Kristi Noemβs tenure at DHS will be remembered for policies that eroded oversight, undermined civil rights protections, and intensified fear in immigrant and protester communities.
www.washingtonpost.com/politics/202...
Kristi Noemβs tenure at DHS will be remembered for policies that eroded oversight, undermined civil rights protections, and intensified fear in immigrant and protester communities.
www.washingtonpost.com/politics/202...
@kennedyhrc.bsky.social at the NHL! Thanks Chris Karlo!!!
"Well-behaved women seldom make history." β Laurel Thatcher Ulrich. As a woman-founded, woman-led organization, we know that women donβt just make history, they define it. To all the women who speak up, show up, and speak out, thank you. Happy Womenβs History Month!
(3/3) A century after its conception, honoring Black history means teaching it, living it, and carrying its lessons forward every single day for the next hundred years and beyond.
(2/3) Started as βNegro History Weekβ in 1926 by the Association for the Study of African American Life and History cofounder Carter G. Woodson, Black History Month was officially recognized as a national observance in 1976.
(1/3) Black history is not just confined to 28 days in February. It is American history, alive in every corner of our country and woven into the fabric of what makes us a great nation.
(1/3) Under U.S. law, unaccompanied immigrant children are entitled to age-appropriate care while their cases move through the courts. But thatβs not the reality.
(2/3) We have documented children being locked in adult ICE jails after being coerced into false confessions that they were adults, having their birth certificates destroyed, & being subjected to racially discriminatory pseudo-scientific age assessments.
No one is above the law.
Black history is American history. It is powerful and courageous, but it is also complicated and painful. No president or administration can erase it. Teaching the full scope of our history challenges us to be better. Whitewashing history, on the other hand, fuels ignorance and excuses injustice.
John Lewis was my hero, my mentor, my friend. He spoke to my children, nieces, and nephews about Daddy not as a figure in a history book, but as his friend. He made history feel human. He made justice feel possible. And he helped our country live our values. Happy Heavenly Birthday, John.
A son of sharecroppers, a Freedom Rider, a moral force in Congress, John Lewis taught us that democracy is not a state, it is an act. When we see injustice, we do not look away. We get in good trouble. And we build bridges despite adversity. Happy Heavenly Birthday, Congressman.
(2/2) I think I speak for all of us at @kennedyhrc.bsky.social when I say we left that conversation ready to sprint to the voting booth and text every friend and family member we know to register to vote. Thank you MarΓa Teresa for joining us!
(1/2) Thank you to our incredible board member MarΓa Teresa Kumar for joining us at our 2026 retreat.
Mom with Helen Chavez, Cesar Chavez, and Jesse Jackson as Chavez breaks his last great fast.
βThere are few areas in our law which more urgently demand reform than our present unfair system of choosing the immigrants we will allow to enter the United States... This nation was built by immigrants of courage and ability who came from many lands.β - Senator Robert F. Kennedy.
(2/2) I was honored to march with him across the Edmund Pettus Bridge and to fast alongside him in support of farm workers with Cesar Chavez.
Rest in hope, power, and love, Reverend.
(1/2) My condolences to the family of the Rev. Jesse Jackson. He was a lifelong champion for justice, equality, and democracy, and a true friend. Wherever injustice raised its ugly head, Rev. Jackson showed up, and showed up, and showed up.
(5/5)
I urge you to read and share this extraordinary interview.
The Iranian people are risking everything for their freedom. We must not look away.
(4/5) From funerals monitored by intelligence agents, to families extorted for the bodies of their murdered children, and prisoners inside Evin staging a haunting performance with body bags to honor the dead, this conversation is both devastating and defiant.
(3/5) Nasrin spent years on the frontlines of the struggle for womenβs rights and democracy in Iran. She endured more than six years in prison for her work. Today, her husband, Reza Khandan, remains unjustly imprisoned in Tehranβs Evin Prison for supporting her activism.
(2/5) In a powerful new Q&A, my friend and internationally acclaimed human rights lawyer and former political prisoner Nasrin Sotoudeh speaks with filmmaker Jeff Kaufman about the regimeβs brutality and the human cost of repression.
(1/5) Last month, the people of Iran rose up in the largest nationwide protests since 1979. Thousands were killed. Tens of thousands more were arrested. Internet blackouts. Mass detentions. Families forced to search for their children among piles of bodies. And still, they refuse to be silent.
(1/6) The South Louisiana ICE Processing Center, run by the private prison giant GEO Group, is notorious for systemic abuse. In 2025, GEO reported $2.6 billion in revenue while deaths in detention reached their highest level in over two decades.
Get your shots. Get your kids vaccinated. Do not risk their lives for non-science. The United States surpassed a milestone in reported measles cases, with 2025 now having the most cases since the disease was declared eliminated in the U.S. in 2000, and the most cases in more than three decades.
The only thing more powerful than hate is love. Thank you Bad Bunny.
President and Mrs. Obama have always been the epitome of class, dignity, kindness, moral courage, and what true American leadership looks like.
Logan Airport passport control completely empty. Apparently few tourists, thanks to ICE.
(4/4) Support independent investigations, including the UN Fact-Finding Mission on Iran. Hold those responsible to account. And protect the people risking their lives to speak out.
@kennedyhrc.bsky.social stands with the people of Iran. History will remember who spoke out and who looked away.