Category Archives: human rights

U.S. immigration policy: un-protect and deport

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Image from SEDAC Maps, used under Creative Commons license

CORRECTION 1/10 – DHS=Department of Homeland Security (see below)

Giovanni Miranda was 32 years old when Salvadoran gangs murdered him in front of his family in the tiny room where they lived, behind the small auto body shop he owned. Miranda had lived for most of his life in the United States and was a legal permanent resident, but was deported in 2012, after U.S. authorities discovered a 2002 conviction for possessing a small amount of cocaine. Nothing special about his story: he is one more murder victim in one of the most violent countries in the world, the 2016 murder capital of the world.

On Monday, President Trump and his Department of Homeland Security (DHS) ordered more than 200,000 Salvadorans to return to the most violent country in the world. The administration canceled Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for all Salvadorans and gave them until September 2019 to return to El Salvador or be deported. Continue reading

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Philando Castile: Fear and killing and change

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Mr. Phil. That’s what the kids at J.J. Hill Montessori School in St. Paul called Philando Castile. A parent  called him “Mr. Rogers with dreadlocks.” Will he be remembered as the cafeteria supervisor who gave out hugs and food and love to “his” kids? Or will he be remembered as one more name in the unending litany of black men and women killed by police? Continue reading

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Watch out for TigerSwan: It bites

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“A shadowy international mercenary and security firm” employed by Energy Transfer Partners sent undercover agents to infiltrate protest camps at Standing Rock, harvested information from social media, used aerial surveillance, and eavesdropped on radio communications. TigerSwan, which started life as a U.S. military and State Department contractor, also collaborated closely with local, state, and federal law enforcement to target protesters. Continue reading

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Targeting Muslim Americans: We must respond

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American citizens have an absolute right to religious freedom – to choose and practice any religion or none at all. Today, U.S. officials target Muslim Americans in airports and haters target them in our streets and cities. This is not normal. This is un-American. We need to stand in solidarity with Muslim Americans and stop the bigotry and hatred.

Muhammed ibn Ali is the son of the late Mohammed Ali, heavyweight world boxing champion (three times), famous as well for his political stands, including opposition to the Vietnam War. Muhammed ibn Ali is a U.S. citizen, born and raised here. As a U.S. citizen, he has an absolute right to travel freely in and out of the country. Yet, when he returned to the United States with his mother after attending a Black History Month event in Jamaica, U.S. immigration officials stopped him and questioned him for more than two hours. Continue reading

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Ash Wednesday, Sage Thursday: Walking prayer and protest

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I missed getting my forehead smudged with ashes on Ash Wednesday, on the slushy, icy road out of the Twin Cities by sunrise. On Thursday, I walked out of the house into a cold sunrise, heading for the Lake Street Bridge and a different kind of smudging in another holy ritual. Continue reading

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Filed under environment, human rights, Latin America, organizing, race, religion

Protecting the right to protest

American and pattiot.jpgBerta Caceres paid the ultimate price – she was assassinated one year ago in Honduras, killed for her work for indigenous rights and environmental protection. On February 17, indigenous leader José Santos Sevilla was assassinated in his home — another martyr paying the ultimate price for defending indigenous rights and working for environmental justice. Santos Sevilla, reports Democracy Now, “was the leader of the indigenous Tolupan people, who are fighting to protect their ancestral lands from industrial mining and logging projects.” Continue reading

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Say it loud, Senators: Stop Sessions!

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Last night, the Republican majority in the U.S. Senate voted to silence Senator Elizabeth Warren. Her offense? She read a 1986 letter from Coretta Scott King opposing the nomination of Senator Jefferson Beauregard Sessions. King wrote about the 1986 nomination for a federal judgeship, which the Senate voted down. Warren spoke to the 2017 nomination to Attorney General. The Republican Senators not only want to put this anti-civil rights Senator in charge of enforcing civil rights laws: they want to silence voices speaking the truth about him. And it’s time for Democratic Senators to stand up and show the world just how despicable the Republican support for Sessions is. Here’s how:

Today, before the vote on Sessions, every single Democratic Senator should stand up on the floor and read the same Coretta Scott King letter that got Senator Elizabeth Warren silenced. Let the Republicans show their true colors by silencing every voice of opposition, one at a time. Make them show their shameful behavior to the world.

