Tim Carney argues that real family policy must go beyond government subsidies
Tim Carney argues that real family policy must go beyond government subsidies
Immigrant background checks are unrelated to national security?: David L. Thomas for Inside Policy

North Carolina cotton farmer wants Black people to embrace the plant [Video]

Categories
Nova Scotia News

HALIFAX COUNTY, N.C. (WBTV) – America has a complicated history with cotton.

Before the civil war, the plant brought great prosperity to the country accounting for more than half its exports. But that success came at a price to enslaved Black people forced into labor to pick the plant during harvest — sometimes under brutal conditions.

The history weighs heavy for many Black Americans, unable to shake the plant’s symbol of oppression.

For Julius Tillery, the plant’s story is still unfolding. He’s clipping away at its dark history, trying to change the way Black people view cotton.

“I want people to see more of an honest view of what cotton is, not just from a media from movies and film standpoint,” said Tillery.

As a fifth generation cotton farmer in North Carolina, Tillery has always seen cotton farming as a family business. It was passed all the way down to …

Linda Sams explains why it
Linda Sams explains why it's so important to ensure salmon farming in Canada remains viable
There’s a lot we can learn from Canada’s last trade-war election: Trevor Tombe in The Hub