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Change '08

The Role of Non-violence in History

In Defense of All Our Families

Mac the Knife: Cut the Needy to Feed the Greedy

Book Review: The Race Beat

Make It Happen and They Will Rise!

¡Cierran a la mal llamada Fundación Nacional por la Democracia!

John Howard Lawson’s Smash-up: A Lesson on Cold War Culture

Jazz on the Rocks: A Rap on Pulp Music

How the Media Got "Class" Wrong in the Democratic Primaries

Close the Mis-named National Endowment for Democracy

/Archives - Dates and Topics /The issues /Liberation, civil rights and equality | Print

against racism, sexism, national chauvinism and homophobia

Joel Wendland, 06/24/2006
Michigan voters can’t trust Dick DeVos. He says one thing – about jobs, Michigan schools, and ethics – but his record says another.
| click here for related stories: elections

Labor Research Association, 06/15/2006
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), the primary federal agency for enforcing anti-discrimination laws in the workplace, is facing a $4.2 million budget cut, another blow to workers from the Bush administration.
| click here for related stories: racism, civil rights and equality

Anthony Papa, 06/14/2006
Albany County District Attorney David Soares is considered a hero by many for his bold stances and refreshing approaches to delivering justice.
| click here for related stories: racism, civil rights and equality

Joel Wendland, 06/12/2006
Pravda, one of Russia's major national newspapers, reported last week that the French Communist Party (PCF) condemned violent attacks on marchers participating in Moscow's Gay Pride parade on May 27.
| click here for related stories: LGBT issues

David Howard, 06/12/2006
One thing everyone agrees on regarding immigration is that the current system demands our attention. The critical question is, what kind of attention? Compassionate, inclusive and sustainable? Or just a quick and dirty political fix euphemistically called “comprehensive reform”?
| click here for related stories: human rights

Joel Wendland, 06/06/2006
In order to distract voters from the burning issues like ballooning gas prices, the degenerating situation in Iraq, Republican corruption in Congress, a slowing economy, and declining US credibility around the world, Bush and congressional Republicans have announced their support for extremist policies, say civil rights activists.
| click here for related stories: LGBT issues

Mark Gruenberg, 06/03/2006
The Senate-passed immigration bill creates “an unjust, unworkable and undemocratic three-tiered society” among the nation’s 11 million-12 million undocumented workers, AFL-CIO President John J. Sweeney says.
| click here for related stories: labor movement

Emile Schepers, 05/25/2006
Undocumented and documented immigration to the United States is at a record high in absolute numbers. The Pew Hispanic Center estimates that there are as many as 12 million undocumented.
| click here for related stories: human rights

Political Affairs, 05/25/2006


Fellowship of Reconciliation, 05/24/2006
The Fellowship of Reconciliation (FOR), an organization committed to achieving a just and peaceful world community with full dignity and freedom for every human being, stands in solidarity with the millions who have rallied, boycotted, and marched during recent months in defense of basic human rights for undocumented immigrants in the United States.
| click here for related stories: human rights

Matt Foreman, 05/23/2006
Iraq is a disaster and the treasury is hemorrhaging red ink to pay for it. Gas prices are soaring. Osama taunts us on videotape. Iran's going nuclear. Seven in 10 think the country's heading in the wrong direction. What do you do when you're in power and there's an election just around the corner? You trot out some old diversionary scapegoats once again.
| click here for related stories: LGBT issues

Joel Wendland, 05/19/2006
The Republican-controlled Senate Judiciary Committee, voting 10 to 8, voiced approval for the Federal Marriage Amendment (FMA), which would amend the US Constitution to outlaw same-sex marriages and civil unions.
| click here for related stories: LGBT issues

Mark Gruenberg, 05/17/2006
Leaders of the immigrant rights coalition that mobilized masses of people for demonstrations nationwide on April 10 and May 1 announced a stepped-up campaign that includes lobbying lawmakers, more marches and plans to register and mobilize at least a million new voters around the immigration issue.
| click here for related stories: elections

Bay Area Immigrant Rights Coalition, 05/17/2006
In response to President Bush’s national address on immigration today [May 15], the Bay Area Immigrant Rights Coalition (BAIRC) voices its strong opposition to proposals that place National Guard troops at the border, initiate new guest worker programs and call for increased employer sanctions.
| click here for related stories: human rights

CPUSA, 05/17/2006
George W. Bush’s speech to the nation on May 15, 2006 highlighting deployment of the National Guard to the Mexican border represents an aggressive policy of racist, anti-immigrant demonization and hysteria.
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Norman Markowitz, 05/16/2006
Past and present immigration have many things in common. Both are largely the result of severe economic dislocations effecting regions following under the sway of industrial capitalism.
| click here for related stories: democracy matters

Joel Wendland, 05/16/2006
As the immigration policy debate heats up in Congress, the US public has been bombarded by a steady stream of racist, anti-immigrant sentiments.
| click here for related stories: racism, civil rights and equality

Earth Talk, 05/14/2006
While conducting research upon completion of his sociology Ph.D. in Houston in 1979, Dr. Robert Bullard noticed that all the city’s garbage dumps were located in and around neighborhoods inhabited primarily by African Americans.
| click here for related stories: environment

Laura Carlsen, 05/13/2006
“May Day” is an international signal of distress. When millions marched in the streets of cities across the United States, and hundreds of thousands protested throughout Mexico on May 1, International Workers' Day, they sent out an urgent message to end a system of global competition based on eroding labor rights.
| click here for related stories: labor movement

Emile Schepers, 05/09/2006
Seizing any weapon with which to attack the growing movement for immigrant workers’ rights, the Republican Party and the right wing have found a new gripe: the recording of a Spanish-language version of the United States’ national anthem.
| click here for related stories: democracy matters


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Take a Stand
( 10/01/2003 18:49 )


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