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7 Days of Action in DC
Week of Democracy in Action
250 years later, we are
Declaring Independence from Corporate Rule
Let us know your coming- Register Below

Join Move to Amend from June 28 through July 4, with organizers from across the country will gather in the nation's capital for Seven Days in D.C. — a weeklong series of civic engagement activities, public demonstrations, and cultural events designed to encourage direct participation in the democratic process during the lead-up to Independence Day.
The event will bring together activists, organizers, artists, comedians, musicians, and citizens for a coordinated week of lobbying, voter outreach, protest education, conversations with congressional candidates, and nightly performances across Washington.
What We're Doing
Seven Days. One Mission.
Congressional Lobbying with FLARECongressional lobbying for the #WethePeopleAmendment coordinated through FLARE — For Liberation And Resistance Everywhere.
Voter OutreachOn-the-ground voter outreach efforts across Washington throughout the week.
Protest EducationWorkshops focused on organizing strategy, protest planning, and civic action — building skills that last beyond the week.
Cultural ProgrammingNightly performances featuring comedy, live music, and guest speakers at venues across the city — free and ticketed.
Public DemonstrationsSustained visibility actions throughout the city, creating a civic presence during one of Washington's most visible weeks.
Community BuildingConversations with congressional candidates and fellow organizers — strengthening the networks that make change possible.
The Week
Day by Day
Sunday, June 28 — ArrivalOrganizers from across the country arrive in Washington. Opening gatherings for the week ahead.
Monday – Thursday, June 29 – July 2 — Civic Action DaysStructured civic engagement each day: congressional office meetings coordinated by FLARE, voter outreach, organizing workshops, and protest strategy sessions. Evenings feature cultural programming — comedy, music, and speakers — at venues across the city.
Friday, July 3 — ConvergenceThe week builds toward larger public gatherings and performances as more visitors arrive in Washington for the holiday weekend.
Saturday, July 4 — Independence DayJoin Move to Amend to Declare Independence from Corporate Rule as organizers shift focus to maintaining a sustained civic presence throughout the city — encouraging public participation and reflection during Independence Day celebrations.
"This is about showing up. Not just watching politics from a distance, but participating in it — meeting representatives, registering voters, learning how organizing works, and being part of a larger civic community."
rsvpWHENJune 28, 2026 at 6:00pm - July 05, 2026 at 6:00pm
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This Mother’s Day: Remember Who Really Hijacked Our Power
Mother’s Day was never meant to be about brunch reservations, flower markups, or a pastel‑washed corporate marketing bonanza cashing in on sentimentality.
It was born from civil resistance.
From women organizing for public health in Appalachian coal towns. From mothers demanding peace in the aftermath of war. From abolitionists insisting that human dignity mattered more than profit. From women who understood that care work is political work.

