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People of color who moved to Texas said they were attracted by jobs and more-affordable homes. Census data indicates that in 2023, Texas led the nation in population growth, welcoming 473,000 people, the most new residents of any state. Millennials comprised 40.5% of people moving to Texas from 2021 to 2022, and Gen Zers made up about 30%. The Texas Demographic Center's analysis of the 2020 census found that 95% of the state's population growth was associated with a rise in people of color. Are you a person of color who recently moved to — or moved out of — Texas, and wants to share your story?
Persons: , Jasmine Cambridge, Cambridge, she's, Austin, I've, Austin —, They've, Gen Zers, Lauren Leining, RubyHome, Holly Heard, Anna Lagos, San Antonio —, we'd, Alcynna Lloyd Organizations: Service, Wells, Bank of America, US, Brookings Institution, Americans, Cambridge, Lagos, BI Locations: Texas, Atlanta, Austin, Cambridge, California, New York, Minnesota, Dallas, Houston, what's, Mexico, Mexican, Lagos, San Antonio, New Braunfels, , — Texas, alloyd@businessinsider.com
Read previewThis is an as-told-to essay based on a conversation with Rami Kashou, a Palestinian American fashion designer. I grew up during the second intifada under the Israeli military occupation. Courtesy of Rami KashouMaking clothes as a kid living in the West BankEven when I was younger, I was fascinated with fashion. AdvertisementIn the West Bank, making your own clothes was a way to be fashionable because we don't have much access to the rest of the world. Draping comes from a culture where women drape themselves in fabric, whether it's a shawl, a veil, or a long dress.
Persons: , Rami Kashou, I'd, Elsa Klensch, sister's Barbies, Paris Hilton, Penelope Cruz, Kim Kardashian, I've Organizations: Service, Business, West Bank, US Locations: Palestinian American, Jerusalem, Ramallah, America, , Hollywood, Palestine
I didn't know white people until we got to Fort Worth. AdvertisementMy family bought a home in a neighborhood where we weren't wanted, but we didn't know that. LM Otero/APRegaining our landI went to Fort Worth's first Black high school and graduated when I was 16 years old. One day years later, a friend of mine who works at the Star-Telegram, a local newspaper in Fort Worth, mentioned the land my family had bought all those years ago. Opal Lee (bottom second from left) attended President Joe Biden's signing of the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act.
Persons: , Opal Lee, weren't, Lee, It's, LM Otero, Fort Worth's, Gage Yager, Gage, I'm twerking, Juneteenth, Joe Biden's, Evan Vucci Organizations: Service, Business, AP, Fort, Wiley College, Star, Humanity Locations: Marshall , Texas, Fort Worth, Marshall
Known as "border radio," the unregulated American radio industry sprung up on Mexico's northern border in the 1930s. Michael Ochs Archives/Getty ImagesIn the years that followed, other border radio stations sprung up in Mexico. Hank Thompson, another country music star who grew up in Waco in the 30s, said border radio stations were the only stations where one could listen to country music most of the time. But the legacy of border radio stations continued to live on in the country music they helped popularize, as well as its cousin genres. According to American honky-tonk star Webb Pierce, country music "might not have survived if it hadn't been for border radio."
Persons: , Bill Crawford, Crawford, weren't, Will Horwitz, Horwitz's, Jimmie Rodgers, Carter, Michael Ochs, Jesus Christ, Dallas Turner, John Romulus Brinkley, Brinkley, Pope Brock, Minerva, Minnie, Jones, Patsy Montana, Slim Rinehart, Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings, Hank Thompson, Lydia Mendoza, Rosa Dominguez, Mexican Nightingale, Dominguez, Maybelle, Webb Pierce, It's Organizations: Service, Business, Amazing Broadcasters, American Airwaves, Keystone, Gamma, Getty Images, US, charlatans, Houston, Country, Michael Ochs Archives, Kansas he'd, The Kansas State Medical Board, Federal Radio Commission, Soibelman, Tejano, Getty, Thunderbirds, ZZ Locations: American, West, Mexico, Canada, United States, Mexican, France, Tamaulipas, KFKB, Kansas, New York, Waco, South Dakota
Read previewNetflix pulled an Indian film from its platform just days after it began streaming after backlash from right-wing Hindu groups, reports say. This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. The phrase "love jihad" refers to an Islamaphobic conspiracy theory purporting that Muslim men are seducing Hindu women to convert them to Islam. 'Fanaticism won, creativity lost'It's not the first time Netflix and other streaming platforms have faced pressure from religious Hindu groups. AdvertisementNetflix did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.
