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17 Mar, 4 tweets, 1 min read
The Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on the Equality Act is happening NOW.

7 in 10 Americans agree — it’s time to pass this legislation once and for all.
The Equality Act would add explicit protections for LGBTQ people under federal civil rights law.

It would also finally make discriminating against or sexually harassing people while shopping or on transportation illegal. We must update our federal laws to close these gaps.
Racial justice, women’s rights, and religious groups all support the Equality Act.

Because we ALL deserve to live free from the fear of discrimination and harassment.
No matter what politicians in statehouses or Congress say today or any day: trans youth belong in our country.

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More from @ACLU

10 Mar
You asked, we answered! Check out our Q&A on ID access in this thread!
National and international standards require some IDs to have gender markers, so we can’t tell every federal agency to remove them. But we support and encourage all agencies to review the necessity of gender markers and remove them from IDs where possible.
Some states have been able to implement updated policies that include an X designation much faster than others – it often depends on what software systems they are using to collect and store their data and how difficult they are up to update.
Read 18 tweets
10 Mar
BREAKING: We’re calling on DHS and CBP to withdraw a proposed regulation that would dramatically expand the use of face recognition technology at airports.
This rule would allow CBP to require all noncitizens entering or exiting the US to submit to face recognition, and would allow CBP to collect “faceprints” for future use.

DHS can store these faceprints for up to 75 years and law enforcement can use them for unrelated purposes.
We can’t let that happen. CBP has a long history of abuse and discriminatory profiling. Giving the agency one more tool to surveil travelers will only harm immigrant communities.
Read 5 tweets
9 Mar
Today kicks off the confirmation hearing of Vanita Gupta to Associate Attorney General.

ACLU alumni have a long history of serving our country, and we’re particularly proud of Vanita’s work.
Prior to her nomination to deputy AG, Gupta rose from a staff attorney to Deputy Legal Director and the Director of the Center for Justice here at the ACLU.
Leading our criminal justice docket, Gupta was able to establish impactful relationships across partisan and ideological divides that worked to reduce the footprint of mass incarceration.
Read 6 tweets
8 Mar
‼️ THIS IS NOT A DRILL ‼️ Politicians around the country are attacking transgender youth.

Here's what you can do to fight back in your state now.
ALABAMA

A series of bills — HB1, SB10, and HB391 — would ban medical care for trans youth and ban trans youth from school sports.
action.aclu.org/send-message/a…
ARKANSAS

HB 1570 would ban medical care for trans youth.
action.aclu.org/send-message/a…
Read 7 tweets
6 Mar
March is #WomensHistoryMonth. We're honoring women who've broken barriers, changed culture, and made history.

Aimee Stephens is one of those women. She was a plaintiff in the landmark case that affirmed workplace protections for LGBTQ people last June.

Let's revisit her story. Portrait of an older white woman with short white hair, wearBlack text on a white background that reads: I found it a liWomen's History Month written in black and purple text on a
Aimee had worked for nearly six years as a funeral director in Michigan.

Two weeks after she informed the funeral home's owner that she was trans, Aimee was fired.

Aimee decided to fight back, and we ultimately represented her at the Supreme Court.
Tragically, Aimee's firing caused her to suffer financially and left her without health insurance when her kidneys failed.

Aimee passed away before she could see that the Supreme Court ruled in her favor.
Read 4 tweets
5 Mar
BREAKING: We just secured a partial settlement that is an important first move to restoring abortion access in Guam.

The settlement ensures that an outdated Guam statute cannot be used to restrict access to medication abortion, including through telemedicine.
The settlement clears the way for people in Guam to be able to access abortion in their own community, as opposed to flying nearly 4,000 miles to Hawaiʻi — or further — just to access legal abortion.
There is still work to do to eliminate harmful and medically unnecessary obstacles to accessing abortion in Guam, and we're going to court later this month to do just that.

But for today, we're celebrating this win for reproductive freedom in Guam.
Read 4 tweets

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