And yet, here we are in 2026: a nation expected to spend tens of billions celebrating “Mother’s Day” while the same corporate forces profiting from the holiday bankroll war, poison communities, strip healthcare, exploit workers, and attack bodily autonomy.
That’s not a coincidence.
It’s corporate rule.
Today marks not only Mother’s Day, but also another anniversary, one that explains how corporations got the power to twist everything, even Mother’s Day itself, into a profit center: May 10, 1886, the day the Supreme Court handed down Santa Clara v. Southern Pacific Railroad, the ruling that birthed the legal fiction of corporate personhood.
Not in the opinion, mind you. In the headnotes. Marginalia written by a court reporter, not the Court, declared that corporations were entitled to 14th Amendment “equal protection” rights, an amendment written to defend formerly enslaved people. Justice Hugo Black laid it bare: for 50 years after its passage, fewer than 0.5% of 14th‑Amendment cases protected Black Americans, while more than 50% protected corporations.
Human beings fought for rights.
Corporations hijacked them.That theft echoes everywhere today.
That one maneuver: treating property as a person, unleashed every social justice issue we hold dear:
• weapons manufacturers fueling endless war
• fossil fuel giants torching the planet
• insurance and pharmaceutical corporations smothering Medicare for All
• corporate “speech” overriding public safety
• corporate “privacy” blocking inspections of dangerous facilities
• corporate “takings rights” used to attack environmental and labor protectionsAnd politicians drowning in corporate money unleashed through decisions like Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission tell us this is simply how democracy works.
And all of it rests on a foundation built 140 years ago, in a tax case distorted into constitutional dogma.
It isn’t democracy.
It’s legalized corporate supremacy.
The women who launched Mother’s Day would recognize it immediately.
Ann Jarvis organized mothers to improve sanitation and public health because corporations and political elites were failing working families.
Julia Ward Howe issued a Mother’s Day Proclamation calling on women to rise up against war, injustice, and inequality.
And Anna Jarvis — the woman who fought to establish the official holiday — spent her later years furious that corporations had transformed it into a distorted commercial racket. She was even arrested protesting profiteers exploiting Mother’s Day for money.
She called them:
“charlatans, bandits, pirates, racketeers, kidnappers and other termites.”She was right.
Today, corporations market “empowerment” while funding politicians who control women’s bodies.
They sell “self-care” while opposing universal healthcare.
They celebrate mothers in ad campaigns while denying workers paid leave and living wages.Move to Amend refuses to accept this contradiction.
Move to Amend was founded by women who understood that until we overturn this constitutional fraud, every other path to justice is uphill. Corporate rights always come at the expense of human rights, especially for women who bear the brunt of economic inequality, environmental destruction, and the erosion of democracy.
As feminists, organizers, mothers, daughters, caregivers, and human beings, we cannot allow corporate “persons” to keep dictating the terms of our lives, our bodies, our healthcare, our wages, our communities, our climate.
Because when corporations gain constitutional power, real people lose power.
Women lose bodily autonomy.
Workers lose protections.
Communities lose clean water.
Families lose education and housing security.
Democracy loses meaning.The We the People Amendment exists because reforms alone cannot fix a system built on the lie that corporations are people and money is speech.
Slavery was the legal fiction that human beings could be property.
Corporate personhood is the legal fiction that property can be a person.Both are lies.
This Mother’s Day, we honor the fierce foremothers who refused to accept war, disease, or injustice as inevitable. We honor their strength “the secret in our culture,” as Laura Stavoe Harm wrote, “is not that birth is painful. It’s that women are strong.”

So let’s channel that strength.The We the People Amendment (HJR 54) is the only amendment that fully abolishes corporate constitutional rights. We need more co‑sponsors. We need more pressure. We need more people refusing to accept the legal fiction that property is a person.
Honor the women who organized.
Who resisted.
Who demanded peace.
Who challenged concentrated power.
Who refused to accept exploitation as inevitable.And then ask yourself:
What would happen if we finally ended constitutional rights for corporations?
What would become possible if democracy belonged to people instead of concentrated wealth?The answer is why we organize.
Arise, women of this day.
Arise, everyone who still believes democracy should belong to human beings.The best way to honor mothers is to organize for the future our children deserve.
In love and solidarity,
The Move to Amend National Team-
P.S. If you haven't yet, consider supporting the only campaign organizing against corporate personhood and money equaling speech by becoming a monthly donor! We are grassroots powered and truly cannot do this work without supporters like you. we don't except corporate, government or billionaire dollars, so every donation - no matter the size - makes a real difference!

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Join us for a Week of Democracy in Action
Move to Amend, with organizers from across the country, will gather in the nation's capital for Seven Days in D.C. - a weeklong series of civic engagement activities, public demonstrations, and cultural events designed to encourage direct participation in the democratic process during the lead-up to a Declaration of Independence Day.
What: This is about showing up. Not just watching politics from a distance, but participating in it - meeting representatives, registering voters, learning how organizing works, and being part of a growing movement.
When: June 28th- July4th
Where: Washington DC
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This Vote Could Gut Public Schools: Kids Over Corporations
Friends,
I’m writing this not just as someone who works for a more democratic and just America, but as a kid who grew up in public schools, the place where I learned how to question power, and how to find and believe my voice mattered. Much of the ideals of what I know about democracy came from classrooms funded by all of us, accountable to all of us, and open to every child who walked through the door.
Today, those very foundations are under attack.

