Civil Rights: September 2009 Archives

While more states move to legalize same-sex marriage, California has instead eliminated this right with the passage of Proposition 8. Legal scholar Tobias Barrington Wolff and civil rights attorney Eva Jefferson Paterson join the Hammer Museum to discuss the uncertain future of marriage equality in California.

Wolff served as co-chair of Obama's LGBT advisory committee during the 2008 presidential campaign. Paterson is the President and co-founder of the Equal Justice Society, a national strategy group heightening consciousness on race in the law and popular discourse.

In the video above Patterson looks at the intersection of race, gender and misconceptions about the role of the Black community in the passage of Proposition 8. She made it clear with election data that the failure to stop Prop. 8 can not be blamed on black and brown folks -- not to mention the fact that it was "white folks in the Mormon church who outspent and out organized the No on 8 campaign."

She also presented a brilliant breakdown of parallels between Prop. 8 and other propositions throughout California's history of denying rights to certain groups through the the "misguided democracy" that we Californians call the initiative process.

The video above is a little long, but I highly recommend it. At the very least, skip around for Eva Patterson speaking at the podium and answering questions from the audience.

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Civil liberties advocates are taking their fight to defend free speech all the way to America's most famous colonial outpost. The ACLU is appealing a federal court's decision in support of the FBI in a free speech case in Puerto Rico.

According to the federal district court's ruling, FBI agents shouldn't be penalized for misconduct in a clash with local journalists—or more specifically, an attack on Puerto Rican reporters who questioned the government's probe of a leading activist.

The case, brought by the Puerto Rico Journalists' Association in 2007, looks like a straightforward matter of free speech. The backstory, however, traces a long legacy of government impunity and political disenfranchisement.

About this Archive

This page is an archive of entries in the Civil Rights category from September 2009.

Civil Rights: June 2009 is the previous archive.

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