• Donate
  • Newsletter
  • Home
  • About
    • Our Story, Mission & Vision
    • Meet the team
    • Donate
    • Republish our stories
    • Our supporters
    • Before you talk to a journalist
    • Contact us securely
    • Editorial policies
  • Investigations
    • FedEx
    • Separated By Design
    • Profiting from the Poor
    • Vaccine equity
    • Coronavirus in Memphis Warehouses
  • Byhalia Connection Pipeline
  • Housing
    • Eviction Resources
    • Eviction Guide
    • No Shelter
  • Economic Justice
    • Development
    • Living Wage
    • Workers
    • Poverty
    • Power/Wealth
    • Unions
  • Before you talk to a journalist
  • Careers
  • More
    • Black Lives Matter
    • Racial Justice
      • Activism
      • Black Lives Matter
      • Protests
      • Confederate Monuments
      • Racism
      • Unsung – Black Women series
    • From the editor
    • At The Root
    • Coronavirus
    • Criminal Justice
      • Courts
      • Juvenile Justice
      • Mass Incarceration
      • Policing in America
      • Surveillance
    • Democracy
      • Voting
      • Elections
      • Census
    • Social Justice
      • Civil Rights
      • Immigration
      • Bridge Protest
      • LGBTQ
    • Government
    • Health
      • Health Insurance
      • Reproductive Health
    • Education
    • Religion
    • Newsroom
      • Awards
      • Grants
      • Journalism
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Skip to content
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
MLK50: Justice Through Journalism

MLK50: Justice Through Journalism

On poverty, power and public policy

  • Donate
  • Newsletter
Donate
  • Home
  • About
    • Our Story, Mission & Vision
    • Meet the team
    • Donate
    • Republish our stories
    • Our supporters
    • Before you talk to a journalist
    • Contact us securely
    • Editorial policies
  • Investigations
    • FedEx
    • Separated By Design
    • Profiting from the Poor
    • Vaccine equity
    • Coronavirus in Memphis Warehouses
  • Byhalia Connection Pipeline
  • Housing
    • Eviction Resources
    • Eviction Guide
    • No Shelter
  • Economic Justice
    • Development
    • Living Wage
    • Workers
    • Poverty
    • Power/Wealth
    • Unions
  • Before you talk to a journalist
  • Careers
  • More
    • Black Lives Matter
    • Racial Justice
      • Activism
      • Black Lives Matter
      • Protests
      • Confederate Monuments
      • Racism
      • Unsung – Black Women series
    • From the editor
    • At The Root
    • Coronavirus
    • Criminal Justice
      • Courts
      • Juvenile Justice
      • Mass Incarceration
      • Policing in America
      • Surveillance
    • Democracy
      • Voting
      • Elections
      • Census
    • Social Justice
      • Civil Rights
      • Immigration
      • Bridge Protest
      • LGBTQ
    • Government
    • Health
      • Health Insurance
      • Reproductive Health
    • Education
    • Religion
    • Newsroom
      • Awards
      • Grants
      • Journalism

Author Archives: Rev. Dr. Daryll H. Coleman

Posted inCommentary

Take the slavery language out of the constitution

by Rev. Dr. Daryll H. Coleman November 4, 2022November 7, 2022

As Tennesseans prepare for the November elections, the question must be addressed, “Yes or No on Amendment 3?”   Amendment 3 is the removal of the exception clause that states: “That slavery and involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime, whereof the party shall have been dully convicted, are forever prohibited in this state.” The […]

MLK50: Justice Through Journalism
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram

About Us

MLK50: Justice Through Journalism is a nonprofit Memphis newsroom focused on poverty, power and public policy — issues about which Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. cared deeply. Contact us at info@mlk50.com

Search our Archives

© 2023 On poverty, power and public policy. Proudly powered by Newspack by Automattic