June 18th, 2012
thinkmexican:

Arizona’s Puente Organizes Barrio Committees in Response to SB 1070, Asks for ‘True Solidarity’ in Coming Days

With defiant Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer growing more emboldened as the Supreme Court readies to unveil its ruling on the state’s SB 1070 “papers, please” immigration law, Arizona human rights group Puente and their national allies are bolstering their “Barrio Defense Committees,” as “neighbors link with neighbors to learn their rights and make collective plans to defend themselves.”

They are also asking their fellow Arizona neighbors and politicians to take a stand.

“Within Arizona we’re ready to pose the question to every individual and institution, police department and school district, what side are you on?” Puente executive director Carlos Garcia wrote in an email. “SB 1070 can only function if individuals allow undocumented people to be singled out, if school districts allow their security guards to double as immigration agents, if businesses refuse to offer us safe haven, and ultimately if Obama’s administration agrees to deport whoever Arpaio turns over to ICE.”

Case in point: As President Obama announced his new policy for certain undocumented youth last week, Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio ramped up his anti-immigrant dragnets and snared an unaccompanied and undocumented 6-year-old girl who quite possibly lost her parents on the dangerous journey from El Salvador to the United States.

“For migrants in Arizona, our work has turned towards building power for and amongst ourselves,” Garcia noted in an interview. “We went to Congress for reform and were treated like a political football. We asked the president for relief and instead got record deportations. Now even the courts may give SB 1070 the greenlight. It’s time we realize we have only each other and instead of appealing to the powers-that-be, start organizing deeper in our community so that our goals are unshakable demands instead of requests.”

Read More at AlterNet

thinkmexican:

Arizona’s Puente Organizes Barrio Committees in Response to SB 1070, Asks for ‘True Solidarity’ in Coming Days

With defiant Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer growing more emboldened as the Supreme Court readies to unveil its ruling on the state’s SB 1070 “papers, please” immigration law, Arizona human rights group Puente and their national allies are bolstering their “Barrio Defense Committees,” as “neighbors link with neighbors to learn their rights and make collective plans to defend themselves.”

They are also asking their fellow Arizona neighbors and politicians to take a stand.

“Within Arizona we’re ready to pose the question to every individual and institution, police department and school district, what side are you on?” Puente executive director Carlos Garcia wrote in an email. “SB 1070 can only function if individuals allow undocumented people to be singled out, if school districts allow their security guards to double as immigration agents, if businesses refuse to offer us safe haven, and ultimately if Obama’s administration agrees to deport whoever Arpaio turns over to ICE.”

Case in point: As President Obama announced his new policy for certain undocumented youth last week, Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio ramped up his anti-immigrant dragnets and snared an unaccompanied and undocumented 6-year-old girl who quite possibly lost her parents on the dangerous journey from El Salvador to the United States.

“For migrants in Arizona, our work has turned towards building power for and amongst ourselves,” Garcia noted in an interview. “We went to Congress for reform and were treated like a political football. We asked the president for relief and instead got record deportations. Now even the courts may give SB 1070 the greenlight. It’s time we realize we have only each other and instead of appealing to the powers-that-be, start organizing deeper in our community so that our goals are unshakable demands instead of requests.”

Read More at AlterNet

(Source: thinkmexican)

June 12th, 2012

enlightenmentisgreen:

“The 15-month-old conflict in Syria has grown into a full-scale civil war in which the government is attempting to recapture large swathes of urban territory it has lost to the opposition, the U.N. peacekeeping chief said on Tuesday.”

March 23rd, 2012
kateoplis:

Damn the Defiant, 1963

kateoplis:

Damn the Defiant, 1963

February 21st, 2012
I’ve had many people ask me how I got interested in civil rights, and I said, “Well, just because I’m a person.

— Hubert Humphrey

(via janf)

(Source: livingroomcandidate.org, via just-breezy)

January 9th, 2012

New Jersey’s marriage equality bill is being reintroduced with the strong support of the leaders of the state Senate and Assembly. A news conference with legislative leaders is planned for 1 PM today in Committee Room 1 at the State House in Trenton. From Garden State Equality:

In a dramatic news conference today, the day before the new legislature is sworn in and Governor Christie delivers his State of the State address, leaders of the state Senate and Assembly are announcing they are introducing a marriage equality bill and that they will prioritize it for passage in the new legislature. 