This has not happened in a vacuum; it's by design.
Read more
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Jennie Spanos published It’s Time for Courage: May Day Noncooperation Begins Now in Announcements 2026-04-24 07:49:06 -0700
It’s Time for Courage: May Day Noncooperation Begins Now
This May Day, we face a crossroads. The power we built together through organizing, solidarity, and stubborn love for democracy is being tested like never before. For years, we’ve organized, educated, and grown - hundreds of thousands of Move to Amend supporters committed to ending corporate rule and to claim real democracy. But we have yet to exercise that power in full.
That changes now.

Click here: MAY DAY STRONG!
Just this month, the Trump administration announced it will pay nearly $1 billion of your tax dollars to French oil giant TotalEnergies - not to build clean energy, but to stop offshore wind projects off our coasts. They’re pulling that money from an account not even authorized for this use, a backroom raid on the public purse that benefits fossil fuel billionaires while our communities choke on pollution and struggle to pay rising bills
At the same time, the justice Department is going after our allies at the Southern Poverty Law Center, essentially, defending groups like the Ku Klux Klan and other white supremacist hate groups, while ICE continues its terror campaigns in immigrant neighborhoods - breaking up families, detaining workers, and suppressing dissent with an iron hand. Authoritarian power is consolidating through economic coercion and state violence.
But people power has always been the antidote to tyranny. When ordinary people stood together and refused to cooperate with injustice, they’ve shook empires.
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Jennie Spanos published This May Day, Let’s Choose Workers Over Billionaires and Corporate Rule in Announcements 2026-04-17 14:04:04 -0700
This May Day, Let’s Choose Workers Over Billionaires and Corporate Rule
Everywhere we look, the corporate billionaire class is tightening its grip — on our economy, on our politics, and even on our imaginations. Prices soar while wages stagnate. Corporations dodge taxes while our communities fight for schools, housing, and healthcare.
And through it all, the same few voices call the shots - because the system was built for them.
That’s why this May 1, 2026, Move to Amend is joining people across the country in the Workers Over Billionaires day of action organized by May Day Strong. Together with hundreds of labor unions, community groups, and national networks, we’re taking a stand for a simple but urgent truth: a democracy that serves the many cannot coexist with an economy rigged for the few.
Democracy Is on the Line - and So Are Our Lives
Every demand for democracy is also a struggle for economic justice. When corporations have constitutional rights and money is treated as speech, billionaires can buy political access and block the policies that working people need to survive, from living wages to housing to healthcare.
Corporate power isn’t an accident of capitalism; it’s a constitutional arrangement. The courts have granted “personhood” or "inalienable rights" to entities that were never alive, never voted, and never bled. Those same rights have been used to crush unions, poison communities, and silence dissent.
This May Day, we are taking those struggles for justice to the streets

