â hey, he's a pop star, but that doesn't mean he needs to stick to one genre â this is a slow jam for the ages. Where he was once asking you "what do you mean," now he says you don't have to make your mind up. No pressure or anything. And the minute you understand Big Sean's almost-too-cleverEmpire vn0a54f44tw Socially active students who might want to learn about the prison industrial complex orprison abolition vn0a54f44tw is an AfroIndigenous poet, installation and adornment artist from Oaxaca, México. Their work attends to the quotidian realities of undocumented migrants in the United States, the Black condition in Latin America, and the intimate kinship units that trans and nonbinary people build in the face of violence. Their debut visual poetry collection, vn0a54f44tw Pearson says he believes that his community and family deserve reparations from the U.S. government and companies that contribute to the poor air quality, though he adds that he doesn’t often use the term “reparations” to describe the work that needs to be done. He mentions ensuring health care for those impacted and closure of the facilities that have been polluting the community. “There's going to have to be a rethinking of the value of people's lives in those communities," he says, "and an intentional investment in the millions, if not billions of dollars, to remediate a lot of the harm that has been done.” vn0a54f44tw