Below is a list of communication hooks and events for the month of October that you can use to reach new audiences and inform existing ones. If you notice any omissions, please email us.
Upcoming Media Hooks & Events

Month of October

October is See Us, Support Us Month which raises awareness and amplifies the voices of children with incarcerated parents. Lead by the Osborne Association and partners, the focus this year is "the importance of child-friendly, in-person visiting and removing systemic barriers to maintaining parent-child relationships during a parent’s incarceration."
- Messaging and communication tools: The Osborne Association's SUSU website and social media guide; The Opportunity Agenda's Ensure Decent Detention Conditions; Eliminate the Criminalization of Poverty and Foster an Environment for Respecting Children’s Rights
- Hashtags: #SeeUsSupportUs; #SupportVisiting; #WordsMatter

LGBT History Month celebrates the achievements of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender trailblazers. Use this month to talk about intersectional issues that affect LGBT Americans. Cite the values of Voice and Opportunity.
- Messaging and communication tools: The Opportunity Agenda’s Ten Tips for Putting Intersectionality into Practice; Social Justice Sexuality’s Intersecting Injustice: A National Call to Action Addressing LGBTQ Poverty and Economic Justice for All; Center for American Progress’ Protecting Basic Living Standards for LGBTQ People and Disaggregating the Data for Bisexual People; Making Gay History podcast
- Hashtags: #LGBTHistoryMonth

It’s also , commemorating the first recorded arrival of Filipinos in the continental U.S. (see Oct. 18 below). Filipino Americans are the second largest Asian American group in the nation and the third largest ethnic group in California, after Latinas/os and African Americans. This year’s theme is “Pinay Visionaries: Celebrating Filipina American Women.” Cite the values of Community and Economic Security.
- Messaging and communication tools: Filipino American National Historical Society’s About Filipino American History Month and Facebook page; Advancing Justice’s Inside the Numbers: How Immigration Shapes Asian American and Pacific Islander Communities; The Opportunity Agenda’s Public Perceptions and Attitudes Relevant to The Racial Wealth Gap
- Hashtags: #FAHM2019; #PinayVisionaries
Now until Monday, Oct. 15

National LatinX/Hispanic Heritage Month pays tribute to “the generations of Hispanic Americans who have influenced and enriched our nation and society.” Use this month to discuss Community, Opportunity, and Equality.
- Messaging and communication tools: The Opportunity Agenda's 10 Facts About Public Attitudes Toward Economic Opportunity, Diversity, and Media Trust in the Trump Era; UnidosUS and New American Economy's Power of the Purse: How Hispanics Contribute to the U.S. Economy
- Hashtag: #LatinxHeritageMonth; #HispanicHeritage; #HHM
Wednesday, Oct. 2

International Wrongful Conviction Day was created to "raise awareness of the causes and remedies of wrongful conviction and to recognize the tremendous personal, social, and emotional costs of wrongful conviction for innocent people and their families." Use this hook to talk about the need for criminal justice reform. Cite the values of Voice and Redemption.
- Take action: Join the Twitter takeover at 3pm EDT with hashtag #wrongfulconvictionday and/or join a local event.
- Messaging and communication tools: Wrongful Conviction Day's photos and graphics; The Opportunity Agenda's Enhance Prosecutorial Integrity and Ensure Fair Trials and Quality Indigent Defense; Innocence Project's Prosecutorial Oversight: A National Dialogue in the Wake of Connick v. Thompson
- Hashtag: #wrongfulconvictionday
Thursday, October 3

On this day, 10 years ago, President George W. Bush signed into law the $700 billion bailout bill for the U.S. financial system (The Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008), often called the "bank bailout of 2008.” This was done to address the financial crisis which had developed throughout 2007 and 2008. The act was also supposed to help struggling homeowners, but the Home Affordable Modification Program wasn’t created until February 2009. Few Americans benefited from the program, which resulted in foreclosures and evictions. Discuss this anniversary by citing the values of Economic Security and Community.
- Messaging and communication tools: The Opportunity Agenda’s Thirteen Things America Can Do to Stop Foreclosures and Fulfill the American Dream; On the Media’s Scarlet E series
- Hashtags: #2008bailout; #BankBailout2008; #2008BankBailout
Friday, Oct. 4