The leaders include Senate President Steve Sweeney, incoming Senate Majority Leader Loretta Weinberg, Assembly Speaker Sheila Oliver, incoming Assembly Majority Leader Lou Greenwald, and state Democratic Chairman Assemblyman John Wisniewski.

Marriage equality advocates in New Jersey are also pursuing a legal remedy to the state’s discriminatory marriage law. In July, 2011 Lambda Legal filed a lawsuit (Garden State Equality v. DowPDF) on behalf of Garden State Equality making state and federal claims that New Jersey’s civil union law violates both the New Jersey Constitution and the Fourteenth Amendment of the federal Constitution.

Read More

December 19th, 2011

VENTURA, Calif. (AP) — A Southern California teenager was sentenced on Monday to 21 years in state prison for killing a gay student during a computer lab class, capping an emotional and tumultuous case that drew widespread attention and raised questions about how schools should deal with sexual identity issues.

Superior Court Judge Charles Campbell sentenced Brandon McInerney, 17, based on a plea agreement reached with prosecutors that will send him to prison starting next month after he becomes an adult. McInerney, dressed in a white T-shirt and blue pants, didn’t speak at the hearing, but his lawyer Scott Wippert said his clients was sorry for killing 15-year-old Larry King.

“He feels deeply remorseful and stated repeatedly if he could go back and take back what he did he would do it in a heartbeat, Wippert said.

McInerney pleaded guilty to second-degree murder, as well as one count of voluntary manslaughterand use of a firearm that spared him a retrial. A mistrial was declared in September when jurors couldn’t reach a unanimous decision on the degree of guilt. Several jurors said after McInerney’s trial that he shouldn’t have been tried as an adult.

Unlike other incidents of teen violence, the McInerney case had an unusual twist: prosecutors contended the teen, who had just turned 14, shot King at E.O. Green Junior High School in a fit of homophobic rage because he was offended by the victim’s feminine clothing and his unwanted sexual advances.

Comic Ellen DeGeneres, a lesbian, weighed in on her talk show shortly after the shooting and said gays shouldn’t be treated as second-class citizens. Because of pretrial publicity, the trial was moved from Ventura County to Los Angeles.

Read More

Since my vote in favor of the Defense of Marriage Act 15 years ago, like tens of millions of Americans, I have reflected deeply and frequently about this issue. During this time, I have engaged in discussions about the issue of marriage equality with friends, family members, colleagues and of course, the people I serve in New Jersey. I have heard and listened to many different views.
But for me, this comes down to an issue of fundamental fairness. For me, this comes down to the principles I learned as the child of immigrants and that I cherish as an American: that we believe in equality for all people under the law.

So today, I am announcing my support for the Respect for Marriage Act, which repeals DOMA and ensures that all lawfully married couples — including same-sex couples — receive the benefits of marriage under federal law.

November 29th, 2011

leftish:

URGENT!! PLEASE CALL YOUR SENATORS ASAP!!

US Senate To Vote On Bill That Will Allow The Military To Arrest Americans On American Soil OR Anywhere Else in the World, And Hold Them Indefinitely, without trial - via Addicting Info - November 26, 2011

A Secret SENATE BILL is being voted on TOMORROW! Cooked up by McCain (R) - Levin (D), this bill is being voted upon when it has not had a SINGLE HEARING!! It gives authority to the MILITARY to ARREST an AMERICAN CITIZEN, ANYWHERE, without due process, and IMPRISON THEM INDEFINITELY WITHOUT BEING CHARGED.

There is an amendment that removes the harmful parts of this bill, it is called THE UDALL AMENDMENT. And there is also the FEINSTEIN AMENDMENT which exempts American Citizens from it.

PLEASE TELL YOUR SENATORS TO APPROVE BOTH THE UDALL and FEINSTEIN AMENDMENT!

OUR CIVIL LIBERTIES ARE AT STAKE!