Persons: , Narendra Modi's, Shri Ram, Annapoorani, — Ramesh Solanki 🇮🇳 ( Organizations: Service, Netflix, Business, Hindu Parishad, Zee Studios Locations: Tamil Nadu
Read previewCoco Gauff clarified she "wasn't mad" about a cartoon posted by the United States Tennis Association. In a cartoon posted on Sunday ahead of the Australian Open, the USTA depicted Gauff and other American tennis players as characters from the animated show "The Wild Thornberrys." Oh Coco did not like this usta cartoon post loool pic.twitter.com/k3jEdmtw6m — Melanie Lautrup (@melanie_lautrup) January 14, 2024But in a Monday night news conference, Gauff said her reaction to her comments was exaggerated. Advertisement"I wasn't mad. Gauff said she sent a direct message to the USTA jokingly asking what the thought process behind the cartoon was, but the organization never responded.
Persons: , Gauff, Coco, k3jEdmtw6m, Melanie Lautrup, Jess Pegula, Ben Shelton, Sebastian Korda, she'd, should've, Serena Williams, Williams Organizations: Service, United States Tennis Association, Business, USTA, usta
Read previewThe Field Museum in Chicago has covered up several displays featuring Native American cultural items as new federal regulations go into effect. The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act was established in 1990 to facilitate the protection and return of Native remains and cultural objects. AdvertisementFor years, tribal officials and repatriation activists have called for the speedier return of Native remains and objects. The Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard University, which still holds onto thousands of Native American remains, has not announced how it will respond to the latest regulations. The new rules are the latest effort by the federal government to ensure museums are giving tribes the proper consideration over Native objects.
Persons: , Bryan Newland Organizations: Service, Museum, Business, Protection, Field Museum, Peabody Museum of Archaeology, Harvard University, Association, American Indian Affairs, New York Times Locations: Chicago
The Montgomery Bus Boycott began in December 1955 after Rosa Parks refused to give up her bus seat. Black taxi drivers provided alternative transportation for thousands of boycotters. AdvertisementWithout the help of Black taxi drivers, the boycott would have been severely hampered. Women walked to work during the Montgomery Bus Boycott. Don Cravens/Getty ImagesFacing police pressureIn the face of the mounting boycott, Montgomery police instituted a minimum fare law and even arrested taxi drivers who helped the city's Black residents.
Persons: Montgomery Bus Boycott, Rosa Parks, , Parks, Martin Luther King Jr, King, Don Cravens, Gretchen Sorin, Bayard Rustin, Rustin Organizations: Montgomery Bus, . Police, Service, Parks, Travel, Civil Rights, Smithsonian Magazine, Bus, Montgomery, National Archives, National Park Service Locations: Montgomery, Rosa
A Southeast Asian restaurant closed down last year after facing false accusations of serving dog meat. Anna Le Nguyen and Minh Rasavong Oriyavong help out in the kitchen of Love & Thai. Rallying togetherIn November, Rasavong reopened his restaurant under a new name: Love & Thai. The mural by Hana Luna Her at Love & Thai pays homage to Rasavong's family's journey to America. Customers have flocked to Love & Thai and shown their support, and Rasavong wants to share that support with others in the community.
Persons: , David Rasavong, Rasavong, Anna Le Nguyen, Minh Rasavong, Richard Vogel, Louis, Yelp, David Rasavong Rasavong, Hana Luna, Rasavong's Organizations: Service, Google, Facebook, Business, Thai, &, US, Philippine -, People, Local, Love &, Customers Locations: Fresno, Laos, Thailand, United States, St, Philippines, Oregon, America
Lululemon founder Chip Wilson criticized the company's 'whole diversity and inclusion thing.' Former Lululemon employees of color said Wilson's remarks and the company's response failed its mission of increasing diversity. AdvertisementLululemon's employees of color are making their voices heard after the company's founder blasted its diversity initiatives. In January, Lululemon founder Chip Wilson told Forbes that he doesn't agree with the company's "whole diversity and inclusion thing." "The company has failed all Black employees and employees of color," Michael Collins, a former Lululemon store manager, told Business Insider.
