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FIRST KNOWN DEAF AFRICAN-AMERICAN WOMAN TO EARN A LAW DEGREE

FIRST KNOWN DEAF AFRICAN-AMERICAN WOMAN TO EARN A LAW DEGREE
FIRST KNOWN DEAF AFRICAN-AMERICAN WOMAN TO EARN A LAW DEGREE

CLAUDIA L. GORDON  (1972 - )

Claudia Gordon is Special Assistant to the Director of the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP) in the Department of Labor. Her responsibility: to ensure that contractors doing business with the Federal government don’t discriminate on the basis of color, gender, religion or nonbelief, age, race, ethnic background, national origin, disability, or veteran’s status, and so forth.

She personally experienced the worst sort of discrimination during her early years, but also had a strong foundation of love and support that enabled her to withstand it. She was born in rural Jamaica. Her mother, who had only an eighth-grade education, worked as a domestic servant and laundress to support her three children. She immigrated to the South Bronx so she could earn a better living, and planned to reunite with the children as soon as she could. They were left in the capable care of her eldest sister, Mildred Taylor, a schoolteacher.

When Claudia was 8, she suddenly developed severe pain in her middle ears—possibly otitis media. Mildred took her to a small clinic; there were no hospitals nearby, and, in the clinic, no doctor on duty. The nurse on duty couldn’t figure out what was wrong, only that Claudia was going deaf. Otitis media is treated with antibiotics for the infection and analgesics for the pain. She didn’t receive any treatment.

As she later told a reporter, “My life changed overnight.” Although she had been “the brightest and most outgoing kid in my class,” she was pulled out of school, lost her friends, stayed home, and became an object of ridicule.“I thought I was the only deaf person in the world.” In Jamaica, deaf and disabled persons are stigmatized. Gordon recalls that a deaf woman who lived in the area was called “dummy,” and that the children threw stones at her. Later, she recognized that “the life of this woman . . . almost became my own but for my mother’s triumph in successfully bringing me to America by the time I was 11 years old.”

Freer a frustrating start in public school, she was transferred to Lexington School for the Deaf, learned sign language, participated in sports, and became a top student—valedictorian of her junior-high and senior-high classes. By the time she reached her junior year in high school, she knew that she wanted to become a lawyer. She was strong enough to shrug off those who doubted that she could do it, or considered it an impossible goal.

She earned a degree in Political Science at Howard University, and studied disability-rights law and policy at American University’s Washington College of Law. When she graduated in 2000, she became the first known deaf African-American woman to earn a Juris Doctor (law degree).

She then won a Skadden Fellowship (which has been described as the “legal Peace Corps”) for 2000-2002, and worked as a staff attorney at the NAD Law and Advocacy Center and a consulting attorney with the National Council on Disability. Working with impoverished and minority deaf people, she became intrigued by the prospect of working in a Federal office. Passing legislation to safeguard the rights of disabled persons was one thing. Implementing these laws was a different challenge entirely. She wanted to have direct involvement in the enforcement of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the American with Disabilities Act of 1990, combating “the blatant discrimination that people with disabilities continue to face.”

Gordon has been actively involved with the National Black Deaf Advocates. She was Miss Black Deaf America in 1990, and NBDA Vice President from 2002 to 2005.

She participated in the Ralph Lauren Polo Jeans G.I.V.E. (“Get Involved, Volunteer, Exceed”) ad campaign promoting volunteerism, launched in 2003. She was featured on posters in malls across the country, including one opposite Macy’s on 34th Street in Manhattan, making an ILY sign, beaming, confident, and beautiful. The NBDA was a beneficiary of this campaign.

In 2004, she became Senior Policy Advisor for the Department of Homeland Security, Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties. She assisted in the implementation of the Individuals with Disabilities in Emergency Preparedness, monitoring how Federal agencies worked together to ensure that deaf and disabled persons were included in emergency-preparedness plans.