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Honoring Women’s Month: Equality, Democracy, and the Power of “We the People”
March is Women’s Month — a time to celebrate the people who’ve worked for generations to bring us closer to true equality. So first, a huge shout-out to our friends and allies with the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) Coalition, who are still leading the way to making equal rights a real part of our Constitution.
Here’s something that might surprise you: women still don’t have guaranteed equal rights under the Constitution. And you’re not alone if that’s news — 76% of people in the U.S. think we already do, and 97% agree we should.
The ERA (the 28th Amendment) was first approved by Congress in 1972 and needed 38 states to ratify it. It took longer than expected, but thanks to Nevada (2017), Illinois (2018), and Virginia (2020), that 38-state milestone has finally been reached. Now, we just need Congress to stop dragging their feet and remove an outdated deadline so equality can officially become the law of the land.
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Jennie Spanos published Support the Election Integrity Initiative (aka the Montana Plan) in Promoting Pro-Democratic/Anti-Corporate Power Statutory Reforms 2026-03-09 14:24:35 -0700
Add your name now to demand real election integrity: Support the Election Integrity Initiative (aka the Montana Plan)
Corporate dark money is drowning out the voices of everyday people.
The Election Integrity Initiative (AKA the Montana Plan) is a citizen‑driven push to stop it. By rewriting corporate charters and stripping corporations of the state‑granted power to spend in our elections, this measure cuts off corporate political spending at the source. Without that power, corporations can’t hide behind the Citizens United decision to buy influence.
This Initiative won’t solve every problem, and it doesn’t touch individual donation - but it delivers an immediate, powerful blow to corporate political dominance. It also builds the momentum we need to win a constitutional amendment that finally ends corporate constitutional rights and the idea that money equals speech.
Sign to show your support for a more transparent, democratic election and to help pave the way toward the broader We the People Amendment, before another election is drowned in dark money.
By signing, you agree that your contact information may be shared with our Election Integrity Initiative partners in your state.
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No Kings 3
On March 28, millions across the country will rise in nonviolent action, demonstration, and protest for the next No Kings Day — a nationwide declaration that we reject authoritarianism, reject oligarchy, and reject a system that concentrates power in the hands of the few.
This is more than a protest - it’s a historic moment to stand up against the legal and corporate foundations of power that have enabled state terror, unchecked federal force, and an oligarchical regime that protects corporations over communities.
We honor the long history of collective action in this country - from the original Declaration of Independence’s promise of self-government to every movement that has ever demanded equity, dignity, and freedom. And now it’s our turn once more: to name the root of power, to dismantle the laws and systems that let corporate rule justify violence, and to build something better from the ground up.
Click here Organize or join an event near you
The flagship action will gather at the Minnesota State Capitol in St. Paul — a powerful site of resistance where Minnesotans continue to demand justice after federal agents killed Renee Good and Alex Pretti. Across the country, communities will mobilize in solidarity.
But this moment is about more than protest. It is about vision.
Read more
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NO King #3
Two hundred and fifty years ago, people had the courage to say enough.
They didn’t politely ask an empire for reform. They didn’t wait for permission. They took direct action against concentrated corporate power and declared independence from a system that extracted wealth while denying self-government. The Boston Tea Party wasn’t just rebellion... it was resistance to corporate rule.
Today, we are living under a new empire.
Our unalienable rights are being stripped away in real time - not by monarchs or wannabe kings, but by corporations empowered through courts. Through judicial fiat, corporations have been granted constitutional rights they were never meant to have. These fabricated rights now serve as armor - shielding corporations from accountability while allowing them to dominate elections, write policy, poison communities, and extract wealth with impunity.
Meanwhile, We the People are told to accept shrinking freedoms.
Voting rights are under attack. Political equality is a myth when money determines whose voices are heard. The promise of democracy is hollow when artificial entities wield more power than living, breathing human beings.
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Jennie Spanos published Roe, Then and Now: Join Us to Turn Grief into Collective Action in Announcements 2026-01-22 20:09:55 -0800
Roe, Then and Now: Join Us to Turn Grief into Collective Action
Each January, we are asked to remember Roe v. Wade not only as a Supreme Court decision, but as a hard-won recognition of women’s sovereignty over their own bodies — a recognition rooted in decades of organizing, risk, and sacrifice by those who refused to accept control by the state, by churches, or by economic elites.
Today, that promise has been systematically dismantled.
Across the country, we are witnessing coordinated attacks on bodily autonomy, reproductive freedom, access to health care, and the very idea that people — not corporations, politicians, or courts — should have the final say over their own lives. These attacks do not happen in isolation. They are fueled by big-money political systems that elevate corporate interests and ideological power over human rights and community well-being.
At Move to Amend, we understand that struggles for reproductive justice, racial justice, environmental justice, worker rights, and real democracy are deeply connected. They all ask the same fundamental question:
Who decides — the people, or concentrated wealth and power?
But we also know that living in this constant state of political crisis takes a real toll. Many of us feel overwhelmed, exhausted, angry, or discouraged — even as we remain committed to justice.
That’s why we’re inviting you to join us for a new 6-part learning and support series:
The Way Through: Building Resilient, Sustainable Activists
A 6-part series from Move to Amend’s Movement Education Program (MEP)
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Jennie Spanos published David Orr on The Interrelated Threats of Climate Change & Democracy in Announcements 2025-09-02 21:23:17 -0700
David Orr on The Interrelated Threats of Climate Change & Democracy