Persons: Chip Wilson, , Forbes, Wilson, You've, Wilson's, Michael Collins, they're, women's, Lululemon, Collins, Miya Dotson, Dotson Organizations: Service, Business, Fashion, Equity
Countries have looted and traded artifacts from one another for centuries. Some famous artifacts, like the Rosetta Stone and the Parthenon Marbles, are subjects of dispute. AdvertisementThe old adage of "finders, keepers" has been put to the test as countries have called for the return of various ancient artifacts. For centuries, legendary artifacts have been looted, traded, and taken far away from their original lands. AdvertisementHere are 10 cultural artifacts that countries are still fighting over.
Persons: Stone, Organizations: Service, Museum, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Met Locations: New York City, Benin, Cambodia, Thailand
Jennings sued the streetcar company and was represented in court by Chester Arthur, the future US president. 10 years later, all of New York City's public transit systems were desegregated. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . Then, African Americans were only allowed on trolleys with signs reading, "Colored People Allowed in This Train." Then, after a decade of continued activism and legal battles, all of New York City's public transit services were fully desegregated in 1865.
Persons: Elizabeth Jennings, Jennings, Chester Arthur, , Rosa Parks, Thomas L, Arthur Organizations: Service, New York City, First Colored American Congregational Church, New York Tribune, New Yorkers, Third Avenue Railroad Company, New York Daily Tribune, Avenue Railroad Locations: New York, Montgomery , Alabama, Lower Manhattan
Granville T. Woods was one of the most prolific Black inventors in the 19th century. Woods' inventions revolutionized transportation, but he faced many challenges as a Black inventor. One such inventor was Granville T. Woods, the most prolific Black inventor in the late 19th century. Woods, ironically, was dubbed "Black Edison" by newspapers at the time for his contributions to science. Historians ascribe Woods' decision to sell his hard-won patents to an acknowledgment that it was difficult to market Black American inventions to a largely white audience.
Persons: Granville, Woods, Thomas Edison, he'd, , Edison, George Westinghouse, Frank Sprague, Rayvon Fouché, Lewis H, Latimer, Shelby J, Davison, couldn't, Lucius Phelps, Michael C, Christopher Organizations: Service, Woods, Co, United States Patent, National Inventors Hall of Fame, Edison, Edison Company, Getty, Westinghouse, General Electric, American Engineering, of Black Studies Locations: Cincinnati , Ohio, Columbus , Ohio, Australia, African American
Elon Musk called a growing wave of strikes against Tesla in Sweden 'insane.' The union representing postal service workers have joined in solidarity, meaning no new license plates for Tesla cars. AdvertisementElon Musk called a mounting wave of strikes against Tesla in Sweden "insane" as unions continue to pressure the electric carmaker to sign a collective bargaining agreement with its mechanics. The labor battle began on October 27, when mechanics in the Swedish union IF Metall walked out. Their sympathy strike means that new Tesla cars won't receive any license plates — signaling an impending pause on new car registrations in an important market for the company.
Persons: Elon Musk, , Elon, Musk, Tesla Organizations: Tesla, IF Metall, Service, Swedish Transport Workers ' Union, Berlin Locations: Sweden, Swedish, dockworkers, Germany, Berlin
Indianapolis Colts' owner now says his DUI arrest was because he is a "rich, white billionaire." In 2014, Irsay pled guilty to one misdemeanor count and was suspended for six months from the NFL. The billionaire said in a newly-released interview that he only pled guilty to "get it over with." AdvertisementIndianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay said he was "prejudiced against" for being a "rich, white billionaire" when he was arrested on a DUI charge in 2014. Later that year, the Colts owner pled guilty to one misdemeanor count of operating a vehicle while intoxicated.
Persons: Irsay, , Jim Irsay, Bryant Gumbel, Robert Irsay, Molly Qerim Organizations: Indianapolis Colts, NFL, Service, Sports, Police, Colts, Forbes
Bayard Rustin was a civil rights leader who organized the 1963 March on Washington. When he was one of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s closest advisors, he was working 24/7 on civil rights activism. After meeting with New York Mayor Wagner to discuss racial tension in Harlem and Brooklyn, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. (right), Bayard Rustin (left), and Rev. When he passed, he was remembered mostly for organizing the 1963 March on Washington, which was a triumph not just personally, but also for the Civil Rights Movement. Bayard Rustin (left) and Cleveland Robinson (right) talk on either side of a sign advertising the March on Washington.