Today is National Diversity Day to “celebrate and embrace who we are, despite our differences, no matter what race, religion, gender, sexual orientation, age, nationality, or disability.” Use this hook to talk about the need for acceptance, tolerance and inclusion in our society. Cite the values of Community and Voice.
- Messaging and communication tools: Diversity Promotions’ National Diversity Day website; The Opportunity Agenda’s Rise Above: Countering Fear-Based Messaging and Ten Tips for Putting Intersectionality into Practice
- Hashtag: #NationalDiversityDay
Sun. Oct. 6 - Sat. Oct. 12

The National Alliance on Mental Illness leads Mental Illness Awareness Week to challenge stigma and misunderstanding by showing that mental illness affects everyone directly or indirectly through family, friends or coworkers. Use this week to talk about how mental illness intersects with poverty and criminal justice. Discuss the need for government support of individuals and families dealing with mental illness. Cite the values of Community and Redemption.
- Messaging and communication tools: National Alliance on Mental Illness’ Mental Illness Awareness Week; Why Care? Campaign and Cure Stigma campaign; The Opportunity Agenda’s Ten Lessons for Talking About Criminal Justice Issues; Center for American Progress’ How Cities and States Are Leading the Way on Mental Health
- Hashtags: #MIAW; #CureStigma; #WhyCare
Sunday, Oct. 6

On Oct. 6, 1917, voting and women’s rights activist Fannie Lou Hamer was born in Mississippi. She co-founded the the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party which challenged the all-white delegation at the 1964 Democratic National Convention where Hamer testified. She asked: “Is this America, the land of the free and the home of the brave, where our lives be threatened daily, because we want to live as decent human beings?” Use Hamer’s birthday to discuss voter registration and rights. Cite the values of Community, Voice, and Economic Security.
- Messaging and communication tools: Zinn Education Project’s Is This America? and lessons, films, and readings; The Opportunity Agenda’s 10 Lessons for Talking About Race
- Hashtag: #FannieLouHamer
Monday, Oct. 7

Today Church World Service is calling on all of its partners to join the #Blackout4Refugees Social Media Day of Action to join us in this critical moment for the future of the US refugee resettlement program. They write, "Refugee resettlement is under attack. Stephen Miller and his anti-immigrant coalition within the Trump administration have proposed drastically slashing refugee admissions to the United States and allowing states and cities to ban refugees. Across the nation, organizations, communities and people who support refugees will black out their social media profile images, calling on Americans to demand that Congress block the Trump Administration’s plans to destroy the life-saving refugee resettlement program. We are outraged. We must not allow President Trump to trample on our values and traditions. Join us in calling on Congress to ACT NOW." Discuss the refugee resettlement program by citing the values of Community, Economic Security, and Voice.
- Take action: Sign and share this petition to Congress. Tweet and share these images on your organization's and personal social media.
- Messaging and communication tools: Church World Service's #Blackout4Refugees website and OpEd: Trump's record low cap on refugees is a blow to them and our history as a welcoming nation; The Opportunity Agenda's The Importance of Maintaining our Identity as a Nation That Welcomes Refugees and Talking About Unaccompanied Refugee Children Fleeing Harm; National Immigration Forum's Audio: Leaders Voice Support for Refugees; Welcoming America's WelcomingRefugees.org; SEARAC's Trump Administration Considers Further Cuts to Refugee Admissions; American Immigration Council's Trump Administration Considers Lowering the Refugee Cap to Zero
- Hashtag: #Blackout4Refugees

At 2pm EDT, The #DefendCivilRights campaign will be leading a tweetstorm to oppose the Trump Administration's proposal to undercut core anti-discrimination protections in housing. Please join the effort in supporting a last push for comments! Discuss the proposal by citing the values of Economic Security, Community, and Voice.
- Messaging and communication tools: The #DefendCivilRights campaign's tweetstorm tool kit; National Housing Law Project's Day of Action webpage; #DefendCivilRights' website; The Opportunity Agenda's Memorandum: The Relationship Between Racial Integration and the Duty to Further Fair Housing and Reforming HUD’s Regulations to Affirmatively Further Fair Housing
- Hashtag: #DefendCivilRights
Tuesday, Oct. 8

