*[Enwl-eng] Earth Island Journal: United, We Rise
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Sun Jun 15 01:57:42 MSK 2025
Many strands connect the push for environmental rights and immigrant rights.
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NEWSLETTER | JUNE 13, 2025
United, We Rise
This past week, my attention has been glued
to what’s unfolding in Los Angeles, where Trump has called in the National
Guard and the Marines to suppress overwhelmingly peaceful protests against
federal raids on immigrant communities.
I know I’m not alone in this. These feel
like unprecedented times. Like so many of us, I feel gutted about what the
raids mean for immigrant families, and what this federal aggression means
for our democracy. I also find myself pondering what the federal response
means for other rights-based movements, including for the environmental
movement.
The strands that connect the push for
immigrant rights and environmental rights are many. The environmental
justice movement, for example, has early roots in the fight for farmworkers
rights, which united the causes of worker and immigrant justice and drew
early attention the health impacts of pesticide exposure. Immigrant
communities in the United States have long been the first in line to be
exposed to toxic air and water, and today find themselves on the frontlines
of the climate crisis as well. They are also on the frontlines of disaster
recovery efforts, including in Los Angeles, where they comprise a large
share of the workforce cleaning up after the recent wildfires.
The federal escalation of force in Los
Angeles is meant to stymie resistance, whether over immigration policies,
environmental rollbacks, or any other number of issues. But so far it hasn’t
managed to silence us. Rather, it is having the opposite effect, bringing us
together in our conviction to defend the rights of people and the places we
care about, spurring us to action. Case in point — there are at least 1,800
“No Kings” protests planned across the country this weekend. In other words,
as social movement expert Dana Fisher said in a recent conversation with the
Journal, we might find that a “broader sense of collective risk … builds
power and builds capacity.” (See below)
I’d like to think that’s the direction we’re
headed.
Zoe Loftus-Farren
Managing Editor, Earth Island Journal
Photo by Mobilus In Mobili/Flickr. The
Interior Department is considering shrinking several national monuments,
including Bears Ears, pictured.
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From: Editors, Earth Island Journal <editor at earthisland.org>
Date: сб, 14 июн. 2025 г., 2:45
Subject: United, We Rise
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