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| Participants marching for civil rights from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama in 1965 Source: Wikimedia Commons |
Latinos, Blacks, civil rights, labor and immigrant rights groups all came together in a show of solidarity that racially discriminatory laws will not be tolerated in Alabama or any other state.
Among the marchers were 400 members of the Fair Immigration Reform Movement (FIRM) and 200 members of the Alabama Coalition for Immigrant Justice (ACIJ).
Deepak Bhargava, executive director of the Center for Community Change, a member of FIRM protested the law's damaging effects: “This law has given police carte blanche to racially profile people. It has kept children from school and, forced hardworking families to leave Alabama costing the state $10.8 billion annually.”
Bhargava noted one positive effect of the law: "...it has brought together black, brown and white people, labor, clergy, civil rights, immigrant rights and human rights groups,” he said. “We will hold the state Legislature accountable for dragging Alabama back into its darkest days of discrimination. We will hold businesses accountable if they don’t speak up against this law. We will take this fight to other states thinking about enacting similar laws.”
The other FIRM members participating are: Alliance for a Just Society; Alliance for Immigrant Rights (Michigan); CASA of Maryland; Change Nation North Carolina; Churches United to Save and Heal (New York); Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (California); Colorado Progressive Coalition; Florida Immigrant Coalition; Gamaliel Foundation; Idaho Community Action Network; Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights; Make the Road New York; Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition; National Korean American Service and Education Consortium; Nebraska Appleseed; New York Immigrant Coalition; One America (Washington); Pineros y Campesinos Unidos de Noroeste (Oregon); Progressive Leadership Alliance of Nevada; Sunflower Action (Kansas); Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition, and; Washington Community Action Network.
Source: The Center for Community Change

4 comments:
We need MORE marches....
Indeed!
George Romney fought against extremism, George condemned and despised racists. A letter in which George Romney scolds Barry Goldwater after the epic FAIL of the 1964 Presidential Campaign.
George scolds Barry Goldwater for opposition to the 1964 Civil Rights Act, for sympathy and understanding with Segregationists, Racists, and Ku Klux Klan.
Daily Kos
Mitt’s choice: Goldwater or his Father
By Dengre
February 15, 2012
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/02/15/1065004/-Mitt-s-choice-Goldwater-or-his-Father-
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VIDEO, Reverend Al Sharpton, the racist murder of adolescent Trayvon Martin in Sanford Florida - Michael Baisden Show, March 19, 2012 - Upcoming rally for Trayvon Martin this Thursday at 7pm (First Shiloh Baptist Church, 700 S. Elm Ave., Sanford, FL)
Uploaded by BaisdenLive on Mar 19, 2012
Check out Rev. Al Sharpton, President of the National Action Network and Host of MSNBC's PoliticsNation! He discusses the upcoming rally for Trayvon Martin this Thursday @ 7pm (First Shiloh Baptist Church, 700 S. Elm Ave., Sanford, FL). For more info., visit www.nationalactionnetwork.net
Michael Baisden Show Rewind: Rev Al Sharpton 3.19.2012
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=guYEW1fCGQE
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