BAMN
United for Equality and Affirmative Action Legal Defense Fund (UEAALDF)
NAACP
Reverend Jesse Jackson and Rainbow/PUSH
American Federation of Teachers
Progressive National Baptist Convention
March 25th Coalition
Chinese for Affirmative Action
International ANSWER
NAACP Youth & College Division
Jonathan Kozol, renowned educator and author
American Association for Affirmative Action
Derrick A. Bell, Professor of Law, NYU
Professor Charles Ogletree, Harvard University
Eleanor Holmes Norton, Member of Congress, Washington DC
Immortal Technique, Viper Records
Martin O'Malley, Governor-Elect, Maryland
Bob Moses, civil rights leader, Algebra Project
Darnell Hunt, Director of Bunche Center for African American Studies, UCLA
Mitchell Chang, Professor, UCLA Graduate School of Education
UAW Region 1A
United Teachers Los Angeles (UTLA)
AFSCME City of Detroit Presidents
AFSCME Local 207, City of Detroit
Oakland Education Association (OEA)
AFSCME Local 2920, City of Detroit
AFSCME Local 2626, Librarians' Guild, Los Angeles
San Lorenzo Education Association (SLEA)
American College Personnel Association
Oakland Unified School District
Berkeley Unified School District
Los Angeles Urban League
Equal Justice Society
Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice
The Kentucky Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression
Seattle Alliance of Black School Educators (SABSE)
Public Education Network
ILACHE - Illinois Latino Council on Higher Education
Reunion Regional de los Comites pro APPO
Maryland Freedom Board of Education
New York State Affirmative Action Advisory Council
Redstone Area Minority Employees Association
San Diego Association of Black Psychologists
Advance Youth Leadership Power, Chicago
C.L.O.U.D. N.I.N.E. - Allendale, MI
Act on Racism, Allendale, MI
National Association of Bench and Bar Spouses (NABBS), Detroit chapter
Concilio Hispano, Inc.,
Cambridge, Mass.
North Carolina Equal Rights Society
Brown Foundation for Educational Equity - Topeka, KS
YWCA USA
Rethinking Schools, Milwaukee, WI
National Latino Law Students Association (NLLSA)
National Black Law Students Association (NBLSA)
Associated Students of the University of California (UC Berkeley)
The Black Ivy Alumni League
Howard University Student Association
Fayetteville State University Student Government
Elizabeth City State University Student Government, North Carolina
Society for the Advancement of Management, Howard University
Pacific Islanders at Cal (UC Berkeley)
Twin Cities Alliance of Latino/a Law Students
Black Student Union of Columbia College Chicago
Black Student Union, Franklin High School, Seattle
Black Student Union, Bowling Green State University, OH
Center for Latino Policy Research (CLPR), UC Berkeley
Target HOPE, Howard University Chapter
Washington State Club, Howard University
Afro-American Cultural Center, Yale University
Black Student Alliance, Yale University (BSAY)
Hermanas Unidas, King/Drew Medical Magnet High School, Los Angeles
African-American Theme House, UC-Berkeley
Anti-Defamation League, Bravo HS chapter, Los Angeles
Otoku Club, Bravo HS chapter, Los Angeles
Latino Student Union - University of Maryland
Bowie State Student Government Association
Coalition for Justice - Harvard Graduate School of Education
Black Honors Caucus, University of Maryland
ALANAI Honor Society, University of Massachusetts
University of Baltimore Black Law Students Assn.
NAACP College Chapter at Kutztown University, PA
Texas Southern University Chapter of N.A.A.C.P
NAACP at Miami University (Ohio)
Morgan State University Student Government, Maryland
African-American Student League of Montgomery County Community College (PA)
Blacks In Government, Washington DC
Lincoln University Student Government Association (PA)
Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc
Alpha Kappa Alpha (AKA) Inc, Delta Upsilon Omega Chapter
Interested Ladies of LTA Latin Sorority, Inc.
Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., Nu Alpha Chapter, George Washington University
Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. Iota Zeta Chapter, UMD College Park
Phi Alpha Kappa Honor Society, New York City
Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. Beta Delta Chapter, South Carolina State University
Iota Phi Theta Fraternity, Inc., Beta Beta Chapter, UMass-Amherst
Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc., Omicron Lambda Chapter
Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity Inc., Delta Delta Chapter, Coppin State Univ (Baltimore)
Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc.- Epsilon Xi, Western Michigan Univ.
Reverend Doctor Samuel Berry McKinney, Mt. Zion Baptist Church, Seattle
Plymouth Congregational UCC Board of Social Action
Reverend J. Alfred Smith, Allen Temple Baptist Church, Oakland
Reverend Dr. John J. Hunter, First AME Church, Los Angeles
Reverend Frank W. Jackson IV, St. Andrew-Redeemer Lutheran Church, Detroit
Ebenezer A.M.E. Church, Fort Washington, MD
Ledonia Wright Cultural Center Emissaries (Greenville, NC)
Advocating 4 Kids (Virginia Beach)
Action by Congregations Together for Children, Brooklyn, NY
This spring, beginning with the historic marches in Chicago and Los Angeles, millions of Latinas/os, joined by people of all races, marched through the cities of this nation demanding equality and justice. A new mass civil rights movement was born. Mass action of unprecedented scope defeated the worst elements of the racist attack on immigrants and has begun to shift the balance of power in the county in favor of progress and integration. All the forces standing for integration must understand this shift in the balance of power.
The right wing is taking the Seattle and Louisville school desegregation cases to the US Supreme Court because they want to kill Brown v. Board of Education. They want to outlaw any measure that can achieve integration in American life. They want segregation forced on local school districts by the weight of federal law. They want black and Latina/o youth permanently relegated to separate, inferior schools. They are about to learn a lesson they should have learned a long time ago: you don't always get what you want.
Our new movement, standing up integrated, militant, shoulder to shoulder, will defeat this attack on school desegregation and make the racists wish they hadn't started a fight against so many proud, angry, smart people. We've had enough - we're not having any more. The new movement puts the racists of the country on notice: we're not accepting the back of the bus any more. We will not be marginalized. We will not be mistreated, disrespected or segregated.
It's time to fight.
The Seattle and Louisville school desegregation cases are a wake up call to all the youth of the nation. Now is the time to stand up and fight. The old, tired, sold-out leaderships would rather bow down, beg and be beaten for their trouble. A new leadership that wants to stand up and fight for equality, integration and justice will find a more vibrant, deeper response to that perspective now than at any time in decades.
The right wing will take from us only what we let them. When we stand up together and fight there's no power on earth that can stop us. In defending Brown v. Board of Education, at the US Supreme Court, we can wake up the progressive forces of the country - we can put America on the road to making Martin Luther King's dream into our shared destiny. Which direction this society moves is completely up to us - the young leaders of the new civil rights movement.