Missouri Is Having Its Own Wendy Davis Moment

Right now, something big is brewing in Missouri.

By By Carolyn Ehrlich, Political Strategist, ACLU

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Twenty-Four Years of Love

We're like a lot of couples out there. We met in college. We've stuck by each other's side through the ups and downs. And we're involved in our local North Carolina community.

By By Tamara Sheffield & Maryja Mee

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Private Prisons Eat Our Humanity

Somebody figured out, once again, how to build a machine that can quantify the life of an African-American man and make money off him. They figured out how to use the value of his body to fuel their machine. They learned how to drive its engine, and how to turn a profit. They call it prison privatization. I call it mining black gold, and I have watched black gold be mined from the streets of my community every day.

By By Reverend Edwin C. Sanders II, Senior Servant and Founder, Metropolitan Interdenominational Church

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Transgender Military Ban Takes Center Stage

In an interview with Martha Raddatz on ABC's This Week on Sunday, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said that he believes current military regulations that prohibit transgender individuals from serving openly in the military should be reviewed.

By By Ian S. Thompson, ACLU Washington Legislative Office

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Law Enforcement’s Lobbying Priority In States Is Fighting Transparency

The ACLU has been working in states across the country on a variety of laws pertaining to law enforcement agencies and their power to gather and access information about us—including location tracking, drones, automatic license plate readers, and access to our electronic communications content. From my vantage point in the ACLU national office working with our state affiliates to advance legislation, I have a unique view of legislative battles taking place across the nation. And what I have seen is that regardless of the issue or the state, there has been one common theme in law enforcement opposition to the bills: they don’t want you to know what they’re doing.

By By Allie Bohm, Advocacy & Policy Strategist, ACLU

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On the Agenda: May 12 - 16

If you tuned into John Oliver’s new show last Sunday, you were reminded of one indisputable truth of the internet age: there is no wrong time for a viral video of animals being totally adorable. Hats off to the host of Last Week Tonight, who followed up a segment asking hard questions about the death penalty with a video of a hamster eating a tiny burrito.

By By Rachel Nusbaum, Media Strategist, ACLU Washington Legislative Office

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DOJ Proposal on Law Enforcement Hacking Would Undermine Longstanding Check on Government Power

At the urging of the Department of Justice, the U.S. Courts’ Committee on Rules of Practice and Procedure is considering whether to bless procedures that would allow law enforcement to hack into computers, including by the use of controversial “zero-day exploits.” As Bloomberg News reported this morning, the proposed rule change raises privacy concerns. It has the potential to threaten internet security and to facilitate violations of the Fourth Amendment.

By By Nathan Freed Wessler, Staff Attorney, ACLU Speech, Privacy & Technology Project

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It's Time for Love to Win

There is a natural and sincere completeness to our family. Christy and I know that nothing is missing. We know that nothing is unintended.

By By Christy Berghoff & Victoria Kidd

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"I should not have had to sue my employer to have a healthy pregnancy or keep breastfeeding"

As a mother of three children, working in the manufacturing industry, I am truly in the minority: I'm one of 30 women in our facility and the only one with small children. Still, I hardly thought that in this day and age I would have to fight just to have a healthy pregnancy or continue breastfeeding after returning to work.

By By Bobbi Bockoras

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