The People, Relocated

At the homefront concentration camps of World War II, Japanese Americans made do.
RT @radioambulante: Learn podcasting basics with @Transom_org. Part One: Voice Recording Gear http://t.co/jqD1hOvUXN
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Empowering #feminist drawings to brighten your day http://t.co/vqC53PLRUq via @BoingBoing #art4 http://t.co/VyvMo2OmZU
20 hours ago
MT @latinorebels: @Deadline Hollywood & Why It’s Dead http://t.co/Bs45RrjmH9 #diversity #racialjustice http://t.co/OfgiHx0eG1
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Getting a Bunch of Likes, or Creating a Hashtag? That’s Not #SocialChange: Impact Producer @lksriv http://t.co/NW0Zk0tsWN via @FilmmakerMag
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Friday in #NYC: #Undocupoets Petition Reading http://t.co/Y4ufYlPt1P via @aaww #latism #immigration http://t.co/acscUKRZUW
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At the homefront concentration camps of World War II, Japanese Americans made do.
“Some hold in hand the first cup of coffee of the day. Those are the ones who did not work all night.”
“she made the tamales of the past and the tamales outside of time” — A poem by Sesshu Foster.
A writer discovers that Sabra Hummus—a boycott target of the Palestine solidarity movement—is being served on her Amtrak train.
Tagged: California, Colorlines.com, labor, public art, Ramiro Gomez
The prophetic Cesar Chavez speech from 1984 that Tucson officials don’t want students to read.
Tagged: Cesar Chavez, farmworkers, labor, Saving Ethnic Studies, Tucson
ICE officers’ union resists reforms while AFl-CIO demands more.