#IsrealiWarCrimes #Disablity #Descrimination #Isreal
Today in Labor History September 7, 1976: Ian Davies, London social worker, won reinstatement after being demoted. He had been fired for being gay (after being entrapped by an undercover cop who approached him for sex in a public bathroom). His union, NALGO (National and Local Government Officers’ Association), fought and won reinstatement for him, but at a demoted status. So, 25 of his union members staged a wildcat strike, later approved by the union, which won him full reinstatement at his original grade.
The struggle for working-class LGBTQ rights in the UK really took off in 1972, with the establishment of gay and lesbian worker branches within NALGO. By 1976, they had won LGBTQ-inclusive policies within NALGO and were publishing their own union newsletter: NALGAY. Homosexuality had only recently been decriminalized in England and Wales (1967). In 1993, NALGO merged with two other unions to form UNISON.
#workingclass #LaborHistory #lgbtq #union #strike #descrimination #homophobia #NALGO
President Donald Trump lashed out at Bishop Mariann Edgar Budde after she made a heartfelt plea for mercy during a National Cathedral prayer service on the morning of his inauguration. The reverend, who addressed the congregation with a powerful message, urged Trump to show compassion for transgender children and immigrant families, some of whom live in fear of deportation.
The suit, which was filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts, argues that the executive order directly violates the Fourteenth Amendment and the Immigration and Nationality Act, which guarantee citizenship to all children born on U.S. soil.
Suite a une négociation annuelle obligatoire, engagée sur les thèmes prévus par les dispositions légales. Voici les moyens mis en place pour les personnes à mobilité réduite :
Aménagement de deux postes de travail.
La remise en place des normes l'accessibilité de l'entreprise
Ainsi que des projets d'aménagement