Persons: Bayard Rustin, Rustin, Walter Naegle, Yoonji Han, , Bayard, Lincoln, Patrick A, Burns, Dr, Martin Luther King Jr, he'd, New York Mayor Wagner, Martin Luther King, Jr, Bernard Lee, Gracie, I've, I'm, Walter Naegle ., Dr . King, Cleveland Robinson, Al Gretz, Colman Domingo, Anger Organizations: Service, American Civil, Civil Rights Movement, New York Times Co, Getty, International Rescue Committee, New York, Civil Rights, Washington Locations: Washington, India, Harlem, Brooklyn
The Denver Basic Income Project examines the impact of guaranteed income on wealth disparity. AdvertisementAdvertisementLast October, Palafox was entered into the lottery for the Denver Basic Income Project, along with the others at the shelter. AdvertisementAdvertisementBasic income to fight racial and economic inequalityThe Denver Basic Income Project was founded in 2021 to examine the impact of guaranteed income on wealth disparity in the US. The project's participant pool was "designed to mirror the demographics of those that experience homelessness in Denver," Donovan said, emphasizing the project's mission of equity. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe Denver Basic Income Project has received a $2 million commitment from the City of Denver in its 2024 budget, and is in talks to determine next steps, according to Donovan.
Persons: , Rosemarie Palafox, Palafox, Mark Donovan, Donovan Organizations: Service, Denver, Income, National Alliance, Homelessness Locations: Denver, Colorado, who's, Alaska, City of Denver
Herbert "Bertie" Bowman was the longest-serving African-American staffer on Capitol Hill in US history. AdvertisementAdvertisementBertie Bowman, the longest-serving African-American staffer on Capitol Hill in history, died at 92 years old on Wednesday morning. Sen. John Kerry hugs Bowman after his confirmation hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee for Secretary of State on January 24, 2013. AdvertisementAdvertisementBowman escorts Hillary Clinton at a hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on March 2, 2011. Bowman had continued to work in the Capitol until his death, becoming the longest-serving African-American congressional staffer in US history.
Persons: Herbert, Bertie, Bowman, , Bertie Bowman, Andrew Desiderio, Sen, Ben Cardin, Burnet Maybank, Maybank, Chris Dodd, Tom Williams, I'd, talkshow, Tavis Smiley, Lyndon Johnson, Strom Thurmond, John Kerry, Ken Cedeno, Jesse Helms of, J, William Fulbright of, Bill Clinton, Elvis, Clinton, Chip Somodevilla, he'd, Hillary Clinton, Alex Wong, Helms Organizations: Capitol, Senate, Service, Punchbowl News, Foreign, Station, Senate Foreign, State, William Fulbright of Arkansas, US, Foreign Relations, Washingtonian, Military Force, Islamic Locations: Washington , DC, Ben Cardin of Maryland, Summerton, South Carolina, Washington ,, Washington, Jesse Helms of North Carolina, Vietnam, Islamic State
Baron Davis is a former NBA player who's making a name for himself off the court in the business world. NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. When I saw the court he'd built in his backyard, it was just like, "I'm going to do this every day." From there, it was every day, all day, basketball, basketball, basketball. That's when I realized I needed to go and find great athletes doing dope stuff, that are doing great investments, creating incredible businesses, and branding themselves as entrepreneurs.
Persons: Baron Davis, who's, Davis, Yoonji Han, , it's, Los Angeles , Cleveland —, Clark Hodgin, Let's, Alec Castillo Organizations: NBA, Business, Service, UCLA, , Shutterstock Locations: Santa Monica, South Central, — New York , New Orleans, Charlotte, Los Angeles , Cleveland, San Francisco, Golden State
Katya Echazarreta became the first Mexican-born woman to go to space in June 2022. She became the first Mexican-born woman to go to space in 2022. I only spoke Spanish to my mom, who still hadn't learned English at that point. I didn't hear back until three years later, but during that time, I completed a space training program where I did training with microgravity, G-force, and pressurized spacesuits. Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto via Getty ImagesI'd always known that a Mexican-born woman hadn't traveled into space before because I'd been obsessed with this topic for so long.
Persons: Katya Echazarreta, Echazarreta, , I've, I'd, hadn't, Galileo, Juno, Gerardo Vieyra, José Hernández, Ellen Ochoa, Rodolfo Neri Vela, Fundación, It's Organizations: NASA, Service, UCLA, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Jet Propulsion, Mars Rover, Humanity, Getty Locations: Mexican, California, Guadalajara, Mexico, Utopia Liberty
Hawaiian youth advocates sued the state's transportation department over greenhouse-gas emissions. Amid the escalating climate crisis, Nishida and 13 other Hawaiian youth advocates sued the Hawaii Department of Transportation in 2022 over transportation-related greenhouse-gas emissions. The lawsuit, Navahine F. v. Hawaii Department of Transportation, is scheduled to go to trial next summer. Transportation emissions made up the largest share of energy-sector emissions in Hawaii in 2017, according to a 2021 report by the Hawaii Department of Health. Youth plaintiffs gather before the start of the Navahine F. v. the Hawaii Department of Transportation hearing at the First Circuit Environmental Court in Honolulu on January 26.
Persons: Taliya Nishida, Nishida, Navahine, Andrea Rodgers, Rodgers, KawahineʻIlikea, Taliya, Mesina, Kalā, Rylee, Elyse Butler Organizations: Service, Hawaii Department of Transportation, . Hawaii Department of Transportation, Transportation, Hawaii Department of Health, Trust, cocounsel, Court, Department of Transportation Locations: Hawaii, Maui, Montana, Honolulu, Waimea, United States
Keshawn Warner is the cofounder of Dazed, a cannabis dispensary in Massachusetts and New York. AdvertisementAdvertisementThis is an as-told-to essay based on a conversation with Keshawn Warner, co-founder of the cannabis dispensary Dazed. Then, in 2008, at the height of the stop and frisk era, I was arrested for trying to buy cannabis. A Dazed cannabis dispensary. AdvertisementAdvertisementWhen we heard that New York had legalized cannabis and was opening up its cannabis industry, my ears perked up.
Persons: Keshawn Warner, Warner, Yoonji Han, Woodrow Wilson, There's, we'd, Andrew Lichtenstein, dink, I'd, Patrick Roberts, frisked Organizations: Warner, Morning, Getty Images, Norfolk State University, Yankees, York Locations: Massachusetts, New York, New York City, East Harlem, Puerto Rican, California, Breckenridge in Colorado . Denver, York, Manhattan
Ashley Blanc was born in Trinidad & Tobago but moved to the US when she was a baby. Last year, Blanc bought a house in Latronico, Italy, and said she can't wait to move there. In the fall of 2021, I came across an article about cheap homes for sale in Latronico, Italy. Latronico, Italy, taken during a visit to the town. But here in America, it's moreso, "We don't like you because you're Black and you're beneath us."
Persons: Ashley Blanc, Blanc, I've, Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King, Jr, Vincenzo Castellano, Money, there's, I'm, it's, Latronico Organizations: Service, Social Security Locations: Trinidad & Tobago, Latronico, Italy, Wall, Silicon, United States, Barbados, America, Baltimore, Europe
She's long grappled with her two loves, acting and astronomy, spending 11 years acting before getting her Ph. Shields said her acting experience helped her break free of the stereotypes she faced as a woman of color in science. D. program in astrophysics. D. program. D. program.
Persons: Aomawa Shields, Shields, astrobiologist, Kelly McGillis, Charlotte Blackwood, I'd, didn't, I've, Spitzer, Organizations: Service, UC Irvine, Blue Angels, Miramar Air Force Base, Diego's La Jolla Playhouse, MIT, Lowell Observatory, Madison, PBS, University of Washington Locations: America, Wall, Silicon, San Diego, Shields, Miramar, Diego's, . Wisconsin, Los Angeles, grad
Beanie Babies exploded in popularity in the '90s, sparking a collector frenzy over the toys. Lina Trivedi was in college when she joined Ty, Inc. and created a website and accompanying poems for Beanie Babies. Both ideas were ways to connect better with customers and helped generate buzz for the toys. Her role in the Beanie Babies craze was documented in the recent movie "The Beanie Bubble." This article is based on a conversation with Trivedi, as told to Insider reporter Yoonji Han.
Persons: Lina Trivedi, Beanie, Trivedi, Yoonji Han Organizations: Ty, Inc, Service Locations: Wall, Silicon, Indian American
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