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Activism Channel
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Welcome to the Newsmast Activism & Civil Rights Channel. A curated feed of posts from the Fediverse, handmade by @newsmast@newmast.social, and broadcasting […]

[bridged from https://newsmast.community/@activism on the fediverse by https://fed.brid.gy/ ]
Reposted by Activism Channel
"Georgia’s ruling party has introduced new legislation that would dramatically weaken protections for peaceful assembly, further shrinking democratic space and flouting basic human rights standards guaranteed by the country's constitution and international law."
@hrw.org […]
Original post on mastodon.online
mastodon.online
December 10, 2025 at 5:54 PM
Reposted by Activism Channel
Help us spread the word! Put a poster up, spread some flyers! We will be eternally grateful! You can request them at https://www.2dh5.nl/en/2-dh5-promo-pack/

#2dh5 #utrecht #activism #festival #netherlands
December 10, 2025 at 4:34 PM
Reposted by Activism Channel
FFS

#dhs inks contract to create its own fleet of #boeing 737s for #deportations
The agency will spend nearly $140 million to buy the planes, funding that comes from a massive budget increase for #immigration enforcement approved by #Congress.

#trump #law #constitution #alienenemiesact […]
Original post on masto.ai
masto.ai
December 10, 2025 at 4:17 PM
Reposted by Activism Channel
US judge blocks #trump #nationalguard deployment in #losangeles

A federal judge on Wednesday blocked Donald Trump's deployment of National Guard #troops to Los Angeles & ordered them returned to the control of the #state's #governor.

#law #possecomitatusact #abuseofpower #immigration […]
Original post on masto.ai
masto.ai
December 10, 2025 at 2:39 PM
Reposted by Activism Channel
RE: https://mastodon.social/@RonSupportsYou/115695583788089042

