From Southern Poverty Law Center <[email protected]>
Subject Demanding accountability on the international stage
Date October 25, 2023 4:00 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
As a nation we often talk the talk but fail to walk the walk."

Friend,

While the FBI's most recent hate crime report once again showed a disturbing uptick in hate crime incidents, we must demand accountability, meaningful legislation and enforcement for the sake of our communities. That is why your support is critical for the SPLC to advocate for change on the international stage and hold bad actors accountable in the fight against hate in our nation.

[link removed]

As part of the SPLC delegation for a trip to Geneva for the United Nations Human Rights Committee, President and CEO Margaret Huang and chief policy officer LaShawn Warren spoke on the United States' long history of human rights abuses and the hate crimes that continue
to plague our communities.

"As a nation we often talk the talk but fail to walk the walk," Huang said. The committee was reviewing the United States' compliance with the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights (ICCPR).

While our nation has championed some of the most significant international human rights treaties and agreements, it has also failed to uphold its commitments on its own soil. The time for action is now.

Make a contribution today to support the SPLC's Hate Crimes Awareness Month campaign. Your donation sends a powerful message around the world - hate has no place in our country.

[link removed]

Donate

[link removed]

Our delegation was joined by survivors of hate crimes and state-sponsored violence, community activists, leaders and others who shared their experiences and insight on how these failures to comply with the ICCPR have real consequences for people's lives.

Survivors Taylor Dumpson, Haifa Jabara and Ian Manuel's testimonies served as a devastating reminder of the contradictory role the U.S. has played on the international civil and political rights stage and the uphill battle we face to put an end to hate violence.

Last year, the SPLC's senior policy counsel for international advocacy, Lisa Borden, spoke on some critical recommendations to curb hate crimes and human rights abuses in the United States. While these recommendations have yet to be implemented, we will continue working
hard in order to bring justice to our communities.

We must:

-Restore the full powers of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, restore
voting rights to returning citizens and increase funding for election
integrity
-Create a national human rights institution to ensure compliance with
the ICCPR
-Pass the End Solitary Confinement Act
-Introduce and pass legislation that criminalizes all forms of torture
-Promote inclusive education to instill understanding of people's
differences and to enable the public to resist disinformation and
radicalization, as we have modeled with our Learning for Justice
program

As Hate Crimes Awareness Month draws to a close, we are urgently asking for your support. Can you help us by making a special gift today?

[link removed]

Donate

[link removed]

Your partnership helps us win fights against white supremacist tactics such as voter suppression, hate violence and education censorship in the Deep South and beyond. Thank you for standing with us in the face of injustice.

In solidarity,

The Southern Poverty Law Center



--
Unsubscribe [link removed] | Privacy Policy [link removed] | Contact Us [link removed]

Southern Poverty Law Center
400 Washington Avenue
Montgomery, AL 36104
334.956.8200 // splcenter.org
[link removed]
Copyright 2023
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis