NBC News MSN

Melissa Harris-Perry

Most Recent

President Barack Obama speaks about the BRAIN (Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies) Initiative on April 2 at the White House.

Does Obama’s BRAIN initiative have a chance?

With bold congressional action, the United States could still take part in a worldwide scientific revolution. Without it, we'll watch from the sidelines. Read More

Iraq war veterans, members of the Iraq based Organization of Women's Freedom in Iraq and Federation of Workers Councils in Iraq, protest outside the White House in Washington DC on March 19, 2013, marking the 10th anniversary of the Iraq war. The three organizations launched the "right to heal" campaign, addressing the human rights violations in Iraq. (Photo by Nicole Sakin/AFP/Getty Images)

Backlog of veterans claims recalls Vietnam-era benefit battles

The frustration of Vietnam veterans echoes today among new veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan who deal with a current backlog that has left nearly one million veterans waiting for their benefit claims to be processed. Read More

Angela Davis is photographed in 1973.

New documentary details how Angela Davis became Angela Davis

Host Melissa Harris Perry spoke with Shola Lynch, the writer and director of "Free Angela and All Political Prisoners," a new documentary about activist Angela Davis. Read More

Obama Dinner with Republican Senators at the Jefferson

‘Political science is not punditry’

Why does Senator Tom Coburn hate political science so much? Read More

n_mhp_3tech_130330

Sexism in the tech world rears its head at Adria Richards

An incident involving sexism accusations, social media, and speaking out recently resulted in two people losing their jobs and a wide conversation about women in the male-dominated technology industry. Read More

This week's "Foot Soldier," nurse Asma Hanif.

Meet Asma Hanif, nurse to Muslim women in need

This week’s Melissa Harris-Perry Foot Soldier is Asma Hanif, an advanced practice nurse who has devoted her life to operating Al-Nissa Holistic Health Center, a free clinic for women who are homeless, uninsured, or victims of domestic abuse, and Muslimat Al-Nisaa, a shelter for Muslim women. Read More

n_mhp_4letter3_130330

‘Buddy’ Caldwell, lay off the Angola 3 already

Melissa Harris-Perry's "Open Letter" is to Louisiana attorney general James "Buddy" Caldwell, who showed why the Angola 3 case is about more than the murder of one man--it's about the inhumanity exhibited for more than 40 years. Read More

File Photo:  U.S. Navy guards escort a detainee after a "life skills" class at Camp 6 in the Guantanamo Bay detention center on March 30, 2010 (Photo by John Moore/Getty Images, File)

Hunger strikers determined to leave Guantanamo, ‘one way or the other’

Prisoners at Guantanamo Bay have been on a mass hunger strike for nearly two months; is starvation their only way out of prison? Read More

Baltimore Ravens linebacker Brendon Ayanbadejo (51) tackles Kansas City Chiefs defensive back Javier Arenas (21) during the first half of an NFL football game at Arrowhead Stadium in October. Ayanbadejo and Minnesota Vikings punter Chris Kluwe are vocal advocates for marriage equality.

Straight athletes for marriage equality: ‘It’s okay to be who you are’

"Our 'Jackie Robinson player' is going to come out soon--this year, next year, some time in the near future--and everything's going to change. We're going to put this behind us. We're going to do the right thing," said Brendon Ayanbadejo, NFL linebacker and marriage-equality advocate. Read More

Edward Blum walks with lead plaintiff Abigail Fisher outside the Supreme Court.

How to pick a plaintiff: The man who chose Abigail Fisher

Abigail Fisher's Supreme Court case may bring down affirmative action in college admissions, and that is no accident. Read More

Students demonstrate outside the office of Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel protesting the city's plan to close more than 50 elementary schools on March 25, 2013 in Chicago, Illinois.

