Education
These guided paths help people build the knowledge needed to understand history, government, and systemic racism— and why reparations, land back, and antifascism matter in practice.
Learning Path of the Week
Migration, exclusion, labor, and community resilience.
Anti-Asian racism has deep roots in law and labor history—knowing this changes how we see the present.
Each path includes a 3-step curriculum and why it matters.
Foundations in markets, labor, public goods, and inequality.
Understanding how economies actually work is the first step to seeing why inequality is a policy choice—not an accident.
Branches of government, constitutional structure, and civic power.
Knowing how power flows in government helps people organize for change and resist misinformation.
How U.S. foreign policy is made, documented, and debated.
Foreign policy decisions shape wars, migration, and global inequality—understanding them prevents fear-based narratives.
From slavery and Reconstruction to civil rights and reparations.
Racial wealth gaps and injustice are rooted in history—this path shows why repair is necessary.
Migration, exclusion, labor, and community resilience.
Anti-Asian racism has deep roots in law and labor history—knowing this changes how we see the present.
Immigration, incarceration, and postwar justice movements.
The incarceration of Japanese Americans shows how fear can erase rights—understanding it guards against repetition.
Treaties, land, sovereignty, and contemporary nations.
Land back and sovereignty are rooted in treaty law and Indigenous survival—this path builds that foundation.
Historical harms, legal frameworks, and repair movements.
Reparations and land back are about repair and justice, not charity—this path explains the legal and moral basis.
What antifascism is, and how propaganda shapes fear.
Antifascism is defense of democracy and human dignity—this path separates history from propaganda.
Mass incarceration, policing, and the path toward accountability.
The U.S. locks up more people than any nation on Earth—understanding the system is the first step to changing it.
Critical thinking, disinformation, and the role of journalism.
In an age of algorithmic feeds and AI-generated content, knowing how to evaluate information is a survival skill.
Science, policy, food systems, and the fight for a livable planet.
Climate change is a justice issue—the people least responsible suffer most. This path connects science to action.
Inequality, labor rights, housing, healthcare, and the fight for a fair economy.
Wealth inequality is a policy choice. This path shows how economics, labor, and housing intersect with justice.