Immigrant communities are often asked to “get right with the law,” but is the law right in the first place? That’s what Alina Das asks in her new book, No Justice in the Shadows. She delves into her experience as the daughter of immigrants, an immigration attorney, and a clinical law professor to explore the intersection of immigration and the criminal justice system.

Too often, she argues, our immigration system is used as a tool of discrimination and oppression, rather than as a tool of justice, and the consequences are dire. Our current immigration system is breaking up families, and forcing people to face persecution — even death — in their home countries, and it’s all based on a false premise of ensuring public safety and national security.

Das joins At Liberty this week to discuss her book, and how we need to fundamentally reenvision the immigration agencies in our country, which she says are ultimately charged with enforcing laws rooted in white supremacy.

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Date

Friday, September 11, 2020 - 12:00pm

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Sometimes the jargon woven into our founding documents doesn't make much sense. So we simplified it for you. Here are the Bill of Rights, the first 10 amendments to the United States Constitution, in easy-to-digest language.

Amendment 1

Congress can't make any law that:

  • Favors one religion over another religion, or no religion at all, or opposes any religion;
  • Stops you from practicing your religion as you see fit;
  • Keeps you from saying whatever you want, even if you are criticizing the President of the United States;
  • Prevents newspapers, magazines, books, movies, radio, television or the internet from presenting any news, ideas, and opinions that they choose;
  • Stops you from meeting peacefully for a demonstration or protest to ask the government to change something.

Amendment 2

Congress can't stop people from having and carrying weapons.

Amendment 3

You don't have to let soldiers live in your house, except if there is a war, and even then Congress needs to pass a law and set the rules.

Amendment 4

Nobody can search your body, or your house, or your papers and things unless they can prove to a judge that they have a good reason for the search.

Amendment 5

Except during times of war or if you are in the military:

  • You can't be tried for any serious crime without a Grand Jury meeting first to decide whether there's enough evidence against you for a trial;
  • If at the end of a trial, the jury decides you are innocent, the government can't try you again for the same crime with another jury;
  • You  cannot be forced to admit you are guilty of a crime and if you choose not to, you don't have to say anything at your trial at all;
  • You can't be killed, or put in jail, or fined, unless you were convicted of a crime by a jury and all of the proper legal steps during your arrest and trial were followed; and
  • The government can't take your house or your farm or anything that is yours, unless the government pays for it at a fair price.

Amendment 6

If you are arrested and charged with a crime:

  • You have a right to have your trial soon and in public, so everyone knows what is happening;
  • The case has to be decided by a jury of ordinary people from where you are, if you wish;
  • You have the right to know what you are accused of doing wrong and to see and hear and cross-examine the people who are witnesses against you;
  • You have the right to a lawyer to help you. If you cannot afford to pay the lawyer, the government will.

Amendment 7

You also have the right to a jury when it is a civil case (a law case between two people rather than between you and the government).

Amendment 8

The government can't make you pay more than is reasonable in bail or in fines, and the government can't inflict cruel or unusual punishments (like torture) even if you are convicted of a crime.

Amendment 9

Just because these rights are listed in the Constitution doesn't mean that you don't have other rights, too.

Amendment 10

Anything that the Constitution doesn't say that Congress can do is left up to the states and to the people.

Date

Tuesday, February 9, 2021 - 3:15pm

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Sports have long been an arena where civil rights and civil liberties questions have taken center stage: Track and field star Tommie Smith raised his fist for racial justice on the 1968 Olympic podium. Tennis great Billie Jean King fought for equal pay for women. Olympic runner Caster Semana challenged intersex bigotry to be able to compete. And of course, NBA players organized a strike this week in protest of the killing by police of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wisconsin.

But one group of athletes has often kept quiet during social movements: college athletes. This is largely because the institutions they play for silence them. At a time when racial justice conversations have ignited across the country, At Liberty took a look at how universities suppress their athletes’ voices and the barriers to holding those universities accountable.

Joining us to talk about college athletes and free speech is Frank LoMonte, First Amendment lawyer and director of the Brechner Center for Freedom of Information at the University of Florida, and Toren Young, a former football player at the University of Iowa.

https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/878463793

Date

Friday, August 28, 2020 - 1:15pm

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