Minority & Small Business Week Page A4 September 26, 2007 O pinion Opinion articles do not necessarily reflect or represent the views o f The Portland Observer Stopping Injustice in its Tracks by J udge G reg M athis L ast T hursday, thousands o f black A m ericans gathered in the sm all town o f Jena, Louisiana to support the teenagers who have com e to be known as the Jena 6. The scene was rem iniscent o f a 1960s freedom m arch and many o f those old-school leaders, includ­ ing Reverends Jesse Jackson and A1 Sharpton. But there were also som e new faces. Young faces. All excited to play a part in making sure injustice is stopped in its tracks. The Jena6 may have unwittingly sparked the next big youth m ove­ ment in the African-American com ­ munity. And it's about time. We have been waiting for more o f our young people to get active. The Jena 6 are a group of black teenagers who have been arrested and charged with crimes related to their alleged involvement in the as­ sault - many say it no more than a high school fight - o f a white teen­ ager in December o f last year. The K - x dents only received three days o f in­ school suspension. The six are accused of beating and knocking a white teen uncon­ scious. The teen was treated at the hospital and later that evening at- The Jetta 6 may have unwittingly sparked the next big ■ youth movement in the African- American community. And it's fight w as one o f many racially charged events that occurred in the town after white students hung three nooses from a tree on the Jena High School campus. Those white stu- tended an event at the high school. Five o f the students involved in the alleged attack - Robert Bailey, Jr., Mychal Bell, Carwin Jones, Bryant Purvis, and Theo S h a w -a llo f whom were 1 7 - adults under Louisiana law not have been tried as an adult. - were initially charged with assault. T hough charges stand against the Jesse Ray Beard was 14 at the time others, they have also been re­ and was charged as a juvenile. The duced. If not for the intense and consis­ district attorney later increased the assault charges to attem pted sec­ tent public outcry against the biased ond degree murder. Many o f the treatment these six young people tow n's black residents, and many were receiving, Mychal Bell may have across America, believed the in­ received a sentence of up to 20 years creased charges were di spropor- on Sept. 20. Instead, our people - tionate to the crim e and were young and old - traveled to Jena and put the town on notice: black Ameri­ racially motivated. In June, on the first day o f can youth will stand up and fight for M ychal B ell’s trial, the district justice. There are many reasons why our attorney reduced the charges. D espite conflicting w itness ac­ young people haven’t been as ac­ counts on w hether or not he was tive or as conscious as they should involved in the attack, Bell was have. Perhaps they believed no good found guilty. O n Sept. 14, B ell’s would com e o f it. Conditions for conviction was overturned w hen a many are the same today as they Louisiana court decided he should were 40 years ago. Or, maybe they thought the old-guard w ouldn’t ac­ cept them. Many of our m ore estab­ lished leaders have been reluctant to pass the torch. W hatever the rea­ sons, the dem onstration in Jena shows us that a new day is dawning. Young black people played a key role in promoting the march and rally on social networking sites such as Facebook and MySpace. They sent emails and text messages to their friends, clueing them in on every development in the case. Their orga­ nizing style may not look that o f years past, but it is real and it is effective. L et’s hope it continues. Judge Greg M athis is national vice president o f Rainbow PU SH and a national board m em ber o f the S o u th ern C h ristia n L ea d ersh ip Conference. Wrong Turn on Equality }Tut>Y p W SLACK'S TH r £ e TIMES M ope lító L Y To RíCENÉ ABH ormaut hish - cosv THAU W i l e Bottfc'NPg? HOOPS ARE SO MUCH HIGHER. F or . A R io tH - AAttRÙANS?.'. 'Jena 6 ’ protest shows new day dawning ..BEMUSE- 'NHtTV MeR '-AlVf 3UM?/ z X a J Supreme Court erodes gains by M arian W right E delman The July 28th Supreme C ourt decision to strike dow n voluntary school integration plans in L ou­ isville and Seattle, will erode gains in racial equal­ ity won through landm ark court cases and the struggle by A m eri­ cans o f all races in the C ivil Rights M ovem ent. The action by the conservative five- justice majority assaults both the spirit and intent o f the W arren Court's 1954 Brown v. Board o f Education desegrega­ tion ruling, w hich had a dom ino effect o f undoing legally sanctioned racial apart­ heid in all aspects o f A merican life. A lthough low er courts had upheld both L ouisville's and Seattle's volun­ tary plans, w hich achieved diversity using race as one of the criteria for school p lace­ ment, the H igh C ourt ruled both plans unconstitutional. C hief Justice John Roberts, jo in e d by Ju stices S calia, T h o m a s a n d A lito , sa id boards o f education cannot take the race o f an individual student into account to help foster racial integration o f schools. W riting for the m ajority, Roberts stated, "To achieve a system o f determ ining adm ission to public schools on a non- racial basis is to stop assigning stu­ dents on a racial basis." T he practical im plication o f Robert's reasoning is that if A m ericans w ere only "colorblind" in im plem enting so­ cial, econom ic