NAACP
Chapel Hill will be the home of one of thirteen rallies going on simultaneously across North Carolina on Wednesday. Join us in rising up against the immoral attempts to drag our state back to the bad old days!
From ncaacpnc.org:
Taking the Dream HomeForward Together Movement Rallies across North Carolina on the 50th Anniversary of the March on Washington
After many of you attend the 50th Anniversary Celebration of the March on Washington in D.C. on August 24th, we will return to North Carolina and rally in our home state on August 28th, the actual 50th anniversary of the March on Washington. We will heed Dr. King's call at the end of his "I Have a Dream" speech to go home and organize! We will hold 13 simultaneous rallies across the state to bring to light the unconstitutional and immoral acts of the NC General Assembly and the influence their decisions have had on our local communities. We will rally in the 13 Congressional Districts and demand that our Congress People renew Section 4 of the Voting Rights Act.
Date:
Wednesday, August 28, 2013 - 5:30pm
Location:
Peace and Justice Plaza, Franklin St. Post Office, 179 East Franklin Street, Chapel Hill
I'm pretty sure that no other municipality in North Carolina could have done business from prison in Raleigh tonight. But Carrboro Mayor Mark Chilton (who helped instigate Mega Moral Monday) as well as Alderpeople Michelle Johnson, Damon Seils, and Sammy Slade all committed civil disobedience with about 140 other people - including Chapel Hill Town Council Member Donna Bell and OP Editor Molly De Marco - by refusing to leave the rotunda in the N.C. General Assembly.
Among the 1,000 protesters outside the NCGA were a quorum of Orange County Commissioners (Bernadette Pelissier, Penny Rich, Renee Price, and Mark Dorosin), a Carrboro Alderperson (Randee Haven-O'Donnell), OP regular Mark Marcoplos, and two more OP editors (Travis Crayton and myself).
Historic Thousands on Jones Street People's Assembly 6
14 Point People's Agenda for North Carolina
-
-
-
Health Care for All. NC
ought to provide its people with health insurance and prescription
drugs, while funding public health programs to treat social diseases
that plague Black and poor communities including HIV/AIDS, diseases
caused by environmental pollution and warming, drugs, domestic violence,
mental illness, diabetes, and obesity.
-
-
-
Lift Every HBCU. NC
must financially support our Historically Black Colleges and
Universities to develop equitable infrastructure and programs with
doctoral-level leadership for today's challenges.
-
-
Provide Affordable Housing and Stop Consumer Abuse. NC
must provide an Affordable Housing Trust Fund for low-income renters,
vouchers for wounded veterans who can not find accessible housing,
meaningful tax breaks for seniors forced out of their homes, and
protection against predatory lending and foreclosures.
-
-
-
-
-
-
Date:
Saturday, February 11, 2012 - 9:30am to 12:30pm
Location:
Assemble at Shaw University in Raleigh, NC
Last week, I received a press release about the 2011 endorsements by the Anderson-Thorpe-Chapman Breakfast Club (quoted in its entirety at the end of this post). Unfortunately, the statement raised more questions than it answered. I spoke by phone with my friend Nate Davis, corresponded with NAACP representative Rob Stephens, and also e-mailed Fred Battle and Al McSurely, but was not able to get any answers to my questions. If candidates and the media are going to tout these endorsements, I think we should know a little more about where they came from.
Pages
About Us
OrangePolitics is a not-for-profit website for discussing progressive perspectives on politics, planning, and public policy in Orange County, NC. Opinions are those of their authors. Learn more.
Community Guidelines
By using this site, you agree to our community guidelines. Inappropriate or disruptive behavior will result in moderation or eviction.
Zircon - This is a contributing Drupal Theme
Design by
WeebPal.