After four months, the No voice, No equal future project has carried out six activities and had a positive impact on nearly 2,000 youths from ethnic minorities.
what do you expect her to do then? i have no idea. i really don t. i m asking her to veto it as well as all of the other businesspeople in arizona who see that. at this time, when our economy is fragile and we re just starting to recover, we need jobs. that has to be our focus. and we know already that companies are starting to say, you know, maybe we won t come to arizona. yesterday i was talking to chamber leaders in flagstaff where i live, and they said they re already getting e-mails and phone calls and letters from people who said we were going to come to arizona, go to the grand canyon, but, nope, we don t think we ll do that anymore. it s an interesting point you raise because this is a tourism story. it is a business story. it s an economic story. it starts out, though, first and foremost, i think, as an equality story and whether this kind of discrimination should be authorized and written into the law. it s scary to people we re still having these debates now. congressw
and phone calls and letters from people who said we were going to come to arizona, go to the grand canyon, but, nope, we don t think we ll do that anymore. it s an interesting point you raise because this is a tourism story. it is a business story. it s an economic story. it starts out, though, first and foremost, i think, as an equality story and whether this kind of discrimination should be authorized and written into the law. it s scary to people we re still having these debates now. congresswoman, thank you for your time tonight. thank you, ari. appreciate it. joining us, syndicated columnist dave savage. author of american savage: insights, slights, and fights on faith, sex, love and politics. and louise melling for the aclu. dan savage, you don t need a big long question. tell us what s on your mind tonight. i think it s important to know the law doesn t actually single out gays and lesbians alone for discrimination. it is so broadly worded that anyone in arizona can
it starts out, though, first and foremost, i think, as an equality story and whether this kind of discrimination should be thor authorized and written into the law. it s scary to people we re still having these debates now. congresswoman, thank you for your time tonight. thank you, ari. appreciate it. joining us, sinyndicated columnist dave savage. author of american savage. and lois melling for the aclu. dan savage, you don t need a big long question. tell us what s on your mind tonight. i think it s important to know the law doesn t twhal single out gays and lesbians alone for discrimination. it is so broadly worded that anyone in arizona can discriminate against anyone else in the provision of goods or services or anything else for basically any reason, so long as they claim that they re discriminating because of a sincerely held religious belief. a muslim cab driver could refuse