We’re Battling for the Soul of America

Was the summer of 2020 a wake-up call, a reckoning or a revolution?

Danielle Moodie
ZORA
Published in
3 min readJun 14, 2021

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The summer of 2020 brought with it protest after protest after protest. But to what end? Photo: Getty Images

With six months under our belts in 2021, many have begun to refer to 2020 as the “lost year.” Twenty-twenty was the year that brought us so much — trauma, a reset, inner peace, anxiety. Essentially, it was a basket case of a year. If you are Black, however, it brought with it the persistent reminder that even in the midst of a global pandemic, where a trip to the grocery store could land you in the hospital or worse, being Black in America was still just as deadly as contracting Covid-19. Twenty-twenty made hashtags and household names of Black Americans just trying to live, sleep, run, and shop: Ahmaud Arbury, Breonna Taylor, George Floyd, Rayshard Brooks, and the list, sadly, goes on from there.

Consequently, it would be the murder of George Floyd, captured on video by the brave teenager Darnella Frazier, that the nation would collectively watch in horror, in which former police officer and now convicted murder Derek Chauvin pressed the life out of Floyd. It was Chauvin’s heinous act of depravity for human life that compelled Americans in all 50 states to leave the safety of their homes to protest what we couldn’t unsee: Black life truly didn’t matter to far too many people. While there have been too many Black lives lost to…

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Danielle Moodie
ZORA
Writer for

is the host of #WokeAF Daily & co-host of the podcast #democracyish. She covers all the news and happenings at the intersection of politics and pop culture.