Gaines Jr., Newman C. Golden, and Wendell M. Lucas.

    ‘We Return Fighting’

    The ambivalence many Black soldiers felt toward the U.S. in WWII was matched only by the ambivalence the U.S. showed toward principles on which WWII was fought.
    by Gary Younge via New York Review of Books on September 28, 2023
  • Martin Luther King: How a Rebel Leader Was Lost to History

    Fifty years after his death, King is a national treasure in the US. But what happened to his revolutionary legacy?
    by Gary Younge via The Guardian on April 4, 2018

Related Excerpts

Viewing 1–1 of 1
Two men sitting on a couch and laughing, with an American flag behind them

The Conceit of American Indispensability

As we mine the 1940s for alternate visions of international order, we must not presume that the US remains the benevolent center of global politics.
by Sam Klug via Boston Review on August 18, 2020
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