Rally unifies voices amid attacks on immigrants, LGBT+ rights; now it’s time to make noise, organizers say
February 25, 2025 | Nikki Overfelt Chifalu
As anti-immigrant rhetoric and policies seeking to dismantle DEI efforts ramp up, Danny Soriano has seen inquiries and communication to his digital media business noticeably slow down, the Latino entrepreneur said.
“Clients [suddenly seem] deterred from going with me — as opposed to somebody who’s not of color or white,” explained Soriano, the founder of High Resolution Media, expressing an increasing feeling of isolation within the broader Kansas City community.
But on Sunday — at the Unidos Rally for Immigrants and LGBTQIA+ Rights organized by the Chicano Center for the Arts — Soriano, who comes from an immigrant family, was embraced by a crowd who gathered to celebrate a movement for justice, dignity, and protection for all people.
“A lot of people don’t realize that the Hispanic and the Latino communities are a lot bigger than we think,” he said. “Just seeing how many people came out — a lot of new faces, a lot of faces that I’ve already encountered before — to support is really important.”
Soriano, who also is a singer, performed several songs for the scores who gathered in the Westside neighborhood under an I-35 overpass (a site chosen because it represents a technique historically used to divide communities, organizers said, referencing urban planners who wielded placement of interstate roadways to segregate populations).
RELATED: Kansas City bears racial scars of Interstate system

Danny Soriano sings during the Unidos Rally for Immigrants and LGBTQIA+ Rights; photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News
“It honestly feels really good to be able to have people who understand what I’m saying when I’m singing in Spanish,” Soriano explained after performing Sunday. “Because usually when I’m playing shows — whether it’s at like The Ship or different places in Kansas City — not a lot of people understand what I’m saying. But here, I felt very welcomed. I felt like the people were receiving it well, so I enjoyed it. I loved it.”

Deanna Munoz, founder of Chicano Center for the Arts, stands alongside Melissa Ferrer Civil, poet laureate for Kansas City, Missouri, during the Unidos Rally for Immigrants and LGBTQIA+ Rights; photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News
Organizer Deanna Munoz, founder of Chicano Center for the Arts, emphasized the importance of visibility in creating a spirit of belonging during a time of political and cultural upheaval in Kansas City and beyond.
“There’s so many things happening around here right now, we need to show up and show our voices,” the nonprofit leader and influential community activist said.
Speakers at Sunday’s rally notably included Melissa Ferrer Civil, poet laureate for Kansas City, Missouri; Missouri State Rep. Wick Thomas, D-Kansas City; Edgar Galicia, director of Central Avenue Betterment Association; and Daniel Scharpenburg, vice president of National Treasury Employees Union Chapter 66.

Johnathan Duncan, sixth district councilman for Kansas City, Missouri, speaks during the Unidos Rally for Immigrants and LGBTQIA+ Rights; photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News
Johnathan Duncan — sixth district councilman for Kansas City, Missouri, and “a descendant of Mexican immigrants and a product of slaves” — said it makes him hopeful to see everyone show up with pride.
“We’re showing up 10 toes down for our community, regardless of your immigration status, regardless of where you came from,” he continued. “We’re showing up for one another and that’s what it’s going to take.”
“There’s a lot of things that the other side wants to use to divide us,” he added. “They want to divide us inside of ourselves, and they want to divide us from one another. Because when we are disorganized, we are not powerful. I want to thank you all for being here today. I will not stop organizing because I can’t. I can’t. The risks are too damn high, y’all. The risks are too damn high.”
Events like Sunday’s rally are critically important, said Manny Abarca, first district legislator for Jackson County, but they are just the beginning.
“If this is all we do, if we don’t show up for better bus services, if we don’t show up to make sure that the money goes in the right places, to protest your crazy property taxes, then we are not doing all that we can,” he explained. “I want you to go home, charged and ready to go.”
Featured Business
2025 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
LaunchKC, Techweek to welcome 10 tech firms to KC in style
In roughly four months, Kansas City will welcome a crop of tech startups bolstered by thousands of dollars in funding and a rockstar arrival. Kansas City’s LaunchKC competition — which aims to attract 10 tech firms to relocate to KC with $50,000 grants — has partnered with national tech conference Techweek to offer the winners…
New platform GUILDit offers art entrepreneurs visibility
A new program called GUILDit to promote and support art entrepreneurship is coming to Kansas City. The program is a bi-monthly gathering where art entrepreneurs take the stage to give six-minute presentations followed by questions and answers in the hopes of crafting a stronger Kansas City art economy, and to further connections between local artists.…
In time for Mother’s Day: Ovatemp wants to boost women’s fertility
The arrival of Ana Mayer’s baby girl isn’t the only thing she’ll be thinking about this Mother’s Day. Mayer — who’s among the newest founders in the Techstars-led Sprint Mobile Health Accelerator in Kansas City — will also be mulling how to further develop Ovatemp, the Boston-based ovulation tech company she leads. Ovatemp offers women…































