Category Archives: Voices

OPINION | You Keep Saying ‘Abortion on Demand.’ I Don’t Think You Know What It Means

by Megan Burbank


Last week, President Joe Biden got himself into a kerfuffle with reproductive rights activists when he expressed his true feelings on abortion. “I’m a practicing Catholic,” he said at a meeting with Vice President Kamala Harris and Democratic governors. “I don’t want abortion on demand, but I thought Roe v. Wade was right.”

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OPINION | Reparations May Be a Pipe Dream but Justice by Geography Could Work

America will likely never pay remunerations for slavery. But it could enact policies that just happened to help Black Americans at the local level.

by Marcus Harrison Green

(This op-ed has been copublished with The Seattle Times.)


Black History Month is as good a time as any to contemplate a Black future. Of course that requires an unflinching reflection on the past.

But with one presidential candidate unable to identity slavery as causal to the Civil War, another claiming it was a nuisance that could have been negotiated around, and books depicting the horror of the “peculiar institution” bound for bans in certain school districts, how can a mass appeal to examine painful American history not be anything but futile?

Continue reading OPINION | Reparations May Be a Pipe Dream but Justice by Geography Could Work

OPINION | Equitable Funding Is Essential for All Public School Students

by Karen Lobos


Rainier Prep is a charter public middle school just south of Seattle that is free, public, and open to all. We serve 335 students, 97% of whom identify as members of the Global Majority (i.e., Black, Brown, Indigenous, and other students of color) and 73% of whom are from families with limited incomes. For eight years, we have delivered on our community’s vision for an exceptional college-prep public middle school option with the flexibility to innovate and meet the needs of all of our students. By integrating a foundation for academic growth with a robust, personalized advising and coaching program, our students, families, and partners are working together to navigate best-fit pathways for success in high schools, degrees, and careers.

However, because charter public schools like ours are not entitled to local property tax levies and lack access to dedicated funding for facilities, our students receive approximately 25% less public funding than their peers in traditional public schools. Last year, we called on legislators to address this funding inequity and were provisioned with one year of enrichment funding for charter public school students in the state budget. We are grateful for this critical support, which has allowed us to continue serving our students, increasing their access to technology integration, field studies, and enrichment activities.

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OPINION | Coalition of Genocide Survivors Advocated for Ethnic Studies, but Lawmakers Killed Bipartisan Bills

by Oliver Miska


A coalition of genocide survivors led by local education nonprofit Washington Ethnic Studies Now (WAESN) is fighting for “meaningful inclusion” and “equity” in bills funding holocaust and genocide curriculum and teacher training. HB 2037, the House version of the bill, and SB 5851, the Senate version, have been under scrutiny, with lawmakers being pressured to make amendments.

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OPINION | Malcolm X’s Timeless Call to Action: Echoes of ‘The Ballot or the Bullet’ in Today’s Struggle for Black Liberation

by Gennette Cordova


Black History Month, especially, is a time for reflecting on the teachings and work of Black leaders who came before us. Malcolm X’s 1964 speech “The Ballot or the Bullet,” delivered less than a year before his assassination, offers valuable perspective to understand the ways in which history has continued to repeat itself, with a call to action to disrupt the cycle.

This speech, which he opens by beseeching his Black audience to unite despite their differences, is rich with relevant insights. The most pertinent of these is an urgent idea with two parts. The first is that, while supporting Republicans is clearly not a realistic solution to the problems Black people face — it wasn’t in 1964 and it isn’t today — we must urgently address the Democratic Party’s consistent failure of the Black community.

Continue reading OPINION | Malcolm X’s Timeless Call to Action: Echoes of ‘The Ballot or the Bullet’ in Today’s Struggle for Black Liberation

OPINION | House Bill 2065 Would Address Racial Disparities, End Double-Penalizing for Juvenile Offenses

by Washington Sen. Claudia Kauffman and Rep. Chris Stearns


Right now, 422 Indigenous people incarcerated in Washington’s state prisons are serving longer sentences because they were involved in the juvenile system as children.

No one should be penalized twice for crimes committed when they were young. Our focus must be on healing and rehabilitation, not punishment.

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OPINION | Giant Retailers Use Consumers’ Gift Card Money as Another Advantage Over Small Businesses

by Luis Rodriguez


Running a small neighborhood business is incredibly rewarding. We live and work in our neighborhood, we know our customers by first name and what they like to eat and drink, and we are deeply involved in our community. But small retail and food business owners know the challenges to keeping our doors open are numerous. Retaining talented staff, street closures, construction, small margins, and unpredictable events like the pandemic, to name just a few.

Being in the shadow of much larger corporate businesses competing for the same customers is a given. Companies like Starbucks have the name recognition, marketing power, real estate, and other advantages to clobber us in sales, no matter how loyal our customer base is. But there’s another factor that contributes to an unlevel playing field that works to their advantage.

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