Jim Wallis on racism, reparations, and #BlackLivesMatter

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Half a century ago, a teenaged Jim Wallis decided to confront the rampant racism in his hometown of Detroit, Michigan. As a white man, he decided to enter the city and take jobs alongside black workers, and he began speaking out about the racial barriers present at all levels in Detroit. The decision angered many within his white community and even pushed him away from his church. The negative reactions of Wallis' peers did not deter him, and today, he continues his fight for racial justice. In 2014, he was among 20 faith leaders arrested in Ferguson, Missouri during a march protesting the unfair treatment of black Americans by law enforcement. And now Wallis has released his manifesto on the matter, America's Original Sin: Racism, White Privilege, and the Bridge to a New AmericaNew York Times bestseller in which Wallis does not mince words. Here we discuss his relentless war on racism and why he's relentlessly waging it.

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