The Crisis magazine is published bi-weekely, and is dedicated to being an open and honest forum for discussing critical and significant issues confronting people of color, and the new-aged American society. In addition, it positively highlights the historical and cultural achievements of these diverse peoples. You cannot get more real than the publication of essays, interviews, and in-depth reporters, who write their explored past and present issues concerning race and its impact on educational, economic, political, social, moral, and ethical issues. Each issue includes a special section from The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), reporting the news and events of the NAACP on a local and national level. The belief of this periodical is for actively cultivating a diversity of opinion in a healthy necessary step to solving the problem of race, where it is understood that there is no one right way to translate good intentions into workable public policy. Building on the foundation established by Du Bois, the intended purpose of The Crisis is the commitment to an integrated, non-violent society that rejects all forms of racism, anti-Semitism, sexism and homophobia.
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