^ J J o rtla n b ©bseruer Page A4 úb Opinion articles do not necessarily reflect or represent the views o f The Portland Observer O pinion No Human Being is Illegal « Immigration proposals dehumanize people Editor’s note: The following excerpts are from a speech Sen. Avel Gordly delivered to a rally for immigrant workers: B y S en . A vki . G ordey The first thing that I want to say to you today is that no human being is illegal! I want to tell you something about being “illegal.” W hen O regon’s Constitution was enacted in 1857, it declared all African- A m ericans within the state’s boundaries “illegal.” The Oregon Constitution stated that no black person could live anywhere in this state. Such is the power o f bigotry and hate. The native people, who had inhabited these lands for 10,000 years, had it even worse. They were made "illegal” in their own homes! They were starved, deci­ mated by diseases brought by the white settlers, and their ancestral lands stolen. This is the power of bigotry and hate. In 1906 and 1910, Oregon vot­ ers— all white men— votedtocon- tinue to deny women the right to vote. W omen voters were “ille­ gal” in the state. In 1910, these privileged white men specifically denied women tax­ payers the right to vote. Oregon women did not win the right to vote until 1912. During W orld W ar II, people o f Japanese ancestry were declared “illegal” and entire fam ilies were sent to internm ent camps. That was the pow er o f bigotry and hate. A black person could not live in this state legally until 1926. Those that did, did so at the risk o f imprisonment and worse. Some m em bers o f the state legislature were openly members o f the Ku Klux Kian. W e stand here today next to Broadway Avenue. Before 1952, there was no restau­ rant on that street that would serve black people. There was no department store that w ould allow black custom ers to try on clothing. The hotels would not rent rooms to black people. The Public Accommodations Law of 1953 forced them to open their doors to people who look like me. Such is the power o f the law. A few good people from Portland and other places went to Salem for 18 consecu­ tive legislative sessions— 36 years! — be­ fore racial and ethnic discrim ination in pub­ lic places became illegal in this state. My father was a Pullman porter on the Union Pacific railroad. My m other was ac­ tive in church and in w om en's organiza­ tions. Born A merican citizens, bu, in those not-so-long-ago days o f redlining, entire neighborhoods w ere off-lim its to black hom eow nership. History tells us that our oppressors will try to divide us. In 2002, I was the chief petitioner for a Constitutional am endm ent that at long las, removed the rem aining racist language from the O regon Constitution. The voters over­ whelm ingly supported the am endm ent, but 352,027 O regonians voted to keep the lan­ guage in! particularly people o f color, and p articu ­ larly people w ho speak languages other than English. On the o th er side o f this issue, o p p o s­ ing you— here in this state— is a large group o f people, w ell-financed and e n ­ trenched in pow er, w ith th eir hate radio show s and a long history o f support for causes that seek to m arginalize and d e h u ­ m anize and crim inalize people o f color and poor people no m atter how long they have inhabited this place, and no m atter how great, how ho n o rab le have been their co n tributions to our nation. Next January, the Oregon Legislature will convene, and we can anticipate that some legislators will draft laws like the Sensenbrenner bill before Congress. They will use essentially the same argu­ ments that were used to condone slavery. They will use essentially the same arguments that were used to condone slavery, that were used to deny free blacks the right to live in the state o f Oregon. You should know that in 2005 the voters in A labam a wen, to the polls to decide w hether to rem ove outdated racist language in their state constitution. These laws re­ quired segregated schools, and enacted poll taxes designed to keep African Americans from voting. More than 600,000 Alabama voters voted to keep the language in, and it is still there today. Ju st betw een these tw o states, then, O regon and A labam a, we can count nearly a m illion voters— actual voters— people w ho w ill turn out and vote— w ho have no qualm s about dehum anizing other hum an beings. D oes it surprise you to know that until recen tly , farm w orkers in O regon not only did not have the right to meal and rest breaks, but O regon law specifically ex ­ cluded them alone— am ong all the d iffe r­ ent categories of em ploym ent— from these rights that we all take for granted. N ow there is another m ovem ent in C on­ g re ss th a t w o u ld fu rth e r d e h u m a n iz e people w ho are born in o th e r countries. Æl'r JJort lattò (Observer Established 1970 that were used to deny free blacks the right to live in the state o f Oregon, that were used to imprison innocent Japanese fam ilies dur­ ing W orld W ar II, that were used to prohibit Chinese people from emigrating to America, that were used to prohibit w om en from voting, that w ere used to deny N ative Americans the right to speak their own languages, to live in their own homes, even to survive as human beings. That is the nature o f the opposition we face today, that we will face tom orrow, next week, next month and next year. They will attempt to deny basic medical care to immigrants; they will attempt to deprive im poverished people striving to bu i Id a better life for their fam ilies o f oppor­ tunities for education, em ploym ent, and of every basic human dignity. But we will meet that opposition with organization, com m itm ent, dedication, and voices raised in support o f justice! Sen. Avel Gordly represents northeast and southeast Portland in the O regon L eg­ islature. The Portland Observer welcomes freelance submissions. Manuscripts and photographs should be clearly labeled and will be returned if accompanied by a self addressed envelope. 