Speaker -- David Orr
Thursday, September 11, 5pm PT, 6pm MT, 7pm CT, 8pm ET
The lack of authentically democracy in the U.S. has permitted corporate entities to pursue their own economic and political interests virtually unchecked. This includes plundering the earth and poisoning land, water and air - resulting in the climate crises. What inadequate regulations existed before the Trump regime are now being systemically eliminated.
The dual crises of democracy and climate change are not separate, but are one interrelated threat to the human future.
That’s the theme of Democracy in a Hotter Time, edited by David Orr, which calls for reforming democratic institutions as a prerequisite for avoiding climate chaos and adapting governance to how Earth works as a physical system.
To survive in the “long emergency” ahead, we must reform and strengthen democratic institutions, making them assets rather than liabilities. The collection of essays proposes a new political order that will not only help humanity survive but also enable us to thrive in the transition to a post–fossil fuel world.
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When women stop. The world stops!
On August 18, 1920, after 75 years of relentless struggle, the 19th Amendment was finally ratified. It boldly declared:
“The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or any State on account of sex.”
It was a watershed moment — the fruit of organizing, sacrifice, and persistence across generations. But history teaches us: rights won are never rights guaranteed.
Today, more than a century later, women are still demanding to be fully recognized as equals under the law. The Equal Rights Amendment (ERA)—first introduced in 1923— is currently in a unique legal position. Although it has been ratified by three-fourths of U.S. states, it has not yet been formally codified in the Constitution as the 28th Amendment, leaving women vulnerable to rollbacks on hard-won rights.
Even more disgusting, corporations have been granted sweeping constitutional rights—the rights of “persons” under the law. This distortion of democracy is why corporations can pour unlimited money into our elections, poison our communities, and put profits over people without accountability.

The contradiction is stark:
- Women fought 75 years for the vote.
- We’ve struggled for over 100 years for constitutional equality.
- Corporations have amassed more rights than people.
That’s why we’re building a movement for the We the People Amendment (currently HJR54) — to affirm that only human beings have constitutional rights and that money is not free speech. Our movement is about creating a genuine democracy free from corporate rule and finishing the work that generations before us began.
And we know this truth: change has always come from people coming together — refusing to be silent, refusing to be divided, and refusing to accept injustice as normal.
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Honoring Juneteenth: Reclaiming Justice, Reclaiming Democracy
On this Juneteenth, we pause to honor the end of slavery in the United States—a defining milestone in our collective pursuit of justice, liberation, and true democracy. But while Juneteenth marks freedom delayed, it also reminds us: the struggle for equality is not over.
At Move to Amend, we believe Juneteenth is not just a day of remembrance—it is a call to action.

Juneteenth symbolizes the long fight to end systemic oppression. At its heart, it echoes the very mission of our movement: to dismantle the structures that continue to uphold inequality, to ensure that democracy serves all people—not just the wealthy and powerful.
As you may know, Move to Amend is a national grassroots coalition committed to passing the We the People Amendment (H.J.Res.54) — an amendment to the U.S. Constitution that would:
- End corporate personhood, because corporations are not people and should not enjoy the same rights as living, breathing human beings.
- Make clear that money is not speech, so political power can no longer be bought and sold to the highest bidder.
Here’s why this is so relevant today:
The 14th Amendment, ratified in 1868, granted citizenship to all persons born or naturalized in the United States, including formerly enslaved people, and prohibited states from infringing upon the fundamental rights of citizens. The Amendment has been hijacked, exploited by corporations to gain rights and power never intended for them. Supreme Court cases in the 1880's set the stage for this betrayal of justice—using the language of equality to serve corporate interests.
This perversion of justice is a direct affront to the spirit of Juneteenth.
We believe reclaiming the 14th Amendment is essential to fulfilling its original promise—and to confronting the economic and political systems that continue to harm Black, Brown, Indigenous, and working-class communities. Corporate influence fuels policies that perpetuate poverty, environmental destruction, mass incarceration, and voter suppression.
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NO KING'S DAY
This is bigger than political disagreement. They’ve defied our courts, deported American citizens, disappeared people off the streets, and slashed our services—all while orchestrating a massive giveaway to their corporate allies. Enough is enough. For anyone who thinks it's gone too far, this moment is for you.