The Obama Administration appointed her to her current post at the OFCCP. Even though “it’s not as well-known as its sister agencies like the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice, OFCCP has powerful investigative and regulatory authorities for protecting workers, promoting diversity, and enforcing the law.” She enjoys the challenges of working with OFCCP Director Patricia Shiu, her colleagues, and a nationwide staff of “nearly 750 dedicated public servants.” She doesn’t have much of a personal life, but does credit the love and support she’s received from her family.

“I am motivated by knowing that although progress is being made towards inclusion and access, there is still a great deal more work to be done.”

February 9, 2022 Independence Now

Official Federal Photograph of Claudia Gordon

Information for this post was collected by Independence Now Board Member, Sandra Sermons, and originally appeared on www.DeafPeople.com, a site that “celebrates the achievements of deaf people in history, and those who are still active in their careers.” Each month, they highlight a contemporary newsmaker.

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JUST WHO IS BEHIND MOMS FOR LIBERTY?

JUST WHO IS BEHIND MOMS FOR LIBERTY?
JUST WHO IS  BEHIND MOMS FOR  LIBERTY?

Maurice T. Cunningham suggests we try a four-part test of the group.

It's worth pondering who and what is really behind some school activist groups that claim to be grassroots.  [LLOYD FOX | Baltimore Sun ]

Moms for Liberty held its national summit in Tampa, and that’s quite an achievement for a grassroots group started just last year by two liberty-loving moms. But since even the “two moms” claim falls apart, it’s worth asking what Moms for Liberty really is.

I pay attention when a new “parents” or “moms” group bursts upon the education/politics scene. I exposed the millions in dark money behind Families for Excellent Schools during a 2016 charter schools ballot question campaign in Massachusetts. New groups like Moms for Liberty are just as transparently Astroturf — a group that claims to be grassroots but is actually artificial turf.

One of the best tools for analyzing phony education groups is a four-part test by Professor Daniel Katz. Let’s see how Moms for Liberty does.

Growth at a pace that only a corporation’s monetary resources could manage. Moms for Liberty incorporated as an Internal Revenue Code 501(c)(4) organization, a form that lends itself to dark money political shenanigans. It exploded on the scene with its leaders being guests on Fox News and breaking into the Washington Post. It has a well-developed website and extensive social media reach. Moms for Liberty has formed three federal and one state political action committees, one of which is a SuperPAC able to accept unlimited donations. Its careers page is seeking state coordinators to work with the chapter chair coordinator, and a communications officer. Here’s something I’ve noticed following Moms for Liberty and similar organizations: the “comms moms” — many of these groups’ leaders have backgrounds in marketing and communications. “At the top, (Moms for Liberty) … are political strategists, risk managers and communications professionals — high-powered women with connections to top state and national Republicans,” reports the Florida Phoenix. Moms for Liberty’s press is being handled by Calvary Strategies whose CEO is a former campaign manager and chief of staff to Sen. (then-Gov.) Rick Scott.

Since its inception Moms for Liberty has managed a fund raiser with former Fox News celebrity Megyn Kelly (top ticket $20,000), co-hosted The American Dream Conference featuring a keynote from former Trump Cabinet secretary Ben Carson, and the national summit (presenting sponsorships for $50,000 are sold out, featuring Gov. Ron DeSantis, Carson, Sen. Rick Scott and former Trump Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos.

Who is funding the group and for how much? Moms for Liberty’s leaders claim to get by on t-shirt sales. They’ve barely even heard of the Koch brothers! Yet perhaps they’ve heard of the Council for National Policy. Two of Moms for Liberty’s National Summit sponsors, the Leadership Institute and Heritage Foundation are critical members of the Council for National Policy, a secretive network of right wing billionaires and Christian fundamentalist leaders that underwrites and coordinates right wing politics.