Today the U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments in three cases about federal civil rights protections for LGBTQ people. The Court will decide whether Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits sex discrimination in the workplace, excludes lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer people. As the ACLU writes, “the Court will be deciding whether to strip LGBTQ people of federal civil rights protections in everything from employment to housing, health care to education.” Cite the values of Community, Voice, and Equality.
- Messaging and communication tools: ACLU’s Supreme Court Agrees to Hear LGBTQ Workplace Discrimination Cases; The Opportunity Agenda’s Rise Above: Countering Fear-Based Messaging and Ten Tips for Putting Intersectionality into Practice
- Hashtags: #DontRollBackOurRights; #NoRighttoDiscriminate

On Oct. 8, 2001, President George Bush created the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). This anniversary provides a useful moment to examine how the national security frame has shaped the immigration agencies with DHS. Advocates are calling for the abolition of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) for its practices that destroy families and communities. Cite the values of Community and Voice when discussing this anniversary.
- Messaging and communications tools: The Opportunity Agenda’s Quick Tips for Talking Immigration Issues and Media Briefing: Tracking Tax Dollars for Brutality; Detention Watch Network’s ICE Lies: Public Deception, Private Profit; American Friends Service Committee’s Abolish ICE! End ICE Abuse and Cruelty Once and For All and It’s Time to Abolish ICE
- Hashtags: #StopICE; #AbolishICE
Wednesday, Oct. 9

At 2pm EDT, Narrative Initiative and Spitfire Strategies will host a webinar, "Research Methodologies for Narrative Change Practice," to explore the current state of narrative research by interviewing leading narrative change practitioners who use a range of research approaches, tools, and methodologies. They write, " In this webinar, we will explore the themes and limitations of our recent landscaping project, opportunities for further collaboration, and increased field capacity for narrative change research." Join by registering here.
Thursday, Oct. 10

Join National Housing Law Project and its partners for a Day of Action to #FightForHousingJustice and oppose the Trump Administration's proposal to undercut core anti-discrimination protections in housing. The deadline for public comments is October 18. Discuss the proposal by citing the values of Economic Security, Community, and Voice.
- Take action: Submit a comment opposing HUD's proposal by October 18, 2019. If you're in the San Francisco Bay Area, join a Happy Hour and dinner commenting party, 4-7pm, at National Housing Law Project's office, 1663 Mission Street, Suite 460. RSVP here.
- Messaging and communication tools: National Housing Law Project's Day of Action webpage; #DefendCivilRights' website; The Opportunity Agenda's Memorandum: The Relationship Between Racial Integration and the Duty to Further Fair Housing and Reforming HUD’s Regulations to Affirmatively Further Fair Housing
- Hashtags: #FairHousing; #FightForHousingJustice; #DefendCivilRights

Today is also the 17th World Day against the Death Penalty. Use this hook to talk about how the U.S. criminal justice system is overly punitive, costly, and racially biased. Also discuss how fewer and fewer Americans support the death penalty. Cite the values of Redemption and Voice.
- Messaging and communication tools: The Opportunity Agenda's Tips for Talking About Law Enforcement Enhanced Penalty Laws and Americans are Becoming Less Punitive; Death Penalty Information Center’s Death Penalty Fact Sheet; World Coalition Against the Death Penalty's website
- Hashtags: #NOToDeathPenalty; #NoDeathPenalty; #racialinjustice
Friday, Oct. 11

National Coming Out Day challenges homophobia by making the personal political. LGBTQ people are encouraged to come out to friends and family. Use this hook to talk about intersectional issues that affect LGBTQ Americans. Cite the values of Voice and Opportunity.
- Messaging and communication tools: The Opportunity Agenda’s Ten Tips for Putting Intersectionality into Practice; Social Justice Sexuality’s Intersecting Injustice: A National Call to Action Addressing LGBTQ Poverty and Economic Justice for All; Center for American Progress’ Protecting Basic Living Standards for LGBTQ People and Disaggregating the Data for Bisexual People
- Hashtags: #NationalComingOutDay; #NCOD
Sunday, Oct. 13

