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1 Work 231 Members 8 Reviews

Works by Desmond Cole

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Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Cole, Desmond
Birthdate
1982-04-09
Gender
male
Nationality
Canada
Country (for map)
Canada
Birthplace
Red Deer, Alberta, Canada
Places of residence
Red Deer, Alberta, Canada
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Oshawa, Ontario, Canada
Short biography
Cole was born in Red Deer, Alberta, grew up in Oshawa, Ontario and went to secondary school in Whitby.[9] He attended Queen's University for two years, before dropping out, stating that "“University is now job training, and I think that’s nonsense.”[9] After teaching French in the Durham region for two years, he moved to Toronto at age 22,[10] where he began working with at-risk youths.[9] In the spring of 2006, Cole competed in Toronto's City Idol competition and was the winner for Toronto-East York.[9] The winners of the competition were assisted in running for city council in the fall of 2006, and Cole placed third in Ward 20 Trinity-Spadina in the 2006 Toronto municipal election, at age 24.[Canadian journalist, activist, author, and broadcaster who lives in Toronto, Ontario.[1] Cole hosts a weekly radio program on Newstalk 1010. He was previously a columnist for theToronto Star and has written for The Walrus, NOW Magazine, Torontoist, The Tyee, Ethnic Aisle, Toronto Life and BuzzFeed. Cole's activism has received national attention, specifically on the issues of police carding, racial discrimination, and dismantling systemic racism.[2][3][4][5] Cole was the subject of a 2017 CBC Television documentary, The Skin We're In.[6][7] His first book, The Skin We're In: A Year of Black Resistance and Power, was released in January, 2020.[8]

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Reviews

"Always pay extra attention to laws that contain the word safe and ask who's safety is being addressed."
 
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Kavinay | 7 other reviews | Jan 2, 2023 |
I don't think the subject matter lends itself to book form. Cole is a newspaper journalist and this feels like a collection of outdated columns and commentary (because I heard about these incidents when they originally occurred and due to style). Except for the May chapter, which was about lilacs and the writer's mom, and stood in stark contrast to the rest of the book.
 
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fionaanne | 7 other reviews | Nov 28, 2022 |
'Canada insists on being surprised by its own racism'

The Skin We're In, by activist Desmond Cole should be mandatory reading for all non-BIPOC Canadians. Like many Canadians, especially generation X and older, I wasn't fully aware of the pervasiveness of racism in our country. Cole's accounting, month by month of one year of his life, of his own and others' experiences with racism and injustice across the country will begin to open your eyes to the reality that is Canada. This and other books in the genre help give me the tools to guide my own children towards allyship and anti-racism.… (more)
 
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mel_t | 7 other reviews | Jul 21, 2021 |
Cole is a Black Canadian journalist, activist and radio host. In this his first book he endeavours to show how white Canadians have continually discriminated against people of colour including members of First Nations.
He discusses our history of racism going back to the earliest French and English settlers and their enslavement of Blacks and First Nation people.

Using case histories that he has witnessed or worked on, he shows how systemic racism exists in government, the justice system and especially the national and municipal police services in Canada. We often look down on Americans for their obvious racial discrimination but he offers enough evidence that shows that Canada's record on race is nothing to be particularly proud of.

Some of his solutions seem to me to be too all encompassing and he seem to make the assumption that all individuals of colour are innocent of misdemeanors. I recognize that the system is stacked against them but particularity when he writes about the immigration system, he makes blanket demands that do not seem to offer an option to turn away obvious criminals.

An uncomfortable book for a liberal who has read extensively about slavery and racism in the US and Canada and actually rode my bicycle from Mobil, Alabama to Owen Sound, Ontario Canada following one of the many routes of the Underground Railroad.
… (more)
 
Flagged
lamour | 7 other reviews | Dec 27, 2020 |

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Works
1
Members
231
Popularity
#97,643
Rating
½ 4.4
Reviews
8
ISBNs
6

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