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V W e fill p r e s c r ip tio n s — in c lu d in g a n tib io tic s , h ig h b lo o d p re s s u re m e d ic a tio n s , a n ti- d e p re s s a n ts , b irth c o n tro l, a n d m o re . ✓ W e h a v e k n o w le d g e a b le , frie n d ly p h a r m a c is ts w h o h a v e th e tim e to s h a re in fo r m a tio n . ✓ O u r p r ic e s a re c o m p e titiv e . W e a c c e p t m o s t in s u r a n c e p la n s a n d a re a d d in g o th e r s a s re q u e s te d . ✓ W e s p e c ia liz e in c u s t o m c o m p o u n d in g Y O U R L O C A L L Y O W N E D . N E IG H B O R H O O D P H A R M A C Y AT ARBO R LO D G E N IN T E R S T A T E A V E N U E A P O R T L A N D B L V D SO 3.4 8 7 4 8 4 8 • W W W N E W S E A S O N S M A R K E T C O M M O N -F R I A p ril 5, 2006 • S A T O a m 6 p m • S U N 10 a m 4 p m There I was on my way to the End-the-War, Begin-the-Peace rally on March 19. A rally that I would later learn was one of the largest protests in Portland history and the largest anti-war rally in the world. I was feeling excited to know that soon I would be standing side-by- side with people of other communities, including my own. I just knew that people of my community would come out in full force to show support for the troops fighting the war in Iraq. A war that 's under the Bush and Cheney administration. A war that’s taking money from healthcare, education and children here in the United States. A war that’s killing not only men and women, but children in Iraq. And a war that is making the rich, richer while the working class and the poor fall more and more into poverty. To my amazement, there was only about 75 to 100 Afro Americans that attended the rally. A rally that was so important to all people. We as a community must show our support for the troops that’s fighting on the front lines giving up their young lives. We must band together and have our voice heard against this outrageous war. We cannot just talk among each other about the wrongdoings of Bush and Cheney. We must take a stand against Bush and Cheney. 1 was expecting to see church group after church group, organization after organization from the community. Other than the Freedom Socialist Party of Portland and Rev. LeRoy Haynes Jr. of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, out of 160 organizations, 1 did not see one organization from my community. We must come together to fight against Bush who not only breaks the law but feels as if he’s above the law. We must fight the Bush Administration with whatever we got, and that’s the power of the people from the young to the old. We the people of the community must organize from church to church, from organization to organization. We must work together before our loved ones and friends return home in a casket. There is power within the people. Stand up and believe in yourself. Revolution is right here in the U.S. It’s time to take it to the government. It’s time to make a change. What we do today will be based on what will happen tomorrow. Power to the people. Gary Clay Sr., Northeast Portland Do Illegal Immigrants Really Take Our Jobs? The young black man hesitated as he stood outside the small furniture manufacturing shop in South Los Angeles. He was dressed neatly, and he was well groomed. He eyed the building warily. The sign on the narrow glass door in English and Spanish, read "help wanted” and trabajo aqui. The opening was for a shop helper, mostly to sweep up and do routine clean up and maintenance. Il did not require any education or special skill. It paid minimum wage, as did the thousands of shops that dotted the area. The company had no employee health care plan, or other benefits. After a moment he went in and politely asked for an application. The petite receptionist, a young Latina, handed him an application form, with an airy nonchalance. She curtly suggested that he fill it out and bring it back. When he asked if there would be an interview, she haltingly said only if there was a position open. The young man looked perplexed, glanced at the help wanted sign, politely thanked her and left. A couple of hours later two other young Latinos came in to apply. One was immediately hired. The other was told that another helper job might open up within the next few days. However, the workers in the shop, as they were in nearly all the other shops in the area were Latinos, a large percentage of who were illegal immigrants. There were no other blacks, whites, or even English speaking native- born Latino workers in the plant or at few of the other shops in the area. This is not a fictional story. I personally witnessed the scene at the company involving the black job seeker. Anti-illegal immigration activ­ ists say that the experience of the young black job seeker has played out thousands of times at restaurants, hotels, on farms, and at manufacturing plants nationally, and that this is a major reason so many young black males are unemployed join gangs, deal drugs and pack America’s jails. Congress will hammer out a comprehensive immigration reform law. But it w on't answer this question: Do the estimated I Oto 12 million illegal immigrants in the country take jobs from American citizens, especially the bottom rung American workers, the young, the poor and more often than not African-American workers? What if the young black job seeker, or any other American looking for work in a low end manufacturing plant or a restaurant in Los Angeles, were offered that job which probably pays minimum wage and doesn't offer any benefits or job security? Would he take it? Maybe yes, maybe no. It’s certainly hard to imagine that a young black from South Los Angeles, South Chicago, or Harlem, not to mention a native born young white or Latino going out to the fields to pick strawberries for 10 to 12 hours a day in the hot sun at minimum or even sub-minimum wages. Or, that they'd take a job at a car wash or bus dishes in a restaurant. But what if the farm contractors, car wash owners, and manufacturers paid a living wage and provided benefits. It might be a different story, at least for some young people in Los Angeles. Then there’s the regional factor. There is some evidence that young workers will work jobs in the South and the Midwest. Jobs that have long been designated as jobs that only illegal immigrants will work, that is if those jobs were offered to them. But when employers give the quick brush-off to young blacks and other young American workers that are willing to take lower end jobs, they send the not-so-suhtle message that they are not wanted or welcome. This is a powerful disincentive for them to pursue work in these taboo areas of the job market. The end result is that an entire category of jobs at the ground rung of American industry is clearly marked as “Latino only.” The fight over jobs and illegal immigration came at the worst possible time for the urban poor. Shrinking federal and state budgets for job training and creation programs, industry downsizing, and escalating crime and violence in inner city neighbor­ hoods made banks and corporations even more reluctant to invest in these communities, and that made the job situation even worse. Earl Ofari Hutchinson, RlackNews.com