On this day in 1792, the cornerstone of the White House was laid. Former First Lady Michelle Obama noted that, during the eight years that she lived there, she “[woke] up every morning in a house that was built by slaves.” Use this anniversary to discuss the role of enslaved people in our nation’s history and the lasting repercussions of racial injustice. Cite the values of Economic Security, Voice, and Equality.
- Messaging and communication tools: Zinn Education Project’s White House Cornerstone Laid; The Opportunity Agenda’s Ten Lessons for Talking About Criminal Justice Issues;
- Hashtag: #WhiteHouse and/or @whitehouse
Monday, Oct. 14

Today is Indigenous Peoples Day (the reframing for Columbus Day in many U.S. cities). Use this hook to discuss Voice and Economic Security.
- Messaging and communication tools: The Opportunity Agenda’s Standing Rock, Ferguson or Mexican Border, ‘We Are All Related’; U.S. Department of Arts and Culture's #HonorNativeLand: A Guide and Call for Acknowledgement; National Congress of American Indians' Proud to Be Campaign; Unitarian Universalist Association's Ten Ways to Honor Indigenous Peoples Day; Reclaiming Native Truths’ Changing the Narrative about Native Americans; IllumiNative’s The false narratives, invisibility, and the erasure of Native peoples must end
- Hashtags: #IndigenousPeoplesDay; #AbolishColumbusDay
Mon. Oct. 14 - Fri. Oct. 18

It's DACA Renewal Week! Next month, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments on the termination of DACA and decide whether to uphold the highly successful program or put immigrant youth at risk of deportation in 2020. At this time, DACA renewals are still open to those who qualify and the Home is Here coalition is hosting a DACA renewals week to continue to educate those who are directly impacted and encourage them to take action. Discuss DACA by citing the values of Economic Security and Community.
- Take action: Use the Home is Here coalition's Social Media Toolkit this week as as DACA renewals resources and directory.
- Messaging and communication tools: The Opportunity Agenda's Communications to Protect Dreamers and our Nation’s Values; United We Dream's DACA in the Courts Timeline and Federal Judge Rules Trump’s Killing of DACA Was Wrong; The National Immigration Law Center's DACA resources; Center for American Progress' What We Know About DACA Recipients in the United States and What We Know About DACA Renewals
- Hashtag: #HomeisHere; #DACA
Tuesday, Oct. 15

Today at 1pm EDT on Capitol Hill, advocates and allies for refugees will Protest and Responding to Decimation of Refugee Resettlement and call Secretary of State Pompeo to save the U.S. refugee resettlement program. He will be meeting with Congress to get final approval on the administration’s proposed cuts to the program. Protesters wearing orange life vests will risk arrest in solidarity with refugees and in opposition to the administration’s dismantlement of the refugee resettlement program.
- Take action: Encourage folks to turn out: Share this tweet about the event and the Facebook event. If you're in the D.C. area, join participants in front of the Capitol at Constitution and First St. NE.
- Messaging and communication tools: Church World Service's media advisory/sign up and Refugees Banned; The Opportunity Agenda's The Importance of Maintaining our Identity as a Nation That Welcomes Refugees; National Immigration Forum's Audio: Leaders Voice Support for Refugees; Welcoming America's WelcomingRefugees.org
- Hashtag: #RefugeesWelcome

On this day in 2016, the #MeToo movement went viral online and quickly became a national discussion about sexual assault and harassment. The movement was founded in 2006 by activist Tarana Burke to address the lack of resources for survivors, specifically black and brown women and girls. The Me Too Movement is now also an organization committed to healing and action by centering survivors. Discuss this anniversary by citing the values of Voice, Equality, and Community.
- Messaging and communication tools: The Opportunity Agenda's The Case of the Cultural Influencers: Colin Kaepernick, Jimmy Kimmel, and #MeToo; MeToo Movement's Creating a 360 Degree Day of Healing, Empowerment, and Strength
- Hashtag: #MeToo

