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immigration

This is not what I was taught the American Dream was.

Posted September 27th, 2011 by Margaret Huang

“This is not what I was taught the American Dream was. The American Dream in my eyes is everyone having equal rights…. I just want to let America know that this is not fair, what they’re doing to us is not fair, because my dad was stopped for no reason. I don’t think that wearing [...]

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Georgia’s New Anti-Immigrant Law – Writings from the Women’s Delegation Traveling to Atlanta to Expose Human Rights Violations

Posted September 27th, 2011 by Mary Olivella

Welcome to the MomsRising blog-a-thon developed by the delegation of women leaders traveling to Georgia this week as part of a growing national resistance to anti-immigrant laws. The We Belong Together Delegation will hear, and then share, the stories of women and children affected by Georgia’s anti-immigrant bill, HB 87, copycat legislation of Arizona’s controversial [...]

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My Mother’s Story and Why I’m Going to Georgia

Posted September 27th, 2011 by Wendy Cervantes

This week I’m going to Georgia, and I’m excited and hopeful. I’m honored to be joining several other women from around the country as part of the We Belong Together delegation. We’re tasked with documenting the impact of Georgia’s new anti-immigrant law on children and families. Their suffering is very real, yet their voices are [...]

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Addressing Georgia’s New and Abusive Anti-Immigrant Law – Why I am joining the “We Belong Together” Delegation

Posted September 27th, 2011 by Mary Olivella

For more than two hundred years, mothers from every corner of the globe have come here to seek a better life for their families, particularly their children. And all of us, newcomers as well as those with families who have been here for generations, want our children to live a safe and healthy life, one [...]

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In Georgia, Thinking of Henry and His Mother

Posted September 27th, 2011 by Maria Elena Perez

“It’s like my mom… doesn’t exist. My mom doesn’t ask too much of her place in society. She just asks to be acknowledged. My greatest fear is my mom being deported.”  (Henry, U.S. citizen whose mother is an undocumented immigrant)   I thought of Henry — and his mother — when I was asked to [...]

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For my mother. For my daughters.

Posted September 27th, 2011 by Miriam Yeung

Being a new parent is hard. The sleepless nights, the sudden loss of free time, the aching biceps from carrying around a surprisingly heavy baby, the spit up, the bottles, the picking up, the picking up, the picking up. But during my most miserable nights of waking up at 12am, then 2am, then 4am – [...]

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Why I am going to Georgia

Posted September 27th, 2011 by Betty G. Robinson

I am going to Georgia for the purpose of making the invisible visible. In the spring of 1960 while a college student, I read about African American students in the South sitting in because they were unable to be served at lunch-counters of national chain stores. I was shocked! I had believed my country was [...]

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Georgia on My Mind

Posted September 27th, 2011 by Tiffany Williams

Since the execution of Troy Davis, whose shattering story activated thousands of people across the country to speak out against a flawed justice system and the brutality of capital punishment, Georgia has been on my mind. I was born there, in a small town outside of Atlanta called Austell, and spent many summers in Newnan [...]

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I am going to Georgia to stand up for America and our children’s future.

Posted September 27th, 2011 by Pramila Jayapal

There’s a myth out there that immigration is complex—even controversial.  But the truth is that the issue of immigration may be the simplest and clearest thing that binds us all together.  With the exception of our Native American brothers and sisters who were here long before any of us came and who didn’t have the [...]

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How to Save Multiculturalism

Posted February 24th, 2011 by Homa Tavangar

European leaders say ‘multiculturalism is a failure.’ Their brand of multiculturalism preserved distinctions without building cohesion and unity. Americans must be vigilant this doesn’t happen here, and we can start by taking small steps in our own lives while advocating for smarter policies that create a brighter, more inclusive, united future.

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