Sisters’ Blog
War on Drugs: A Legacy of Injustice
The War on Drugs catchphrase and campaign became ubiquitous in the early ‘70s when President Richard Nixon signed the Controlled Substances Act into Law, declaring drug use “public enemy number one.”
But who really was the State’s “public enemy number one?
Listen to the People, not the Pundits
Portland is often labeled as a cautionary tale of "woke/progressive" policies gone awry in the eyes of national and international media and political spheres. It seems we can’t make it more than a week without being inundated with think pieces on how to “save Portland.”
Criminalization Doesn’t Work
If we want to make real change, then we need to educate ourselves and our community about the real root causes of homelessness and poverty. We need to undo the harmful narratives about our unhoused neighbors that are fueling the policies that we’re seeing now.
Portland Restricts Daytime Camping
Sisters of the Road has always stood against the forces that would stigmatize, criminalize, traumatize, and dehumanize people regardless of their social standing.