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TRACIE GUY-DECKER
More Meaning. More Compassion. More Fun.
Essays, Poetry, and Illustrations
Beginning in January 2026, Hot Flash of Genius: Essays, Poetry, and Illustrations of Midlife Ethical Non-Monogamy will live here.
(The anti-oppression posts from Bmoreincremental.com migrated here in March 2023. Please use the categories to find what you're looking for.)


Racism, Denial and Shame
Professor Ibram X. Kendi really opened my thinking about racism and my own antiracism with his impressive, thorough and National-Book-Award-winning book Stamped from the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America. (If you haven’t read it yet, you should. It’s long, and it’s worth every minute.) Ever since I read the book last year, I’ve been following Dr. Kendi’s writing. He is a prolific thinker and an active commentator. When I saw that he wrote an op-
Tracie
Apr 20, 20185 min read


The Talmud and White Fragility
I first read How Studying Talmud Helped Me Understand Racism in America at a legislative kick-off for Jews United for Justice in January. On initial reading I felt it was just a new way to say ideas I was already familiar with, namely intention does not equal impact. But the more I processed this essay, the more I realized Avi Killip is actually saying something more nuanced. Killip overlays categories of injury from the Talmud onto racism. These categories were articulated
Tracie
Mar 19, 20184 min read


The Racism of Good Intentions
When I visited NMAAHC (see here for a little about the visit), I took some time to shop the gift store. Browsing the offerings, one (giant) book caught my eye. More than 500 pages long, an impressively thick volume, Stamped from the Beginning by Ibram X. Kendi, bears a subtitle that is hard to resist for me: “The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America.” It also bears the seal of a National Book Award Winner. And so, intimidated by the length but intrigued by the titl
Tracie
Jun 19, 20176 min read


Grappling with the Founding Fathers
A few months ago, I was talking to an old friend of mine about his daughter’s experience in Kindergarten. Nick told me about his daughter confronting her teacher about George Washington. The teacher told the class that Washington was a great man. My friend’s daughter piped up, “but he owned slaves!” The teacher responded, “he was still a great man!” and expected the conversation to be over. As we stood in line waiting for sandwiches, Nick, who is Black, proceeded to express h
Tracie
Jun 16, 20175 min read


Reading list to date
I started this trip with a few other travelers right after the Uprising in Baltimore. Here are the books and articles we've read together between then and now: 1. Irving, Debby, Waking Up White: And Finding Myself in the Story of Race . 2. Alexander, Michelle, The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness 3. Coates, Ta-Nehisi, Between the World and Me , 4. Coates, Ta-Nehisi, " The Case for Reparations " in The Atlantic 5. Cracking the Codes: The Syste
Tracie
Jan 26, 20171 min read


An Open Letter to God
I wanted to start B'more Incremental here, because it helps you understand why I am working for incremental change in the first place. This post was originally written as a part of my participation in the Institute for Islamic Christian and Jewish Studies ' I magining Justice in Baltimore project. It was originally published on ICJS's blog on the Huffington Post. Dear God, I have been asked to write an essay about how religion fits into imagining justice in Baltimore. I’v
Tracie
Jan 22, 20175 min read

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