and political policies, the problem o f racial bias w ould go away. T his is naive at best. A s a society, we are not at the point w here we can rely on individuals to m ake colorblind decisions on a range of matters. Justice Stephen B reyer w as right in his dissent to call this ruling a radical step aw ay from settled law. W riting on b eh alf o f him self and Justices Stevens, S outer and G insburg, Justice Breyer asserted that race-conscious consider­ ations can be valuable tools in "eradi­ cating earlier school segregation, bring­ ing about integration o r preventing ret­ ro gression." T he Court's ruling will now throw many school districts and local com m u­ nities into confusion, stripping m any o f the tools used for decades to im plem ent voluntary antidiscrim ination m easures. It also will open the door to re-litigation o f other established integration plans. T he legacy o f 250 years o f slavery and a century o f segregation laws are still w ith us. W e sim ply have not com e far enough that we can dis­ pense w ith any rem edies to end discrim ination. In A m erica, where nearly all o f us are descended from people who cam e to these shores from other lands, many in desperation and many in chains, laws that protect m inorities are as vital as our founding principles, how ever poorly honored in practice. Racial, ethnic and cultural diversity are essential elem ents o f our national character as is the equal protection o f the law guaranteed by the Fourteenth A m endm ent-a m ore solid bedrock o f A m erica's quest for ju stice for all. T he idea that w e no longer have to ~ As a society, we are not at the point where we can rely on individuals to make colorblind decisions on a range o f matters. Voting Rights Denied D.C. residents deserve representation N ational Urban League Presi­ dent M arc H. M orial issued the fo llow ing statem ent after the U. S. Senate last week fa ile d to stop a filib u ste r o f the proposed D.C. H ouse Voting Rights Act: By a slim three-vote m argin, the Senate failed to overcom e a filibuster by a m inority o f sena­ tors (including Sen. Gordon Smith-R-Ore.), that kept the measure from proceeding to a vote on the floor, a m ajor setback in a decades-long fight to secure congressional representation for the nation's capital. This was the first filibuster o f a voting rights bill since the era o f segregation. D istrict o f C olum bia residents pay taxes, serve on ju ries and fight and die in our nation's wars. Yet, despite this, they have had their hopes o f gaining congressional rep­ resentation stalled so close to the finish line. Residents o f our nation's capital deserve their constitutional right to representation now, something that has been long enjoyed by all Americans residing outside D.C. W ith­ out a full voice in Congress, they are merely second-class citizens. Crafted as a com prom ise, the legislation would add tw o seats in the U.S. H ouse - one for D.C. and the other for U tah, the next state expected to get a new seat. It enjoyed support from both sides o f the aisle and easily passed through the U.S. H ouse last April. It is sham eful that in this day and age, a small g ro u p o f United States Senators would filibuster a voting rights bill. It is ironic and sad that D C residents, once again, had their rights denied by a body in w hich they are not represented. I u rg e th e S e n a te to sto p b lo c k in g A m e ric a n s ' r ig h t to v o te an d re v is it th is issu e d u rin g th is s e ssio n o f C o n ­ g re ss. D .C . r e s id e n ts d e s e rv e v o tin g rig h ts now ! Featuring Breaking Down the Walls Tour Featuring The Light, Rajime Uprooted Gospel Show 503-652-8100 take affirm ative m easures to preserve civil rights is no m ore valid than the idea that we no longer have to take strong m easures to uphold the First A m end­ m ent or any o f our liberties. T here have been num erous ch al­ lenges to o u r rights o f free speech, freedom o f assem bly, and freedom o f the press over the last 200 years. Just as those fundam ental, charter freedom s require preservation, so do the protec­ tions o f racial equality arising from the Fourteenth A m endm ent, the Brow n decision and the Civil Rights Acts. I am appalled that C hief Justice Rob­ erts suggested his ruling w as faithful to the heritage o f Brown. Roberts got it wrong. Brow n was crafted to elim inate racial separation. The Roberts court overturned school integration plans that sought to achieve racial diversity in the classroom . It is my hope that those w ho now sit on the Suprem e C ourt will co m ­ mit them selves to advancing justice and building bridges betw een those o f different racial and incom e groups-not burning those bridges. M arian W right Edelm an is p re si­ d en t o f the C hildren's D efense Fund. ^503-922-0006 (Uprooted Black Americans For Life and Precious Children of Portland On the Scene with Tickets and Giveaways email dennish@kpdq.com Interview with Loca, and National Recording Artists Invite all for 40 Days for Life from September 26,h to November 4th by The UR Community Calendar Prayer & Fasting Vigil at MLK Blvd. and Beech St. Community Outreach Make a Difference and stop Planned Parenthood, the nation’s largest abortion provider, from putting a large three-story abortion facility at Beech & MLK. Sponsored by: Bamboo Lifestyles / Portland Observer www.mog7sodety.com Please come to special vigil on Wednesday, September 26th from 5:00pm till Dark u jre e te i > I I