Anonymous ID: f6e3c5 March 6, 2023, 4:13 p.m. No.18457701   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>7748 >>7773

>>18457477

>The Southern Poverty Law Center

>>18457475

>>18456969 lb

>these Niggers got their hands into everything

 

muh insurrection

look at how smug this fucking cunt is with her smear campaigns.

 

Southern Poverty Law Center works with Jan. 6 committee to track hate groups

New insight on how former President Donald Trump was able to influence hate groups like the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers was brought to light during a Jan. 6 committee hearing. Southern Poverty Law Center President and CEO Margaret Huang joins CBS News Mornings with more insight on how the group is assisting committee members with their investigation.Jul 13, 2022

 

https://www.cbsnews.com/video/southern-poverty-law-center-works-with-january-6-committee-to-track-hate-groups/#x

Anonymous ID: f6e3c5 March 6, 2023, 4:26 p.m. No.18457816   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>7827 >>7949 >>8029

>>18457773

>and worse, there's a multi billion dollar media front giving her shit airtime

good point.

CBS news legitimizing this shit

 

> https://aaamarin.org/2021/02/07/full-transcript-of-margaret-huangs-talk/

 

Full Transcript of Margaret Huang’s Talk

 

Link to recording of Ms. Huang’s talk on 11/6/2020:

https://youtu.be/iHLf_XOSbqc

 

JEAN BEE CHAN

 

Thank you for being here today. It is now my pleasure to introduce our main speaker Margaret Huang.

 

Ms. Huang is an internationally renowned advocate for human rights and racial Justice, and she is now the new president and CEO of the Southern Poverty Law Center and its Action Fund. She’s a native of Tennessee and received a master’s degree in International Affairs from Columbia and a BS degree in Foreign Service from Georgetown.

 

Prior to Southern Poverty Law Center, Ms. Huang served as the executive director of Amnesty International USA where she was in charge of leading campaigns to protect the human rights of migrants, refugees, torture survivors, gun violence victims, as well as activists and protesters across the globe. Please welcome Margaret Huang!

 

MARGARET HUANG

 

Thank you. Thank you so much. It’s such a great pleasure to join all of you this evening, and I love taking part in Asian American community activities. So, thank you very much for inviting me to be part of your event this evening.

 

I wanted to share a little bit about me before I get into the substance of my remarks, because people often ask how I landed at the Southern Poverty Law Center. I’m the daughter of a Chinese immigrant to the United States and a white woman whose family has been in this country for many generations. I grew up in a small town in east Tennessee, which is pretty unusual.And it is because of my parents’ commitment to connect me to my Chinese family, in Taiwan and in China later, that I was able to travel several times to Asia and then eventually to other parts of the world.

 

These experiences opened my eyes to oppression and injustice in many places, but perhaps the most important experience was when I recognized those problems here in my own country. Today I have the privilege to speak to you as the leader of the Southern Poverty Law Center, which is one of the largest civil rights organizations in the country.

 

The SPLC will celebrate our 50th Anniversary next year, five decades of confronting white supremacy and demanding justice for those whose rights have been violated. I’m very grateful to be in this role at this particular moment and to be helping to shape social justice work that recognizes diversity in our country as one of our greatest strengths. We need this diverse movement for social justice more than ever because we’re at a pivotal moment in our nation’s history. In the last several years, we’ve witnessed injustices against black and brown men and women who have been harassed, beaten and tortured and killed by the police.

 

We have been shocked and horrified when white nationalists became mass murderers shooting African Americans, Jews, Muslims and Latinx communities. We’ve watched elected officials deny the humanity of communities of color by trying to eliminate access to health care during a global pandemic. We’re seeing the growing demand for food and shelter from an increasingly vulnerable population of poor people suffering as COVID continues its strain on our communities.

 

We can no longer ignore the long-standing discrimination, the institutional and structural racism against black indigenous and communities of color. Today, as the Asian American community, we have to join our brothers and sisters across racial identities to demand that every person in this country be able to exercise their human rights.

 

I want to express my appreciation to the board of directors of the Asian American Alliance of Marin for adopting a solidarity statement and a call to action in September. Statements like these are critical for building our intersectional movement for social justice, and I thank you.

 

Now we have a new moment for action. I believe in the incoming Biden administration. And yes, I am accepting it even though nobody else is, for some reason. The Biden administration is going to offer us the opportunities to demand new policies and to stop harmful practices. I thought I would share with you tonight some of the most urgent actions that we need this new administration to take for our Asian American community and also for all other communities of color, and indigenous communities, black communities in this country. The first urgent action that we need is an end to the ever-increasing use of detention, both for criminal actions as well as for immigrants, refugees and asylum seekers.