NO KINGS is a National Day of Action and mass mobilization in response to the increasing authoritarian excesses and corruption of the Trump regime. We’ve watched as they’ve cracked down on free speech (of people, not corporations), detained people for their political positions, threatened to deport American citizens, and defied the courts. They’ve done this all while continuing to serve and enrich their billionaire and corporate allies. They think they rule—but we are bigger than even their worst aspirations.
- Donald Trump is planning a military parade in Washington, D.C. on June 14. This display of might is intended to intimidate opponents and solidify his image as a strongman on our dime—we won’t stand by while that happens.
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Instead of allowing this military parade to be the center of gravity, we will make action everywhere else the story of America that day: people coming together in communities across the country to reject strongman politics, corruption and the ongoing Corporate Coup.
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Alongside local organizers, partners, and leaders from across the pro-democracy & pro-worker movement, we will demonstrate organized people power that outpaces any authoritarian aspirations.
- Donald Trump is planning a military parade in Washington, D.C. on June 14. This display of might is intended to intimidate opponents and solidify his image as a strongman on our dime—we won’t stand by while that happens.
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Big Pharma Handouts
According to the White House, Executive Order 14087 has been signed — rolling back critical medication price decreases for seniors that were negotiated just one year ago. This executive action is a blatant gift to Big Pharma, once again proving that corporate power holds more sway over our government than the voices of the people.
You can see for yourself — the White House News page lists all executive orders numerically. Scroll to #14087 to see the order that rescinds lower drug prices for Medicare recipients. Please share this information with anyone you know who could be affected.

White House Executive Orders List- 14087
How did this happen? Follow the money.
Big Pharma and other giant corporations have never held more political power than they do today. This is thanks to the disastrous Citizens United Supreme Court decision, which further codified the insane notion that a corporation is a person and money equals speech.
This allows corporations to spend unlimited amounts of money to influence elections and policy, drowning out the voices of everyday people. This executive order is just the latest example of corporate rule in action.
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Jennie Spanos published Organizing 119th for the We the People Amendment in Announcements 2025-03-08 09:24:59 -0800
Organizing 119th for the We the People Amendment
Every day, corporate influence tightens its grip—drowning out the voices of everyday people and shaping policies that put profits over our communities, our environment, and our future. Billionaires and corporate lobbyists flood elections with dark money, drowning out the voices of everyday Americans. Big Pharma blocks lower prescription drug prices while raking in record profits. Oil and gas giants bankroll politicians to stall climate action while wildfires rage and floods devastate communities. Corporate polluters poison our water—just ask the people of Flint and East Palestine—yet they face little to no accountability.
Together, we can change that! Join us for “Organizing for the We the People Amendment” on March 10.
(RSVP below)The We the People Amendment (H.J.Res. 54) is the solution. It will put an end to corporate constitutional rights and overturn Citizens United, ensuring that our government is led by people, not corporate interests. This amendment will make it clear: only human beings have constitutional rights, and money is not speech.