Who is really running the operation? The two “founders” are former school committee member Tina Descovich, a communications and marketing professional and Tiffany Justice, also a former school committee member. But there was a third founder, Bridget Ziegler. She is still a school committee member and her husband, Christian Ziegler, is vice chairman of the Florida Republican Party and the owner of a political marketing firm. He boasts that Moms for Liberty will provide crucial ground support for DeSantis’ re-election.

Then there’s the odd coincidence of so many grassroots parents organizations arising at the same time with similar missions. Parents Defending Education is Koch-connected. The Koch-funded American Legislative Exchange Council claims credit for the havoc wreaked by anti-Critical Race Theory legislation. The Council for National Policy’s Leadership Institute commenced its own program to take over school boards. The Council for National Policy-connected Turning Point USA initiated a School Board Watch List for reporting “woke” school boards.

Do its supposed grassroots members have even a clue what the organization is about? Upstart operations like Moms for Liberty, according to a column in Forbes, “are operated by professional communications folks and seasoned political operatives, but that doesn’t mean they haven’t activated and harnessed actual anger and upset among people on the ground.” It also doesn’t mean those people understand that what they think is grassroots is actually manipulation from secretive puppeteers above.

Moms for Liberty could put such questions to rest by revealing its true financiers. But that would lead to a lot of uncomfortable inquiries, questions perhaps even the comms moms can’t handle.

Maurice T. Cunningham retired in 2021 as associate professor of political science at the University of Massachusetts at Boston. He is the author of “Dark Money and the Politics of School Privatization.”

Published by the Tampa Bay Times July 9, 2022

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A RADICAL and BASELESS THEORY THAT COULD UPEND OUR ELECTIONS

A RADICAL and BASELESS THEORY THAT COULD UPEND OUR ELECTIONS
A RADICAL and BASELESS THEORY THAT COULD UPEND OUR ELECTIONS

Before adjourning its' most recent session the Supreme Court announced it would hear Moore v. Harper in the fall.  If you were aware of this, it should have struck terror in your heart.  Terror for what their possible ruling in this case could do to our democracy.  The Brennan Center for Justice released the following call for action: to learn how dangerous this could be and then share this information with everyone you know and everywhere you possibly can.

Sound far-fetched? It’s not. In fact, it’s precisely the argument the Supreme Court shockingly agreed to take up this fall in Moore v. Harper, a case that will consider a dangerous, fringe doctrine called the “independent state legislature theory.”

So what is this so-called “theory”? In short, it’s an antidemocratic tool for minority rule — a scheme to defy critical checks and balances so that governors, state judges, and even state constitutions would be powerless to intervene. It asserts that state legislatures — and state legislatures alone — have the power to regulate federal elections and that their actions can’t be overruled by state courts. If the Supreme Court adopts this transparently baseless notion (and at least four sitting Supreme Court justices are open to the “theory”), it would be the most radical power grab in recent history.

Independent state legislature theory would allow legislators to entrench their party’s power in Congress through gerrymandered maps and restrictive voting laws. It’s a tool that could allow one party to undermine fair representation and voting access — especially in communities of color that are disproportionately targeted by gerrymanders and vote suppression. In its most extreme form, it could even allow rogue state legislatures to overturn federal elections. Think of it as election denial dressed up in legal garb.

Our democracy — our tradition of free and fair elections — is on the brink. But the Brennan Center is going all in to fight back. We have gathered the legal and historical scholarship that thoroughly discredits independent state legislature theory. We’re using that work to expose this “theory” for the reckless, radical scheme that it really is — sounding the alarm in the media, with allies, and with advocates like you. As someone who cares about our democracy, we need your help getting the word out about this little-noticed case.

Can you help us shine a light on this dangerous “theory”? Share the facts on independent state legislature theory with your family, friends, and elected officials >>

Consider the moment we’re in: In the wake of Trump’s Big Lie of a “stolen” election, voters across the country have been championing pro-democracy reforms with newfound resolve. Some are even pushing to amend their state constitutions to demand fair maps and taking their lawmakers to court to ensure that all citizens have equal access to the ballot. This dubious “theory” could erase these reforms and give state legislators virtually unfettered power to control federal election processes — and their outcomes.

