Vote by Mail Not Enough, California Must Also Require Minimum Number of In-person Polls for November Elections

By Brittany Stonesifer, Christina Fletes

African American woman at voting booth during US elections

Why Freedom of Expression and Public Health Must Coexist  

The COVID-19 pandemic forces a reckoning with the balance between freedom of assembly and public health and safety. The virus is highly contagious and the risks of exposure include severe illness or death. These risks are especially high for medically vulnerable people and communities that our systems have failed, especially Black and brown communities.

young people wearing masks protesting

If COVID-19 Doesn’t Discriminate, Then Why Are Black People Dying at Higher Rates?

To provide meaningful protection and support for all members of the community, a COVID-19 response must address the pervasive racial injustices at the federal, state, and local level.

By ReNika Moore

black people waiting in long line

Let’s Stop the Scapegoating During a Global Pandemic

Just like tens of millions of people sheltering in place in the U.S., I’m adjusting to the new realities and worries of day-to-day life during the COVID-19 pandemic. But on top of worrying about my elderly family members, U.S. hospitals’ shortage of basic medical equipment, or where I can find toilet paper and eggs, I have another fear. Like other Americans of East Asian descent (including citizens and non-citizens), I worry that I might be attacked on the street or in a store because of my race.

There are so many news reports that spur my concerns. For example, on March 14, a man in Midland, Texas, attacked an Asian American family shopping at a Sam’s Club store, stabbing three members of the family, including a two-year-old and a six-year-old child, as well as an employee. The attacker said that he targeted the family because he believed, based on the family’s race, that they were spreading the COVID-19 virus. The FBI categorized the attack as a hate crime, and more generally warned of a potential surge in bias-based attacks on Asian Americans.

By Cecillia Wang

woman shopping flushing

California, a "Free State" Sanctioned Slavery

By Susan D. Anderson

Gold Miner

Hey Clearview, Your Misleading PR Campaign Doesn’t Make Your Face Surveillance Product Any Less Dystopian

In the last few weeks, a company called Clearview has been in the news for marketing a reckless and invasive facial recognition tool to law enforcement. The company claims the tool can identify people in billions of photos nearly instantaneously. And Exhibit A in support of their claim to law enforcement that their app is accurate? An “accuracy test” that Clearview boasts was modeled on the ACLU’s work calling attention to the dangers of face surveillance technology.

By Jake Snow

facial recognition system,

On the 47th Anniversary of Roe, Let’s Advance Reproductive Justice for People Behind Bars

By Minouche Kandel, Aditi Fruitwala

I love repro rights

An Open Letter to California Officials: Housing First

By Eve Garrow

housing first

Gold Chains: The Hidden History of Slavery in California

By Candice Francis

Gold Chains, the hidden history of slavery in California, art piece man embodying slave ship