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    • Image courtesy of pride.com

      pride.com

      • The phrase has been used by LGBTQ activists, immigration activists, and most pertinently, black activists at intense junctions of racial tension. While its history stretches back decades, the chant has experienced a groundswell in the last few years as more and more people took to protesting police violence, racial inequality and other injustices.
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  2. Sep 19, 2017 · After violent protests in St. Louis, some of the city’s police officers were heard repeating a familiar, and unexpected, phrase.

  3. We are shifting power by discussing safety, transportation, and ticketing in our communities. Who gets to decide who belongs and who doesn’t? Learn more about our values

  4. Apr 22, 2022 · Featuring work by thirty-eight independent photojournalists, this exhibit captures ordinary New Yorkers as they rallied, rioted, marched, and demonstrated from 1980-2000.

  5. Whose Streets? Our Streets! (Tech Edition) 2020-21 “Smart City” Cautionary Trends & 10 Calls to Action to Protect and Promote Democracy . Rebecca Williams. Belfer Center for Science and International Afiairs Harvard Kennedy Schooliii. Acknowledgments.

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  6. Mar 17, 2017 · Today’s show: “Whose Streets? Our Streets!: New York City, 1980-2000” was on view at the Bronx Documentary Center in New York from January 14 to March 5—and continues to live online.

  7. A BIPOC group that reviews and revises laws and policies governing the use of streets in Seattle, WA, with a pro-equity, anti-racist framework. They recommend to cease police involvement in traffic enforcement and invest in communities of color.

  8. Jan 14, 2017 · New York’s streets were turbulent and often violent in the 1980s and 1990s, as residents responded to social changes in their city as well as U.S. involvement in Central America wars, the nuclear arms race and liberation movements around the world.

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