Republican majority leader, Senator Mitch McConnell, used an archaic Senate rule, Rule 19, to shut up Elizabeth Warren. The rule says

“No Senator in debate shall, directly or indirectly, by any form of words impute to another Senator or to other Senators any conduct or motive unworthy or unbecoming a Senator.”

It was passed after a fistfight broke out between Senators on the floor of the Senate. Senators usually ignore the rule, as Vox observes:

 “Senate Republicans appear to have violated the rule on multiple occasions, one of which occurred less than a week ago — with no apparent consequences.

“On February 1, Sen. David Perdue (R-GA) took to the Senate floor to directly attack Minority Leader Chuck Schumer after Schumer cried at a press conference about Trump’s executive order. ‘The minority leader’s tear-jerking performance over the past weekend belongs at the Screen Actors Guild awards, not in a serious discussion of what it takes to keep America safe,’ said Perdue in a speech on the floor.

“Additionally, Republican Sen. Tom Cotton used the Senate floor to attack the ‘sad, sorry legacy’ of former Minority Leader Harry Reid on May 25, 2016. On July 24, 2015, Sen. Ted Cruz accused McConnell of a ‘flat-out lie.’”

Moreover, as Senator Chris Murphy pointed out on Twitter: “Rules against criticizing other Senators cannot apply when you are DEBATING THE NOMINATION OF A SENATOR!”

I’m attaching the PDF of Coretta Scott King’s letter. Here’s an excerpt:

“Mr. Sessions has used the awesome powers of his office in a shabby attempt to intimidate and frighten elderly black voters. For this reprehensible conduct, he should not be rewarded with a federal judgeship. …

“The irony of Mr. Sessions’ nomination is that, if confirmed, he will be given a life tenure for doing with a federal prosecution what the local sheriffs accomplished twenty years ago with clubs and cattle prods. …

“We still have a long way to go before we can say that minorities no longer need be concerned about discrimination at the polls. Blacks, Hispanics, Native Americans and Asian Americans are grossly underrepresented at ever level of government in America. If we are going to make our timeless dream of justice through democracy a reality, we must take every possible step to ensure that the spirit and intent of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the Fifteenth Amendment of the Constitution is honored. …

“I do not believe Jefferson Sessions possesses the requisite judgment, competence, and sensitivity to the rights guaranteed by the federal civil rights laws to qualify for appointment to the federal district court.

It was true in 1986 – Sessions was unfit to be a federal judge. It’s true now – he is unfit to be Attorney General.

And it is unfitting for the U.S. Senate to deny Elizabeth Warren, or any other Senator, the right to say so.

What you can do:

Call your Senators. Tell them to read the Coretta Scott King letter on the Senate floor today. Tell them to stand up to Mitch McConnell and not allow the silencing of debate. Tell them to vote against the Sessions nomination.

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Elliott Abrams: Contra Wars capo coming back?

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UPDATE 2/13: Abrams is out! Not because he’s an all-around nasty piece of work (see below) but because he didn’t support Trump in the primaries.

Elliott Abrams avoided a felony conviction for his official crimes during the Iran-Contra era by pleading guilty in 1991 to misdemeanor charges of withholding evidence from Congress. Then he returned in the State Department under Bush II. Now he may be coming back for a third act as second-in-command in the Trump State Department. According to the New York Times, Abrams “is described politely in foreign policy circles as a ‘controversial’ figure, but that deeply understates the case.” I think calling him a war criminal would not be overstating the case. Continue reading

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Filed under human rights, Latin America, Tracking Trump, Uncategorized

Because this is OUR country: Myrlie Evers Williams on Martin Luther King Day

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Myrlie Evers-Williams at the Missouri Theatre in 2015. Photo by Mark Schierbecker, published under Creative Commons license.

She heard the shots ring out, that long-ago summer night. Inside the house, she heard her husband’s car pull up, and then the shots that killed him. One of the bullets came through the living room window, into the house where she and their three small children waited for a father who would never walk in the door again.

At today’s Martin Luther King Day breakfast, Myrlie Evers Williams recalled that night, Continue reading

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Sex, Russians, and the Affordable Care Act

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Sex. Russians. Sex and Donald Trump and the Russians.

Now that I have your attention, consider this: whatever Donald Trump did in a Russian hotel is far less damaging to the United States than what the Republican Congress is doing right now in Washington, D.C. Continue reading

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Filed under health care, health insurance, human rights, Tracking Trump