TBT 1959: Black Organizer Beaten and Jailed for Sign Showing Man in Chains

Asbury Howard, a black leader and organizer who headed an effort to register black voters in Alabama, was convicted in January 1959 for having a poster made from a newspaper cartoon.

By Leslie Fulbright

Has Your School Done Its Homework on Sex Ed?

It's back to school season again. Here's how to make sure your school's sexual health education is up to date and follows California law.

By Sophie Lyons

CA Healthy Youth Act

Huge Ruling! Mandatory Immigration Detention "Smacks of Injustice"

Communities are being torn apart by mandatory immigration detention. Every day, more than 30,000 immigrants are held in prison-like without due process.

By Cecilia Bermúdez, Angélica Salceda

Photo: U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Department of Homeland Security)

Five Years Later, BART's Cell Service Shutdown is Still a Wakeup Call

Five years ago today, BART made the unprecedented decision to shut off cell service at multiple stations in order to suppress a protest. Scores of riders were left without the ability to communicate.

matt cagle quote

What Does Safety Mean to You?

Every year on the first Tuesday of August, the National Association of Neighborhood Watch sponsors a “National Night Out.” The tenor of these events usually reinforce the idea that neighborhood watch and police-community partnerships are the pathway to public safety.

By ACLU of Northern California

#SafetyIs by Micah Bazant

#FreedomNow: Global Call to Action 7.21

We support the Movement for Black Lives and the collective #FreedomNow actions taking place globally on Thursday, July 21. Join us at a protest or take these online actions to show your support.

By ACLU of Northern California

#FreedomNow

Facebook's Expansion Plans Could Displace Thousands in Menlo Park

Facebook’s proposed headquarters expansion would inject tens of thousands of new workers into one of the tightest housing markets in the country, yet its environmental study denies any impact on housing demand or displacement pressures.

By Sam Tepperman-Gelfant

Facebook Campus Menlo Park, CA

When Privacy Gets in the Way of Becoming a Pokémon Master

I’m the first to admit: I love Pokémon Go. Another thing I love? Privacy. I was shocked to find out that in signing up to explore the Pokémon world, I'd given Pokémon Go permission to explore my Gmail inbox.

By Alex Andresian

Photo via flickr / edowoo - Pokemon Go

Why the Next Philando Castile Could Be a Sixth-Grader

Despite overwhelming proof that our system of law enforcement is inherently unequal, we’ve nevertheless let this racist institution into our most sacred public space—the schoolhouse.

By Nayna Gupta, Linnea Nelson

stock photo of a school aged youth of color wearing a backpack