Hundreds protest school closings in Chicago: ‘It’s not over’

Hundreds rallied in Chicago on Wednesday to protest the largest proposed mass school closing in the nation. Read More

University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill sophomore Landen Gambill, center, stands with supporters during a rally, on the steps of the South Building on campus in Chapel Hill, N.C. Gambill, who faces possible expulsion after saying publicly that she's a rape victim, has filed a federal complaint against the school, saying it retaliated against her, her attorney said Monday, March 25, 2013.

Rape isn’t ‘like a football game’ to UNC survivors

Yet another student filed a complaint against the University of North Carolina on Monday charging that she is being targeted unfairly for revealing her rape. See our "Melissa Harris-Perry" interview with two other young survivors alleging mistreatment by UNC. Read More

FILE - In this Sept. 21, 2011 file photo, Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo. listens on Capitol Hill in Washington. Claire McCaskill, one of the most vulnerable Democrats up for re-election in 2012, plans to skip the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, N.C. McCaskill's campaign said Tuesday she will spend the week campaigning in her home state instead. (AP Photo Manuel Balce Ceneta, File)

Moderate Sen. McCaskill supports gay marriage

It's not just Republicans evolving on gay marriage; Democrats who have remained silent before are starting to come around. "I find myself unable to look them in the eye without honestly confronting this uncomfortable inequality," Sen. McCaskill said of her gay friends. Read More

GLAAD President Herndon Graddick arrives at The 23rd Annual GLAAD Media Awards on April 21, 2012 in Los Angeles.

GLAAD adds transgender equality to its mission

GLAAD has officially committed to making greater equality for transgender people a part of its platform. Read More

A monument to the Texas Rangers and the Texas State Capital in Austin, Texas. (AP Photo/Scott A. Miller)

Texas bill could effectively close most abortion clinics

Texas is next in a the line of states trying to significantly diminish the access women have to abortions. In addition to other restrictions in North Dakota, Arkansas, and Kansas, a committee in the Texas Senate advanced a bill Tuesday that would effectively shut down most of the abortion clinics in the state by setting minimum facility standards. Read More

Equality House

Meet Aaron Jackson, prideful neighbor of Westboro Baptist Church

This week’s “Foot Soldier” is Aaron Jackson, who was inspired to send Westboro Baptist Church a visual message in support of LGBTQ equality by creating the “Equality House,” a home across the street from the Church that he purchased and painted in the colors of the rainbow pride flag. Read More

n_mhp_5letter1_130323

My open letter to the Steubenville survivor

While many focus on the "ruined" lives of the young men convicted of rape in Steubenville, Ohio, host Melissa Harris-Perry has a heartfelt message for the 16-year-old survivor of the assault. Read More

Chaim Levin, left, of Brooklyn. NY, and Michael Ferguson, far right, of Salt Lake City, are two of four gay men accusing a New Jersey organization of selling "conversion therapy" services promising to make them straight.  At a November news conference, they said that they were subjected to humiliations, including having to strip naked, or taking a baseball bat to effigies of their mothers.

Although discredited, gay conversion therapy remains an option for minors

New Jersey could soon outlaw gay conversion therapy for minors. But some argue that banning the practice will only drive it underground, to be practiced by unlicensed therapists. Read More

File Photo: Opponents of the Affordable Care Act rally before the Supreme announces its decision about the constitutionality of the President's efforts on health care reform. (Photo by Chris Maddaloni/CQ Roll Call, File)

Happy Birthday, Obamacare

Three years after the Affordable Care Act became national law, it's still maligned and misunderstood. Fortunately, it's working. Read More

Dr. Stephanie Dahl, a Fargo infertility specialist, speaks out against two anti-abortion bills in the North Dakota Legislature during a news conference Monday, March 18, 2013, in Fargo, N.D. Dahl says the bills could restrict or ban in vitro fertilization. (Photo by Dave Kolpack/AP)

North Dakota may take lead in GOP race to end abortion

The North Dakota Senate passed a bill that would outlaw abortions after a fetal heartbeat can be detected, which could be before most women know they're pregnant. Will there be a new winner in the "most draconian abortion law" contest? Read More