Post-Election Protesting? Know Your Rights to Demonstrate - #ACLUTimeMachine

Rallying in response to the news of Donald Trump’s election? Read, print, and share our new demonstrators’ rights wallet cards.

By Irene Rojas-Carroll

Know Your Rights to Demonstrate

Catholic Hospitals Denied These Women Critical Care. Now They’re Speaking Out.

I'm heartbroken and in awe. Woman after woman has come forward to tell us her story of being denied critical reproductive health care at a Catholic hospital.

By Brigitte Amiri

women

Since When Did Police Officers Replace the Principal’s Office?

Back in the day, a student who broke school rules or otherwise misbehaved would be reprimanded by a teacher or sent to the principal’s office. But today, school administrators are increasingly relying on law enforcement to keep students in line, and the results can be dire.

By Linnea Nelson, Victor Leung

kid in handcuffs in a classroom

#ACLUTimeMachine - Where Breast Cancer Activism Meets Civil Liberties

This Breast Cancer Awareness Month, we’re flashing back to 2013, a year that marked both a big win and a big loss for the ACLU and the breast cancer movement.

By Leslie Fulbright

ACLUTimeMachine Barbara Brenner breast cancer awareness BCAction

Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter Provided Data Access for a Surveillance Product Marketed to Target Activists of Color

The ACLU of California has obtained records showing that Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram provided user data access to Geofeedia, a developer of a social media monitoring product that we have seen marketed to law enforcement as a tool to monitor activists and protesters.

An icon representing Social Media Monitoring Software

Making Things a Little Fairer in California, One Bill at a Time

California now has some of the strongest protections against policing for profit in the country. Although we had several legislative successes this year, two important, ACLU-sponsored bills died in the Legislature.

By Natasha Minsker

Sacramento Capitol building

Government of the People, By the People, and for the People

In the 2010 Citizens United decision, the US Supreme Court ruled that independent political expenditures by corporations and unions are protected speech. Citizens United became a flashpoint because Americans are increasingly concerned about the impact of economic inequality on our political system.

By Abdi Soltani, Helen Hutchison

dollar sign American flag

Police Use of Social Media Surveillance Software is Escalating, and Activists are in the Digital Crosshairs

It goes without saying that speaking out against police violence or government overreach shouldn’t land you in a surveillance database. But it can, and it does.The ACLU of California has

By Nicole A. Ozer

Map of California, with dots marking the areas where local law enforcement has acquired social media monitoring software

It's Time to Shine a Light on Police Surveillance in Fresno

When you are having meetings about transparency and building trust with law enforcement, the last thing you expect to hear is that they may be secretly spying on you. But that is exactly what happened to us as community activists with Fresno Faith In Community/Live Free.

By Taymah Jahsi

Live Free logo for Faith in the Valley in Fresno