GET YOUR SENATORS’ CONTACT INFO HERE:

[NOTE* from Leftish - I need your help here…I was posting this to as many Facebook walls as I could think of, when Facebook informed me that I was spamming, and would be shut down if I continued…so if you could help get the word out, it would help us all out.]

November 1st, 2011

The San Diego school superintendent Monday branded as “adult bullies who preach hate and intolerance” the people who have made phone calls and sent emails criticizing the students’ selection of a lesbian couple as the homecoming king and queen at Patrick Henry High School.Supt. Bill Kowba said adults criticizing the selection of Rebecca Arellano and Haileigh Adams are “demonstrating such a lack of tolerance and are presenting such a negative role model for children with their hateful comments.”Arellano was named homecoming king at a Friday pep rally. Adams was named homecoming queen at a school dance Saturday.The calls and emails, Kowba said, “are also disrupting the work of the school to focus on the education of students … if these calls and emails were from students, they would face disciplinary measures.”Kowba said that he supports and congratulates the Patrick Henry homecoming king and queen “and wishes them and the school well … I look forward to the day when all students can come to school, free of harassment and bullying.”


(via Critics of lesbian homecoming couple are bullies, official says )

The San Diego school superintendent Monday branded as “adult bullies who preach hate and intolerance” the people who have made phone calls and sent emails criticizing the students’ selection of a lesbian couple as the homecoming king and queen at Patrick Henry High School.
Supt. Bill Kowba said adults criticizing the selection of Rebecca Arellano and Haileigh Adams are “demonstrating such a lack of tolerance and are presenting such a negative role model for children with their hateful comments.”
Arellano was named homecoming king at a Friday pep rally. Adams was named homecoming queen at a school dance Saturday.
The calls and emails, Kowba said, “are also disrupting the work of the school to focus on the education of students … if these calls and emails were from students, they would face disciplinary measures.”
Kowba said that he supports and congratulates the Patrick Henry homecoming king and queen “and wishes them and the school well … I look forward to the day when all students can come to school, free of harassment and bullying.”

(via Critics of lesbian homecoming couple are bullies, official says )

September 19th, 2011

As of 12:01 today, September 20, 2011, Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell has  officially ended, and gay, lesbian, and bisexual service members can no  longer be kicked out of America’s armed forces, just for being gay,  lesbian, or bisexual.
Today, we should celebrate. Tomorrow, we must continue the fight.
Fight for our transgender brothers and sisters to be included in the end of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.
Fight for our transgender brothers and sisters to live safer lives.
Fight for full equality on all fronts, including marriage and ENDA.
Fight for full equality for all, including all minorities, not just those who are LGBT.
Fight to strengthen separation of church and state.
Fight for economic equality.
Fight for the right to full access to health care.
Fight for the right to life — life free of uncontrolled gun violence,  life free from the uncontrolled lies we hear every day from the Right,  from religious extremists, from our enemies.
Fight for the right to education, equal and free of right-​wing anti-​science, anti-​equality indoctrination.
Fight for women’s right to choose.
Fight for the right to live our lives free of the injected ignorance  right wing extremists have spread throughout this great land.
Add to this list: What else do you think we should be fighting for?

As of 12:01 today, September 20, 2011, Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell has officially ended, and gay, lesbian, and bisexual service members can no longer be kicked out of America’s armed forces, just for being gay, lesbian, or bisexual.

Today, we should celebrate. Tomorrow, we must continue the fight.

Fight for our transgender brothers and sisters to be included in the end of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.

Fight for our transgender brothers and sisters to live safer lives.

Fight for full equality on all fronts, including marriage and ENDA.

Fight for full equality for all, including all minorities, not just those who are LGBT.

Fight to strengthen separation of church and state.

Fight for economic equality.

Fight for the right to full access to health care.

Fight for the right to life — life free of uncontrolled gun violence, life free from the uncontrolled lies we hear every day from the Right, from religious extremists, from our enemies.

Fight for the right to education, equal and free of right-​wing anti-​science, anti-​equality indoctrination.

Fight for women’s right to choose.

Fight for the right to live our lives free of the injected ignorance right wing extremists have spread throughout this great land.

Add to this list: What else do you think we should be fighting for?