On Oct. 15, 1966, the Black Panther Party for Self Defense was founded to seek justice for African Americans and other oppressed communities through a combination of revolutionary theory, education, and community programs. Discuss this anniversary by citing the values of Economic Security, Voice, and Community.
- Messaging and communication tools: The Zinn Education Project’s What We Don’t Learn About the Black Panther Party—but Should; The Opportunity Agenda’s 10 Lessons for Talking About Race and Opportunity for Black Men and Boys;
- Hashtags: #BlackPantherParty
Wednesday, Oct. 16

On this day in 1968, African-American medal winners in the Olympics, Tommie Smith and John Carlos, gave a Black Power salute during the award ceremony. This anniversary provides a useful hook to discuss today’s activism by athletes like Colin Kaepernick. Cite the values of Voice and Community.
- Messaging and communication tools: The Opportunity Agenda’s Opportunity for Black Men and Boys; Rejecting Bigotry, Demanding Action; Ten Lessons for Talking About Race, Racism and Racial Justice and Create Fair and Effective Policing Practices
- Hashtag: #blacklivesmatter

It’s also World Food Day, which the United Nations created to focus on how people and communities can take action to end hunger. Use this hook to talk about hunger and poverty in the United States, especially now as Congress considers changes to the federal food stamp program, SNAP. Cite the values of Economic Security and Community.
- Messaging and communication tools: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations’ World Food Day 2019 Communication Toolkits; The Opportunity Agenda’s Talking About Economic Justice; Center on Budget and Policy Priorities’ SNAP Works (video series); Food Research and Action Center’s Rural Hunger in America – Get the Facts; Rural Hunger in America – SNAP: Get the Facts and Senior Hunger resources
- Hashtags: #WFD2019; #ZeroHunger; #HandsoffSNAP

Thursday, Oct. 17
The United Nations' International Day for the Eradication of Poverty recognizes "the knowledge and courage of families living in poverty throughout the world, the importance of reaching out to the poorest and building an alliance with citizens from all backgrounds to end poverty." Use this hook to discuss the values of Economic Security and Community in the United States.
- Messaging tool: The Opportunity Agenda’s Talking About Economic Justice; United Nations Special Rapporteur’s Statement on Visit to the USA; United Nations' International Day for the Eradication of Poverty 2019
- Hashtags: #EndPoverty; #USAPoverty

World Values Day is an opportunity to think about our most deeply held values and act on them. This year’s core theme is about putting our values to action through our communities. Discuss these values with your audiences: Opportunity, Mobility, Equality, Voice, Redemption, Community and (Economic) Security.
- Messaging and communication tools: World Values Day’s tools and resources; The Opportunity Agenda’s Values; Countering Fear-Based Messaging; Rejecting Bigotry and 10 Lessons for Talking About Race
- Hashtags: #WorldValuesDay

At 2pm ET, the Immigrant Legal Resource Center is hosting a free webinar on a #NewWayForward on Ending Immigrant Criminalization. The speakers will give an overview of the legislative efforts to end immigrant criminalization and repeal the 1996 immigration laws (IIRAIRA & AEDPA) that have contributed to mass incarceration, detention, and deportation. Attendees will also learn about ways to get involved in New Way Forward at the national and local level. Register here.
- Hashtag: #NewWayForward

Friday, Oct. 18
Today is the deadline for comments to oppose the Trump Administration's proposal to undercut core anti-discrimination protections in housing. The deadline for public comments is October 18. Discuss the proposal by citing the values of Economic Security, Community, and Voice.
- Take action: Submit a comment opposing HUD's proposal
- Messaging and communication tools: National Housing Law Project's Day of Action webpage; #DefendCivilRights' website; The Opportunity Agenda's Memorandum: The Relationship Between Racial Integration and the Duty to Further Fair Housing and Reforming HUD’s Regulations to Affirmatively Further Fair Housing
- Hashtags: #FairHousing; #FightForHousingJustice; #DefendCivilRights

On this day in 1972, The Clean Water Act became law. The legislation is now under attack. Use this anniversary to discuss the importance of infrastructure spending, citing the values of Community and Economic Security.
- Messaging and communication tools: The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities' A Four-Point Fiscal Policy Blueprint for Building Thriving State Economies and Natural Resources Defense Council's Advisory on Safe Drinking Water; NDRC's Watered Down Justice; Topos Public Will Initiative's Public Water; Our Neighborhoods, Our Future’s principles, Partnership for Working Families’ We Make This City
- Hashtags: #cleanwateract; #wemakethiscity