This is our moment to take back our power to create a genuine democracy—but we can’t do it alone. Every dollar corporations pour into elections is a dollar spent silencing you. Every day we wait, corporate power grows stronger.
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Jennie Spanos published Dred Scott: The struggle Continues in Announcements 2025-03-06 08:15:08 -0800
Dred Scott: The struggle Continues
Imagine standing in the Supreme Court chambers 169 years ago today, as Chief Justice Roger Taney delivers the infamous ruling in Dred Scott v. Sandford. The words hang heavy in the air—words that strip away the very humanity of an entire people. Words that declare, without hesitation, that Black individuals "had no rights which the white man was bound to respect."

Dred and Harriet Scott had dared to dream of freedom, had fought courageously in the courts, and had even tasted victory—only to have it cruelly overturned by the highest court in the land. And yet, their loss was not just personal. It set a chilling precedent: that property rights outweighed human rights, that the expansion of slavery could not be curbed, and that the Constitution itself was never intended to include people of African descent.

We know how this story continued. The abolitionist movement erupted with renewed fury. The Civil War raged. The 13th and 14th Amendments were passed, bringing the legal end of slavery and a promise—however fragile—of citizenship and equal protection under the law.
But what if we told you that the Dred Scott ruling was never formally overturned?
What if we told you that, in 2016, it was still being cited as legal precedent—used in an attempt to deny women their constitutional rights in a Kansas court case?
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Jennie Spanos published Join Us in Organizing for the We the People Amendment and Building Democracy! in Announcements 2025-03-01 06:56:22 -0800
Join Us in Organizing for the We the People Amendment!
Every day, corporate influence tightens its grip—drowning out the voices of everyday people and shaping policies that put profits over our communities, our environment, and our future. Billionaires and corporate lobbyists flood elections with dark money, drowning out the voices of everyday Americans. Big Pharma blocks lower prescription drug prices while raking in record profits. Oil and gas giants bankroll politicians to stall climate action while wildfires rage and floods devastate communities. Corporate polluters poison our water—just ask the people of Flint and East Palestine—yet they face little to no accountability.
Together, we can change that! Join us for “Organizing for the We the People Amendment” on March 10.
(RSVP below)The We the People Amendment (H.J.Res. 54) is the solution. It will put an end to corporate constitutional rights and overturn Citizens United, ensuring that our government is led by people, not corporate interests. This amendment will make it clear: only human beings have constitutional rights, and money is not speech.

Read more
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Jennie Spanos published 119th Campaign Sign up in Move the 119th Congress to Amend Campaign 2025-02-20 11:25:16 -0800
Will you help push your Rep to co-sponsor the #WeThePeopleAmendment?
The #WeThePeopleAmendment was introduced in Congress last week.
This amendment makes clear that only human beings have Constitutional rights (not corporations) and that money is not speech so that campaign spending can be regulated, and big money can be eliminated from the political process.
This critical amendment is necessary to move forward on just about every other issue you care about, from climate change to election integrity to police brutality and human rights!
Our goal is to get at least 100 co-sponsors on the #WeThePeopleAmendment -- so we need at least 3-5 constituents in each district to hold a successful lobby meeting... sign up below!
The meetings will all be virtual and online and will take about 20-30 mins. Move to Amend organizers will help you prepare for the meeting and work with you to ensure it is a success!
What is needed to participate:
- High speed internet and computer with video capability (if this is a challenge for you, let us know and we will see if we can make it work)
- A passion for passing the #WeThePeopleAmendment to end corporate rule and get big money out of politics
- 1-2 hours to prepare your statement during the meeting and join a prep call with Move to Amend organizers and other volunteers
- 20-30 minutes during a weekday (between 9am-5pm ET) for the meeting with your Representative and/or a member of their staff (to be scheduled by their office)
Can we count you in to join the meeting?
Sign up
Jennie Spanos
Why I support Move to Amend
I have a deep passion and focus on environmental and social justice issues. This organizing leads me to collaborate with various intersectional grassroots movements building for a just and sustainable future.
The power reaped from the insane notion of corporate constitutional rights exists in tandem with structural oppression and environmental degradation and is found as a cause of so many injustices. Move to Amend and the #WeThePeopleAmendment strikes at the root of that reality.