This will also harm Americans who travel overseas for business or on vacations, because other nations will treat our travelers in a similar way to how we treat their travelers (as explained below).
#politics copy: @renewedresistance […]
December 10, 2025 at 1:50 PM
Reposted by Activism Channel
AIDS activist group ACT UP changed the world. Here's why its work still matters today
_This story is part ofHistory is Queer, an Advocate series examining key LGBTQ+ moments, events, and people in history and their ongoing impact. Is there a piece of LGBTQ+ history we should write about? Email us at history@advocate.com._ One of the most prominent and effective groups fighting for people with HIV or AIDS in the 20th century was the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power, better known as ACT UP. Its confrontational tactics weren’t for everyone — some activists preferred to work within the system. But ACT UP made much progress, and some chapters are still active. Here’s a brief history of the group. ## The beginnings The first ACT UP chapter was founded in New York City in 1987. Playwright Larry Kramer had called for the formation of a direct action group to deal with the epidemic, but many others were involved. About 300 people showed up for the first meeting, according to the ACT UP NY website. Between 500 and 700 attended meetings weekly, notes Sarah Schulman, who was involved with the New York chapter from 1988 to 1992 and interviewed many of her fellow activists for her 2021 book of ACT UP history, _Let the Record Show._ For its logo, the group adopted the pink triangle — which LGBTQ+ people, particularly gay men, had been forced to wear in Nazi Germany — and the words "Silence = Death." ACT UP soon protested on Wall Street against the high prices of AIDS drugs. The first one, AZT, had been approved in March 1987. Protests continued for several years; a 1989 one stopped trading at the New York Stock Exchange for the first time in history. Chapters quickly started in other major cities, including Chicago, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Boston, and San Francisco. Ultimately, there were more than 100 ACT UP affiliates around the world. ## Actions and accomplishments In 1988, members of ACT UP demonstrated at the Food and Drug Administration headquarters in Washington, D.C., to protest the slow approval process for AIDS-fighting drugs. Within a year, the FDA sped up the process. Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, was responsive to activists’ concerns despite having once been called an “incompetent idiot” by Kramer. The two men came to respect each other, and Fauci oversaw much of the research that led to better drugs. One of ACT UP’s most controversial actions was 1989’s “Stop the Church” protest at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York City. Cardinal John O’Connor, the Catholic archbishop of New York, had denounced the use of condoms to stop the spread of HIV, along with opposing needle exchange programs, sex education, and abortion rights. More than 5,000 people participated, with a rally outside the cathedral and a die-in inside, with protesters lying down in the aisles and chanting “stop killing us.” ACT UP/Chicago grew out of another group formed in 1987. Its actions persuaded Chicago to triple its funding for the fight against AIDS and Illinois to double its. Another action brought 1,500 activists from around the nation to protest at public and private hospitals in Chicago, also calling for universal health care and condemning discrimination by insurance companies. “A key demand was that Cook County Hospital open its AIDS ward to women. The ward began admitting women the very next day,” notes the website for the Chicago LGBT Hall of Fame, into which ACT UP/Chicago was inducted in 2000. **Related:** The Heroes of ACT UP Are Dying In Los Angeles, ACT UP/LA demonstrated locally at federal and state buildings, city and county offices, and film and TV studios, and members traveled for protests at the NIH, FDA, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and more. One of its major accomplishments was convincing the L.A. County Board of Supervisors to establish the first AIDS ward in County/USC Medical Center (now Los Angeles General Medical Center), a move the board approved in 1988. ACT UP/LA won the first compassionate release for a woman with AIDS imprisoned in the U.S. and started the region’s first clean needle program. It worked with other chapters around the nation to have the definition of AIDS expanded to include women. In September 1991, a newly formed ACT UP affinity group called Treatment Action Guerrillas (which soon split off as Treatment Action Group) staged an audacious act of protest, unfurling a giant condom over the home of homophobic U.S. Sen. Jesse Helms in Arlington, Virginia. It was printed with the words “Helms is deadlier than a virus.” Helms was the architect of a law that barred HIV-positive foreigners from coming into the U.S., which stood for decades until it was repealed by President Barack Obama in 2010. The senator also fought any funding for AIDS treatment, research, or prevention, and he attributed the disease to gay men’s “deliberate, disgusting, revolting conduct.” The protesters made sure he wasn’t in the house at the time: “The last thing we wanted was to spend our lives in jail for giving a senator a heart attack,” Peter Staley wrote in _Poz _in 2008, the year Helms died. The action received widespread media coverage, and Helms still complained about “radical homosexuals,” but “he never proposed or passed another life-threatening AIDS amendment,” Staley wrote. **Related:** Peter Staley Talks The 'Heavy Dose' of Sex, Love, and Humor in ACT UP - YouTube youtu.be ACT UP/Boston, most active from 1988 to 1994, won expanded access to an experimental drug and better insurance coverage. In 1989, ACT UP demonstrators in San Francisco shut down the Golden Gate Bridge to call attention to the epidemic. In 1991, ACT UP’s Atlanta affiliate held a die-in at Grady Hospital to protest the six-month wait for people with AIDS to be admitted. ACT UP chapters also advocated, with much success, for better portrayals of people with AIDS in the media, while busting myths around the disease, such as the idea that HIV could be transmitted by casual contact. Throughout the 1990s and into the 2000s, ACT UP members continued to protest at government offices calling for more action against AIDS and condemning inaction by presidents including George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton. ## Memories “Our first action was against the Chicago Transit Authority],” ACT UP/Chicago activist Bill McMillan recalled to [_Chicago Magazine_ in 2020. “They had these terrible AIDS-phobic ads up, and they wouldn’t meet with us, so we decided to demonstrate. We were young and fresh, wearing new T-shirts because we had a new logo for ACT UP Chicago, which Danny [Sotomayor, a prominent local activist and artist] designed. We were overwhelmed by how many people showed up. At Clark and Diversey, we shut down the intersection. We had a die-in. That was my first arrest.” “I’d never been an aggressive person before I joined ACT UP,” San Franciscan Virg Parks told _SFGate_ in 1997. “But I liked the idea of a nonviolent organization that still said we’re going to be strong and powerful and angry and let them know that we are pissed off.” Ann Northrop recalled the “Stop the Church” protest on a 2020 _A_ _dvocate_ podcast. “Michael Petrelis got up on a pew and started screaming at the cardinal, ‘You’re a murderer, you’re a murderer.’ And the entire place erupted in screaming and yelling and people throwing things at us … I thought I was going to die.” But she lived on and remains an activist. **Related:**After the 2024 election, we can be inspired by these historical LGBTQ+ movements against oppression Matthew Ebert, writing in _The Advocate _in 2015, said ACT UP saved his life. When he walked into a meeting in New York in 1987, “I took to the room, and the energy and the passion of activism, and the beauty of men and women fighting for our lives, for health care rights, for our civil rights. I learned how to protect myself from AIDS. And I learned what to expect from myself. I learned to rise above, because we were so loathed by the community and the world. We forget that. … Had I not joined ACT UP in 1987, and continued to this day to be a card-carrying ACT UP member, I would be dead.” ## ACT UP today — and its legacy While most ACT UP chapters have disbanded, a few are carrying on. The Boston chapter has been revived and recently protested Fenway Health’s decision to stop providing hormones and puberty blockers to transgender patients under 19 to avoid losing federal funding. “Whether under the banner of ACT UP Boston or another group, it’s clear we need a consistent, organized platform to coordinate a sustained fightback for the transgender community as well as fight for more resources for HIV Prevention and Treatment,” says a post on its Facebook page. ACT UP members in New York are campaigning against Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s anti-science views, plus the Trump administration’s cuts to medical research and Medicaid. They also are pushing for passage of the New York Health Act, which would create a statewide single-payer health care system. They have participated in protests against the war in Gaza as well. Some ACT UP activists went on to channel their passion into more mainstream arenas. “I’m continuing to do the same things, but from a different venue,” Mike Shriver, then policy director for the National Association for People With AIDS, said in the 1997 _SFGate_ article. "The idea that you lose the fire or the gusto because you run an agency is just not true. … Passion doesn't mean chaining yourself to a fence. Passion means getting money and programs to people with AIDS.” Chicagoan Justin Hayford found ACT UP wasn’t for him, but he saw its value. “I went to one ACT UP meeting, and I couldn’t stand it because it was such active democracy that I was like, I guess I’m a totalitarian at heart,” he told _Chicago Magazine_ in 2020. “I wanted more order. But I was thrilled with what they were doing: chaining yourself to the CDC, closing down the Golden Gate Bridge. So I thought, I’m going to work over here, schmoozing the executives and officials and people writing policy, while they’re outside screaming, which they’d better do, because they won’t listen to us unless they fear their building’s going to burn down. You need both.” Ann Northrop expressed a similar view in her _Advocate_ podcast interview, regarding not only AIDS but LGBTQ+ rights and social justice in general. "The movement needs people coming at people in power from every angle," she said. "We need lobbyists. We need people on the inside working. We need people who are donors. We need people who will write their members of Congress, but we need people out in the streets who will raise issues honestly and directly and shame people in power when they don't do the right thing."
www.advocate.com
December 10, 2025 at 7:05 AM
Reposted by Activism Channel
The Justice Department has finalized new regulations that effectively eliminate the use of “disparate impact” analysis—a key tool for proving racial discrimination based on statistical disparities—marking a significant rollback of civil rights protections. These regulations, issued without […]
Original post on mastodon.vtip.me
mastodon.vtip.me
December 10, 2025 at 3:24 AM
Reposted by Activism Channel
This is beyond #activism from the blatantly #partisancourt, this is #ElectionInterference. Wasn’t #citizensunited enough?