On this day in 1587, the first Filipino immigrants arrived in U.S. by way of a Spanish galleon that docked at what is now Morro Bay, California, the first recorded arrival of Filipinos in the continental U.S. Because of this anniversary, October is Filipino American History Month. Filipino Americans are the second largest Asian American group in the nation and the third largest ethnic group in California, after Latinas/os and African Americans. This year’s theme is “Pinay Visionaries: Celebrating Filipina American Women.” Cite the values of Community and Economic Security.
- Messaging and communication tools: Filipino American National Historical Society’s About Filipino American History Month and Facebook page; Advancing Justice’s Inside the Numbers: How Immigration Shapes Asian American and Pacific Islander Communities; The Opportunity Agenda’s Public Perceptions and Attitudes Relevant to The Racial Wealth Gap
- Hashtags: #FAHM2019; #PinayVisionaries

At 2pm ET, The Opportunity Agenda’s Immigration Research Consortium will hold its monthly webinar (speakers to be announced). Register here to join the webinar.
Sat. Oct. 19 – Sun. Oct. 27

Dignity in Schools and partners will lead the National Week of Action Against Schools Pushout to “envision a public school system that values students, parents and communities as decision-makers with the fundamental human right to shape their education… and schools that work towards preventing trauma, repairing harm and promoting healing, and rejecting a culture of punishment and criminalization.” Discuss the school-to-prison pipeline and school privatization using the values of Community and Voice.
- Messaging and communication tools: The Opportunity Agenda's Devos’ “School Choice” Means No Choice for Many American Families; Center for Popular Democracy's Community Schools Toolkit; Dignity in Schools' Demands and 2019 Week of Action Assets; Million Dollar Hoods’ Policing our Schools: An Analysis of LA School Police Department Data (2014 - 2017) and Gay Straight Alliance's LGBTQ Youth of Color: Discipline Disparities, School Push-Out, and the School-to-Prison Pipeline
- Hashtags: #DSCWoA2019; #EducateStudentsStopArrests; #RethinkDiscipline
Saturday, Oct. 19

On this day in 1870, the first African Americans were elected to the House of Representatives. In South Carolina, Black Republicans won three of the state’s four congressional seats. The Zinn Education Projects points out that Reconstruction, the era immediately following the Civil War and emancipation, “is full of stories that help us see the possibility of a future defined by racial equity” and that “it’s worth remembering a time in U.S. history when Black lives mattered.” Discuss this anniversary by citing the values of Voice and Community.
- Messaging and communication tools: Zinn Education Project’s When Black Lives Mattered: Why Teach Reconstruction and Teach Reconstruction Campaign; The Opportunity Agenda’s 10 Lessons for Talking About Race
- Hashtags: #TeachReconstruction; #blacklivesmatter

In New York, activists, scholars, organizers, lawyers, students and members of the community will come together at the Open Borders Conference. It will be a space "to learn what open borders might look like; why open borders would lead to dramatic increases in public safety, prosperity, and equality; and what it would mean to #AbolishICE." More information on registering here.
Tuesday, Oct. 22

The Oct. 22 Coalition to Stop Police Brutality, Repression and the Criminalization of a Generation has mobilized every year since 1996 for a National Day of Protest against Police Brutality on Oct. 22nd. Cite the values of Voice, Equality and Community.
- Take Action: Wear black and join an event near you.
- Messaging and communication tools: The Opportunity Agenda's Create Fair and Effective Policing Practices; Talking Policing Issues and Implicit Bias and the Limitations of Video Footage in Tackling Police Brutality; October 22 Coalition’s Resources and Stolen Lives project; Movement for Black Lives' A Vision for Black Lives
- Hashtags: #O22; #BlackLivesMatter

