From Pride with Courage <[email protected]>
Subject A special Juneteenth message from Courage California
Date June 19, 2024 5:21 PM
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Friend,

As Juneteenth arrives, Courage California is taking this moment to
commemorate this important moment in history. Though President Lincoln's
Emancipation Proclamation was issued in 1863, it wasn't until June 19th,
1865, when Union troops arrived in Galveston, Texas, to enforce the law
and ensure freedom for all enslaved people.

California officially recognized Juneteenth as a holiday in 2003 --
eighteen years before it would become a federal holiday. And Juneteenth is
an important occasion to celebrate the progress we've made fighting
systemic racism and discrimination against Black Californians.

This day also serves as a time for reflection on the ongoing fight for
racial equality and justice. Black Americans have never seen reparations
for their suffering under slavery nationally, and California is no
different.

And we must especially recognize that in 2024, legal slavery still exists.

The California constitution permits indentured servitude, and 65% of
incarcerated people -- 28% who are Black despite being only 6% of the
state's population -- are forced to work for little to no wage. Imprisoned
Californians pave roads, work food service, and even fight fires for 12 to
40 cents an hour. And businesses pocket $1 billion a year on labor from
incarcerated people.

In 2024, we have several opportunities to correct these societal
injustices. California’s first-in-the-nation Reparations Task Force has
made ACA 8, the End Slavery in California Act, its top legislative
priority. Voters could have the power to end indentured servitude in
California in November, but ACA 8 has to pass with two-thirds of the vote
in the Assembly and the Senate first.

The Senate has also passed three bills -- SB 1050, SB 1331, and SB 1403 --
from the Reparations Task Force that would begin building the
infrastructure needed to help restore property and address reparations
claims, and now the Assembly will vote on them.

Juneteenth is a reminder of the resilience of the human spirit and the
ongoing pursuit of freedom, and we can honor those goals by supporting
Black-owned businesses, attending Juneteenth festivities, and [ [link removed] ]calling
our representatives to ask them to pass ACA 8 and the reparations bills
package.

Yours in the fight for a more just and inclusive California for everyone,

–Irene, for the whole Courage team

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Courage California (formerly Courage Campaign) makes sure our democracy works for ALL of us by fighting corruption in California politics. We believe the solution lies in exposing and solving systemic problems through strategic organizing, enhancing coordination between progressive organizations, and mobilizing civic engagement from our communities, particularly voters of color, young voters, and self-identified progressives.

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