Weekly Wrap 9.23.16: The 10 Best Stories You Missed This Week | Sojourners

Weekly Wrap 9.23.16: The 10 Best Stories You Missed This Week

1. WATCH: 6-Year-Old Boy Asks Obama to Bring Syrian Boy to Live With Him

You need this today.

2. The Price of Mass Deportation

The U.S. could lose $4.7 trillion if every undocumented worker were deported.

3. Michelle Alexander Leaving Law to Teach at Union Theological Seminary

The New Jim Crow author says, of her decision, “This is not simply a legal problem, or a political problem, or a policy problem. At its core, America’s journey from slavery to Jim Crow to mass incarceration raises profound moral and spiritual questions about who we are, individually and collectively, who we aim to become, and what we are willing to do now.”

4. 3 Percent of Americans Own Half of the Guns

It’s an average of 17 guns each.

5. MacArthur Grant Awardees Share Their Inspiration

“To me, the getting of this honor is a kind of recognition, obviously a monetary recognition, which is helpful. But it’s also for me the culture saying: We have an investment in dismantling white dominance in our culture.” — Poet Claudia Rankine

The Los Angeles Times is interviewing the latest awardees; see all of the interviews in the Jacket Copy section.

6. Black Lives Matter Isn’t Just a Hashtag Anymore

Brittany Packnett writes for POLITICO on the organization behind the movement and the ways it’s impacted policy.

7. The Numbers on Global Warming Are Even Scarier Than We Thought

Great …

8. What Terence Crutcher’s Death Reminds Me Of

“I have watched Crutcher’s final moments numerous times. I have reminded myself of the injustice of such an event, a senseless killing, and reminded myself of what this incident means for me as a black man in America. And yet what I find most shocking about the video still isn’t how Crutcher died. Rather, it’s how, in his final minutes, he lived.”

9. Turning Silence into Song

“Individuals with aphasia typically have damage to the left hemisphere of their brains, whereas music is largely a function of the right hemisphere … So music can tap into people’s strengths when they have aphasia.” Next step: church choir.

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