The first woman farmworker hired to be a union representative, Maria Moreno, was born on this day in 1920. Moreno was a vocal fighter for impoverished farm workers in California in the late 1950s and early 1960s. A film about her life is premiered on PBS in September. Discuss Moreno's birthday by citing the values of Community, Voice, and Economic Security.
- Messaging and communication tools: PBS' Adios Amor - The Search for Maria Morenotrailer; The Opportunity Agenda's Talking about the Importance of Unions and Economic Security
- Hashtag: #MariaMoreno
Wednesday, Oct. 23

On Oct. 23, 1947, W. E. B. Du Bois and the NAACP petitioned the United Nations with a document titled “An Appeal to the World: A Statement on the Denial of Human Rights to Minorities in the Case of Citizens of the United States of America and an Appeal to the United Nations for Redress.” They asked for the U.N.’s help to address human rights violations the United States committed against its African-American citizens, such as lynching, segregation, and the gross inequalities in education, housing, health care, and voting rights.
- Messaging and communication tools: W. E. B. Du Bois’s statement at the United Nations; The Opportunity Agenda’s 10 Lessons for Talking About Race; Lyonette Louis-Jacques’ Black history at the United Nations
- Hashtags: #WEBDubois
Thursday, Oct. 24

On Oct. 24, 1938, the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) took effect, creating for the first time a federal right to a minimum wage and overtime while also banning child labor. Discuss this important anniversary by citing the values of Economic Security and Mobility.
- Messaging and communication tools: National Employment Law Project's A Baseline for Economic Freedom and social media guide
- Hashtags: #FairLaborStandards; #FLSA
Saturday, Oct. 26

On Oct. 26, 2001, just weeks after the 9/11 attacks, President George W. Bush signed the PATRIOT Act into law. The legislation expanded surveillance powers of the government and permitted indefinite detention of non-citizens. In 2015, many of its expiring provisions were extended or modified by the USA FREEDOM Act. Discuss this anniversary by citing the values of Community and Voice.
- Messaging and communication tools: The Opportunity Agenda’s Immigration Policy Solutions: Due Process and Fair Treatment Under the Law; American Civil Liberties Unions’ Surveillance Under the Patriot Act; American Bar Associations’ 9/11 and the Transformation of U.S. Immigration Law and Policy
- Hashtag: #PatriotAct

Saturday, Oct. 26 - Tuesday, Nov. 12
Starting this Saturday, DACA recipients, TPS holders & allies will embark on the #HomeIsHere March from New York to Washington, D.C. head of the Supreme Court taking up DACA beginning on Nov. 12. This march is a mobilization that is part of the larger #HomeIsHere national coalition campaign. More events along the march are listed on the campaign's Routes and Events page. Discuss the march and campaign and cite the values of Economic Security, Voice, and Community.
- Take action: If you're in New York, join the Kick-Off Rally. Also follow and support NAKASEC (Facebook and Twitter), Make the Road New York (Facebook and Twitter), CASA (Facebook and Twitter), FIRM Action (Facebook and Twitter), and Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights (Facebook and Twitter)
- Messaging and communication tools: The Opportunity Agenda's Communications to Protect Dreamers and our Nation’s Values; United We Dream's DACA in the Courts Timeline and Federal Judge Rules Trump’s Killing of DACA Was Wrong; The National Immigration Law Center's DACA resources; Center for American Progress' What We Know About DACA Recipients in the United States and What We Know About DACA Renewals
- Hashtag: #HomeisHere; #DACA
Sunday, Oct. 27

On Oct. 27, 1978, President Jimmy Carter signed into law the Humphrey–Hawkins Full Employment Act to address rising unemployment. Today, overall unemployment is low, but it remains high for black workers, formerly incarcerated people, and others facing discrimination. Talk about how the government still has a role in assisting Americans who are bearing the brunt of our unfair economic system. Use this hook to discuss the values of Community and Economic Security.
- Messaging and communication tools: The Opportunity Agenda's Expanding Opportunity for All: Economic Justice; Center for Popular Democracy's The Full Employment Mandate of the Reserve;
- Hashtags: #unemployment

