It was less than two weeks ago, on August 28, that we saw the 50th anniversary of the landmark march on Washington - the historic event that ended in Dr Martin Luther King's "I have a dream" speech, a watershed for race relations in the US.
It was last week that a black San Francisco firefighter won US$175,000 ($217,000) in a legal settlement after enduring years of prejudice.
The French have a saying for it: The more things change, the more they stay the same.
The firefighter, Larry Jacobs, now 48, accused top city Fire Department staff of a racially motivated campaign of humiliation that began in 2005.
The goal was to degrade and humiliate him into dropping out of the department - as bosses felt standards were falling with too many recruits making it to graduation.