Tag Page HumanRights

#HumanRights
LataraSpeaksTruth

May 19, 1925, Malcolm X was born Malcolm Little in Omaha, Nebraska, and the world did not yet know a voice had arrived that would shake America awake. He was born to Earl and Louise Little, parents connected to Marcus Garvey’s teachings and the belief that Black people deserved dignity, self-respect, and self-determination. Malcolm came from a family marked by race, resistance, and danger. His childhood was not soft. His family faced threats, displacement, and tragedy. His father died when Malcolm was young, and his mother later struggled under grief, poverty, and institutional pressure. His early life showed how America could break a Black family apart and then blame the child for surviving the pieces. But Malcolm survived. He went through hardship, prison, transformation, faith, discipline, study, and rebirth. Malcolm Little became Malcolm X, rejecting a surname tied to slavery and claiming an identity that refused to bow. Later, after his pilgrimage to Mecca, he became El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz, with a broader view of justice, faith, and humanity. Malcolm X was powerful because he made people confront what they wanted to ignore. He spoke about racism, police brutality, poverty, Black pride, self-defense, global human rights, and the hypocrisy of a country preaching freedom while denying it to Black people. Some called him too harsh. But sometimes truth only sounds harsh to people comfortable with the lie. His life was cut short on February 21, 1965, when he was assassinated in New York. But his words did not die with him. They kept moving through generations, through classrooms, speeches, books, protests, music, and every person who learned that loving yourself in a world that taught you not to is an act of resistance. Malcolm X was not just history. He was a warning. He was a mirror. And he was a reminder that Black dignity was never something to beg for. It was something to stand on. #MalcolmX #BlackHistory #OnThisDay #HumanRights #BlackVoices

Elizabeth

Disability Accommodation Denied – Know Your Rights! I applied for an apartment at Deerbrook Forest – Rockstar 17750 LLC and requested disability accommodations. My request was denied, and some of the follow-up messages included emojis that felt dismissive and unprofessional. ⚠️ Heads up: The third-party “Two Dots” has no publicly listed address or phone number. Be careful when sharing personal or financial info. Know your rights: You can request first-floor units, accessible parking, or other disability-related accommodations. You can request accommodations even if you cannot provide documentation, because the law has exemptions. HUD recipients should contact ADA or housing authorities. If denied, contact the Texas Workforce Commission Civil Rights Division, or file in federal court (Houston). Low-income filers can request a fee waiver. I have formally reported this matter to civil rights authorities, and a federal case has been filed. https://www.twodots.net/⁠ https://www.rockstar-capital.com/ https://www.deerbrookforestapts.com/ #DisabilityRights #HousingRights #ADA #FairHousing #TenantRights #AccessibleHousing #CivilRights #TenantAdvocacy #KnowYourRights #TexasHousing#tip #News #DisabilityRights #HousingRights #TenantRights #FairHousing #ADA #HUD #FederalCase #Accessibility #DisabilityAccommodation #TenantAdvocacy #DisabledAndProud #HousingDiscrimination #KnowYourRights #TexasHousing #CivilRights #DisabilityAwareness #AccessibleLiving #LowIncomeHousing #TenantProtection #DisabledHousing #HumanRights #EqualityForAll #InclusionMatters #DisabilitySupport #AccessibilityMatters #HousingJustice #TenantRightsMatter #HousingEquity #RightsMatter #JusticeForTenants #HousingAwareness #DisabilityLaw #ProtectedRights #TenantEducation #DisabledVoices #InclusiveHousing #AccessibilityRights #RightsOfTheDisabled #TenantSupport #DisabilityCommunity #HousingAccess #FairHousingAct #EqualHousing #TenantSafety #AccessibilitySupport #EmpowerTe

Stateless in Paradise

Today, I received heartbreaking news. Moises Mendoza, the freelance journalist who was the first person to tell my story when I was stranded in American Samoa as a stateless person, has passed away. Moises was more than a journalist. He was a compassionate, courageous human being who chose to listen when I was invisible to the world. He saw my SOS messages, reached out to me, and wrote the first article about my situation—“Stranded in Samoa: The U.S. refuses to take back this stateless man,” published in GlobalPost. Because of him, my story reached the world. It spread across international media, even reaching CNN, and gave me something I desperately needed at that time: a voice. His work helped shine a light on injustice and gave me strength to continue fighting for my freedom and my return. I truly believe that without his courage and humanity, my ordeal could have lasted much longer. Afterward, Moises continued his path of service, becoming a diplomat and representing the United States at the United Nations—still fighting, in his own way, for people whose voices are often unheard. Moises was a beautiful soul. I never had the chance to reconnect with him the way I hoped, but I will always carry deep gratitude for what he did for me. He changed my life. Rest in peace, my friend. You will never be forgotten.#Gratitude #RestInPeace #JournalismMatters #HumanRights #Stateless #AmericanSamoa

LataraSpeaksTruth

1948… On this day the United Nations General Assembly adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. It became one of the most influential documents of the modern era, shaping how nations talk about dignity, equality, and the protection of every person. The declaration was created in the aftermath of a world at war. Countries wanted a shared standard for how human beings should be treated. It outlined rights that are supposed to belong to everyone, no matter their background or location. Over time it became a guide for global conversations about fairness. Movements in the United States used it as a reference point when challenging discrimination and unequal treatment. Leaders in the Black freedom struggle cited its language to push the country to live up to the values it claimed to support. The document did not solve the world’s problems, but it created a blueprint that communities continued to hold up. December 10 stands as a reminder that the fight for dignity has both a global history and a local impact. #History #AmericanHistory #OnThisDay #HumanRights #LataraSpeaksTruth

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Tag: HumanRights | LocalAll