On this day in 1994, the Department of Justice announced that the U.S. prison population surpassed one million people for the first time in U.S. history. the United States has the highest rate of incarceration in the world (nearly 25% of the world’s prison population). Use this anniversary to discuss the explosion of mass incarceration and the need to end money bail. Discuss this anniversary by citing the values of Redemption and Voice.
- Messaging and communication tools: Vera Institute of Justice's #ReimgaineJustice event video and The Next 25 Years video; The Opportunity Agenda’s Promote Community Safety through Alternatives to Incarceration and Encourage Equitable Sentencing; Union Theological Seminary's Exodus event video: Building a Movement to End Mass Incarceration and Mass Detention; Color of Change’s End Money Bail and Video: The Truth About the Money Bail Industry; Black Love’s Bail Out; ACLU’s We Can’t End Mass Incarceration Without Ending Money Bail; The Marshall Project’s Everything You Think You Know About Mass Incarceration Is Wrong
- Hashtags: #EndBailMoney; #ReimagineJustice
Monday, Oct. 28

On this day in 1886, the Statue of Liberty was dedicated in New York City. Use this anniversary to talk about the importance of this national symbol in welcoming immigrants to the United States. It’s also a useful hook for the new “public charge” rule, since it runs counter to the statue’s message. Cite the values of Community and Economic Security.
- Messaging and communication tools: The Opportunity Agenda’s Quick Tips for Talking Immigration Issues; On the Media’s Who Is Lady Liberty, And What Does She Want?; Welcoming America’s Stand Together; Protecting Immigrant Families’ campaign resources
- Hashtag: #StatueofLiberty; #ProtectFamilies

Voters Organized To Educate is organizing Justice Votes 2020: A Presidential Town Hall, a 2020 Democratic Presidential candidate town hall on criminal justice reform – set inside a museum that was once a prison – with questions from impacted people and their families. More information here.
Tuesday, Oct. 29

On this day in 1929, the Wall Street stock market crashed and plunged the nation into the Great Depression, creating economic insecurity for millions of American families. Use this anniversary to talk about the government’s role in assisting Americans facing economic hardship. An array of programs that were part of “The New Deal” assisted millions of unemployed and starving citizens. Today, programs like SNAP and Medicaid help working Americans stuck in low-paying jobs. Cite the values of Economic Security and Community.
- Messaging and communication tools: The Opportunity Agenda’s Talking About Economic Justice; Bill Moyers’ Why is SNAP Part of the Farm Bill? ; Center for American Progress’ How Classical Liberalism Morphed Into New Deal Liberalism; SNAP to Health’s The History of SNAP
- Hashtags: #GreatDepression; #HandsOffSNAP; #BlackTuesday

On this day, 50 years ago, the Supreme Court ruled in the case of Alexander v. Holmes County Board of Education that schools in the South had to desegregate “immediately,” instead of the previous ruling of “with all deliberate speed.” The case was brought by Beatrice Alexander, on behalf of her children, after she sued the Holmes County, Mississippi School District. Discuss this anniversary by referring to the values of Voice, Equality, and Mobility.
- Messaging and communication tools: The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human rights’ Oppose the Confirmation of Judicial Nominees Who Decline to State Brown v. Board of Education Decision Was Correctly Decided; The Opportunity Agenda’s Helping Brown Forward and Devos’ “School Choice” Means No Choice for Many American Families
- Hashtags: #AlexanderVHolmes; #RetireSegregation

On October 29, 2012, Hurricane Sandy hit New York City causing extensive damages to infrastructure in the city. As we’ve seen many times before, natural disasters have the ability to reveal existing inequality among those directly affected. People living in poverty are disproportionately affected by natural disasters. Use Hurricane Sandy to push for economic justice in infrastructure, storm preparedness and recovery spending. Cite the values of Economic Security and Community.
- Messaging and communication tools: Shriver Center on Poverty Law’s What Natural Disasters Reveal About Racism and Poverty; Center on Budget and Policy Priorities’ History Shows What Steps Trump Administration and Congress Can Take to Ensure Access to Health Care for Those Affected by the Hurricanes; The Brookings Institute’s Can people afford American infrastructure?; Sightline Institute’s Talking about Climate Change and Weather; Latino Rebels' Climate Change, Poverty and Human Rights: An Emergency Without Precedent
- Hashtags: #HurricaneSandy; #climatejustice