Wrongly decided, this case would strike at the heart of our democracy and prevent voters from electing the leaders of their choice. Unchecked state legislatures could have the near-absolute power to suppress your vote. Voting maps could be drawn unconstitutionally to dilute the power of voters of color. Election administration could devolve into chaos.

J. Michael Luttig, a distinguished conservative jurist, put the threat of independent state legislature theory in very clear terms: “Trump and the Republicans can only be stopped from stealing the 2024 election at this point if the Supreme Court rejects the independent state legislature doctrine.”

Can you help us get the facts out about this dangerous case? Spread the word: help us expose how harmful and utterly meritless this case is. The Supreme Court is already facing a legitimacy crisis after this term’s extraordinary rulings on abortion and guns. But it can still acknowledge this “theory” for what it is — a naked power grab — and make the right decision in Moore v. Harper.

Thank you for taking action,
The Brennan Center for Justice

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A LITANY OF “FIRSTS” FOR THIS REMARKABLE WOMAN

A LITANY OF “FIRSTS” FOR THIS REMARKABLE WOMAN
A LITANY OF “FIRSTS” FOR THIS REMARKABLE WOMAN

SENATOR TAMMY DUCKWORTH  (1968 - )

Serving as the junior U.S. Senator from Illinois since 2017, Tammy Duckworth has made a name for herself with a number of firsts: She was the first female helicopter pilot to lead a combat mission and the first female double amputee of the Iraq war.  The first Thai-American woman and the first woman with a disability elected to Congress, she was also the first U.S. Senator to give birth while in office.  She is currently running for reelection.

Lada Tammy Duckworth was born in Bangkok, Thailand, March 12, 1968, the daughter of Franklin Duckworth and Lamai Sompornpairin.   Although born outside the United States, Duckworth is a natural-born citizen because her father was an American citizen.  Her father, who died in 2005, was a veteran of the U.S. Army and U.S. Marine Corps who traced his family's American roots to the American Revolutionary War.   Her mother is Thai Chinese and originally from Chiang Mai. Because her father worked with the United Nations and international companies in refugee, housing, and development programs, the family moved around Southeast Asia.  As a result Duckworth became fluent in Thai and Indonesian, in addition to English.

Duckworth attended Singapore American School, the International School Bangkok, and the Jakarta International School.  When Duckworth was 16, the family moved to Honolulu, Hawaii, where she attended Honolulu's McKinley High School, and participated in track and field, graduating in 1985.  She was a Girl Scout, and earned her First Class, now called the Gold Award.

In 1989 she graduated from the University of Hawaii at Manoa with a Bachelor of Arts in political science.  In 1992, she received a Master of Arts in international affairs from George Washington University's Elliott School of International Affairs. She began a PhD program at Northern Illinois University, which was interrupted by her war service   She completed a PhD in human services at Capella University in March 2015

Duckworth joined the Army Reserve Officers' Training Corps  in 1990 as a graduate student at George Washington University.   She became a commissioned officer in the United States Army Reserve in 1992 and chose to fly helicopters because it was one of the few combat jobs open to women at that time.   As a member of the Army Reserve, she went to flight school, later transferring to the Army National Guard and in 1996 entering the Illinois Army National Guard Duckworth also worked as a staff supervisor at Rotary International headquarters in Evanston, Illinois and was the coordinator of the Center for Nursing Research at Northern Illinois University.

She was deployed to Iraq in 2004.  She lost her right leg near the hip and her left leg below the knee from injuries sustained on November 12, 2004, when the UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter she was co-piloting was hit by a rocket-propelled grenade fired by Iraqi insurgents.  The explosion severely broke her right arm and tore tissue from it, necessitating major surgery to repair it.

