Episode Details
Back to EpisodesBlack Lives Matter as Open Source Software
Episode 5449
Published 3 weeks ago
Description
In this episode, we explore black lives matter as open source software. Imagine running a global operation that pulls in a hundred million dollars in funding. Right. And it mobilizes like up to 26 million people in the streets. That's a staggering number. But, and here's the catch, you have no CEO? You have no official headquarters, and you have absolutely no control over who uses your name. Yeah, I mean, it sounds like an organizational nightmare, honestly. Completely. You can't fire anyone. And literally anyone with a smartphone can claim they speak for you. It defies basically every traditional rule of how human beings build movements or wield power. Welcome to today's Deep Dive. Today is Monday, March 23, 2026. And we're looking at the history and the immense societal footprint of Black Lives Matter. This is a phrase that started as a really simple social media hashtag back in 2013, and it erupted into one of the largest, most decentralized erupted across three different continents. But beneath these highly visible, tragic individual events, there is a very dense academic and statistical debate happening. right. The movement's core grievance is rooted in statistics regarding structural racism. For example, the Washington Post began compiling a massive database of police use of force. Right, because there wasn't a really unified federal one. Exactly. And their data showed that in 2019, police officers shot and killed 1 ,001 people in the United States. And when you break down the demographics of those 1 ,001 people, the disparity becomes the focal point. The rate of deaths for black Americans was 31 fatal shootings per million. For white Americans, it was 13 per million. Black Americans were being killed at more than twice the rate. But the interpretation of why that disparity exists is where the academic world completely fractured. How so? Well you had a