#scotus probes #campaignfinance limits challenged by #jdvance

#supremecourt appears likely to issue a ruling notwithstanding arguments that the case is moot because of […]
Original post on masto.ai
masto.ai
December 9, 2025 at 9:26 PM
Reposted by Activism Channel
December 9, 2025 at 4:20 PM
Reposted by Activism Channel
Would you like to have a stand with your organisation at the 2026 edition of 2.Dh5? The form to request one can be found at https://www.2dh5.nl/en/stand-request/
#2dh5 #activism #utrecht #netherlands #festival #activistfestival #anarchism #infomarket
December 9, 2025 at 3:50 PM
Reposted by Activism Channel
...
This event is organized by the SABOA (FediVariety) with support from the Dutch Government (CIO-Rijk), the City of Amsterdam and NLnet Foundation.

Provide your topic! Get on board!
https://fedivariety.org/unconference […]

[Original post on mastodon.social]
December 9, 2025 at 2:04 PM
Reposted by Activism Channel
Here it is: Light the fuse… Put it in play!
And spread the word!

NOAW unconference — Call for Participation!
Submit a topic! Get on board!

"Nodes on a Web: The Fediverse in/for Public Institutions”
Thu/Fri 19/20 March 2026, Amsterdam!

#jjugglingthefediverse #NOAW #fediverse #event […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
December 9, 2025 at 2:00 PM
Reposted by Activism Channel
https://www.forever-wars.com/torture-techniques-from-cia-black-sites-were-used-at-alligator-alcatraz/

"Torture Techniques from #cia Black Sites Were Used at #alligatoralcatraz"

#amnestyinternational, interviewing #migrantdetainees, identifies use of the confinement box. There can be no denying […]
Original post on turtleisland.social
turtleisland.social
December 9, 2025 at 2:55 AM
Reposted by Activism Channel
If you are going to be in the #winnipeg area on this date, please consider attending the #rally for #campmorgan. It is deplorable that this space has been torn down without permission, by the same province that finally agreed to #searchthelandfill […]

[Original post on turtleisland.social]
December 9, 2025 at 2:50 AM
Reposted by Activism Channel
Reposted by Activism Channel
If you thought the world has gotten more fair over the past one hundred years, please think again. #exploitation #resources #oil #CrudeOil #petrol #minerals #Africa #activism #environment #climate
December 8, 2025 at 8:09 AM
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Georgia Protests weekly virtual newspaper for 7 December 2025 in photo format.
Headlines:
Chemical weapons used against the Georgian people
One year of continuous protests
Questions about Georgia addressed to UK government
Embargo on police equipment […]

[Original post on mastodon.online]
December 7, 2025 at 6:03 PM
Reposted by Activism Channel
#giftarticle

Mom of #KarolineLeavitt’s nephew rejects White House narrative of her #ice arrest
In an interview, Bruna Ferreira, who chose the #trump press secretary as her son’s godmother, contested the portrayal of her as a criminal, absentee mom.

#factcheck #trumplies #propaganda #law […]
Original post on masto.ai
masto.ai
December 7, 2025 at 2:26 PM
Reposted by Activism Channel
#hacktivism italiano, #fediverso e critica ai social: un dibattito con gli autori di "Server Ribelli" e "Scritture Digitali".

La storia dell'hacktivism italiano (Indymedia, Hack Meeting) e la "cattura" operata dai social network commerciali, evidenziando la loro non neutralità. L'esperienza di […]
Original post on mastodon.uno
mastodon.uno
December 7, 2025 at 12:10 PM