Duckworth received a Purple Heart on December 3 and was promoted to Major on December 21 at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center, where she was presented with an Air Medal and Army Commendation Medal.  She retired from the Illinois Army National Guard in October 2014 as a lieutenant colonel.

On November 21, 2006, several weeks after losing her first congressional campaign, Duckworth was appointed director of the Illinois Department of Veterans Affairs by Governor Rod Blagojevich. She served in that position until February 8, 2009. While director, she was credited with starting a program to help veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and veterans with brain injuries.

On February 3, 2009, President Barack Obama nominated Duckworth to be the Assistant Secretary of Public and Intergovernmental Affairs for the United States Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) and the United States Senate confirmed her for the position on April 22.   As Assistant Secretary, she coordinated a joint initiative with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to help end Veteran homelessness, worked to address the unique challenges faced by female as well as Native American Veterans and created the Office of Online Communications to improve the VA's accessibility, especially among young Veterans.   Duckworth resigned her position in June 2011 in order to launch her campaign for the U.S. House of Representatives in Illinois's 8th congressional district.

Duckworth was elected to the U.S. Senate in 2016 after representing Illinois’s Eighth Congressional District in the U.S. House of Representatives for two terms.

Duckworth has been married to Bryan Bowlsbey since 1993 They met during Duckworth's participation in the Reserve Officers' Training Corps and later served together in the Illinois Army National Guard. Bowlsbey, a Signal Corps officer, is also a veteran of the Iraq War and is now retired from the armed forces.  Senator Duckworth and her husband are the proud parents of two daughters, Abigail and Maile.

 

Editors Note:  REELECT SENATOR TAMMY DUCKWORTH

 

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JULY IS DISABILITY PRIDE MONTH

JULY IS DISABILITY PRIDE MONTH
JULY  IS  DISABILITY  PRIDE  MONTH

AmeriDisability describes Disability Pride as "accepting and honoring each person's uniqueness and seeing it as a natural and beautiful part of human diversity" and connects it to the larger movement for disability justice.

The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) was passed on July 26, 1990, to prohibit discrimination against people with disabilities. Following this legislation, Boston held the first Disability Pride Day event in July 1990. Since then, Disability Pride events have been celebrated in this month  in cities around the country.  The number of cities celebrating Disability Pride continues to grow as Disability Pride continues to evolve.

This is all due to the hard work of disabled activists who have fought for equal representation and equity.  But a great deal of work remains to be done to ensure the needs of the disability community are met equitably.

Disability Pride Month is not yet a nationally recognized holiday, but in honor of the 25th anniversary of the ADA, New York Mayor Bill de Blasio declared July Disability Pride Month in 2015.  Since then this month has become an important time to honor the diversity and uniqueness of each person in the disability community and celebrate people who have disabilities. 

With more than 160 million people living with chronic diseases and disabilities in the U.S., the National Health Council (NHC) provides a unified voice for people with chronic diseases and disabilities by advocating for increased access to quality, high-value, sustainable, equitable, and affordable health care for all.  There are innumerable non-profit organizations dedicated to addressing many other injustices faced by the disability community.  A number of them are listed at  http://www.bazelon.org/resource-library/disability-rights-organizations/

Having a better understanding of the term “ableism” can be a first step in helping you be an advocate for the disability community.

ABLEISM

Ableism is any form of discrimination in favor of non-disabled people. It comes in many different forms that range from subtly offensive language to outright prejudice. Some lesser-known examples of ableism include sayings such as “That’s so lame,” or “My suggestion fell on deaf ears.” Using a class of disability as an idiom or to illustrate a point can offend and alienate disabled people.

Ableism can also come from well-intended actions. It’s important that disabilities be acknowledged, without unduly affecting the expectations of the disabled individual. Ignoring a disability or pretending it doesn’t exist is a form of ableism. The language we use and the way we acknowledge or fail to acknowledge disabilities are important.  Let Disability Pride Month serve as a chance to highlight ableism and how it plays into our own unconscious biases.  

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