In 1955, Pete Seeger scotch‑taped a song to a microphone and sang it at Oberlin College. The tune was spare, almost plainspoken, but its question cut deep: Where have all the flowers gone? A lyric about war’s recursive toll, about memory slipping through generations. When will they ever learn?

That same year, the acquittal of two white men for the lynching of 14‑year‑old Emmett Till sent a shockwave through the country. Images of Till’s mutilated body circulated widely by Jet magazine, igniting a civil rights movement that was already gathering force. America was learning, slowly and violently, how images could bear witness, provoke outrage, and demand moral reckoning.

Meanwhile, in Los Angeles, a …

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