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- Adrienne Maree: The Luscious Satyagraha
- Afro-Netizen
- Alternet
- Aurora Levins Morales
- Can't Stop Won't Stop
- Colorlines
- Davey D's Hip Hop Corner
- Desplazado
- Digital Smoke Signals
- Edge of Sports
- El Grito
- Feministing
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- Imagine 2050
- Institute for Public Accuracy
- Jack and Jill Politics
- Jobs with Justice Blog
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- Media Matters
- Organizing Upgrade
- PoliticalPoet
- PR Watch
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- RaceWire
- Racialicious
- SmartMeme
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- The Huffington Post
- WIMN'S Voices
- Wired Latinos
CMJ Celebrates a Community Victory over AT&T’s Failed Attempt at Media Consolidation
amalia deloney, Media Policy Field Director stated, “Since AT&T first announced its intent to takeover T-Mobile, CMJ has continuously raised concerns about what role a duopoly would mean for those who rely on access to mobile broadband to find employment, access healthcare, advance their education and organize for social and economic justice.”
Vitter Amendment defeated!
Thanks to everyone who joined the campaign at buildingpower.org, the US Senate voted down the Vitter Amendment—an effort to change Census forms, forcing people to answer questions about their citizenship, 60-39. Of course, this is only a first step. The pressure needs to stay on so that the 2010 Census policies are fair and just.
Lou Dobbs resigns!
For the past two months, Presente.org, together with more than 40 local and national partners, including the Center for Media Justice and several MAG-Net groups, has organized the Basta Dobbs campaign, demanding that CNN fire anti-immigrant and anti-Latino host Lou Dobbs. On the evening of Wednesday, November 11, Dobbs announced his resignation, effective immediately.

