March II. 2009 Page A4 O pinion Opinion articles do not necessarily represent the views o f the Portland Observer. We welcome reader essays, photos and story ideas. Submit to news@ portlandobserver. com. New Orleans Still Struggling Hold government leaders accountable by J udge G reg M athis Most people, locals, tourists and the media alike, see the city of New Orleans in two distinct and separate lights: pre- Katrina and post-Katrina. Indeed, the city that stood before the flood waters rushed in, killing thousands and causing billions of dollars in damage is decidedly differ­ ent. And many doubt it will ever be the same. To see New Orleans now, if you knew it before, is like see­ ing it for the first time. Pre-Katrina, New Orleans had black folk and it had white folk - mostly black folk - with a small Vietnamese popula­ tion. Now, nearly four years later, there is a growing Latino population, made up of mostly day workers and their families who traveled to the city to find work right after the storm. Many black men in the city feel they are losing out on re­ pair jobs, not to mention low- paying jobs in restaurants and hotels, as the city’s new resi­ dents can be hired at a lower pay rate. Even before the storm. New Orleans wasn’t a captain of in­ dustry. Most people worked for the government, at one of the hospitals or universities or were employed by small busi­ ness owners. Since many small companies chose not to reopen after Katrina, this left many residents out of work, with few prospects for employment. The housing situation is no better. Large developers are working to rebuild the city, but only in more upscale neighbor­ hoods, like Lakeview. While upper middle class residents are getting help sort­ ing out their insurance claims and securing fi­ nancing for big­ ger and fancier hom es, other residents - black and not all of them poor - won­ der why no one has come into their neighbor­ hoods to help them. Why then, with all the problems still plaguing the Big Easy are government funds promised to the city being held up? How is it that thousands of volunteers, and actor Brad Pitt, have been able to repair and build more homes in poor areas of the city than the government that promised to ‘uplift the poor’? Why are charter schools now doing more to educate the city’s children than the local pub­ lic school system? Over the last few years, many politicians used New Orleans as a springboard for their campaigns and pet is­ sues. Now that the votes have been cast, very few have re­ turned to the city to deliver on their promises. Perhaps we should write them and ask when they plan to make good on those verbal checks. The government continues to fail New Orleans, as it fails most urban areas. We showed the world in N ovem ber that we as a people were looking fo r a new type o f leader. We can use that power once again to move our elected officials into action. It is never too late fo r them to do the right thing. Judge Greg Mathis is vice president o f Rainbow PUSH and a board member o f the Southern Christian Leader­ ship Conference. AVON Shop my store: youravon.com/llinder Contact ME Today! Latoya Linder 503-360-2096 Murdock Apology Falls Short Policies and hiring practices must change by News Corp, owner Rupert Murdoch’s state­ ment that his New York Post will endeavor to be more sensitive to the communities it serves is w el­ come, but unfortunately his apol­ ogy fails to answer how the Post will do so. Mr. Murdoch could resolve this unfortunate situation in 15 minutes by meeting to develop substantive measures to ensure that this type of incendiary incident does not happen again. His apology comes only after almost a week of tens of thousands of expressions of outrage and disgust from people across the country. The offenders are still on staff and there are no measures being taken to increase diversity in its newsroom. Mr. Murdoch must take the steps needed to assure that the New York Post can prac­ tice more responsible journalism and truly be sensitive to its community, in the fu­ ture. Murdock’s New York Post and Fox News have a history of racially insensi­ tive reporting. 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One has to wonder how many Hispanic or Af­ rican American reporters and editors are working at the New York Post? Clearly, with more diversity in its news­ rooms, it’s likely the paper would have been able to understand the deeply offen­ sive nature of the cartoon. Our guess is that the numbers are abysmally low for a newspaper serving a city with a popula­ Better to Stimulate Peace than War We have just finished eight job, my savings, and will I have health care and a roof over my years of massive overspending on the military. During this pe­ head by this time next year? In the swirl of this economic riod, more defense dollars Military spending is a jobs loser T om H H astings Our state, like all states, is suf- fering from the e c o n o m ic ‘downturn’ and many of us fear for our livelihoods. With each new day comes more bad news. Will this reach our home, my S It s time to make our economy run on sweat and the bright light o f good ideas. terrorism, which is a far greater threat to far more of us than Osama bin Laden, let’s try to think our way to a bit of an over­ view. START SAVING NOW Pre-Spray Traffic Areas {includes: I small Hallway) 1 Cleaning Area (only) $40.00 tion as diverse as New York. It is hard not to interpret the cartoon, which was juxtaposed to a photo of Presi­ dent Obama, as an encouraging sign to those who would assassinate our 44th president because of the color of his skin. The depiction of two police officers shooting down the primate is deeply trou­ bling to communities who struggle daily with suspicious police killings. The National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives has also condemned the cartoon call­ ing it "despicable, insensitive and easily interpreted as racist." Good police officers all around the country should be dismayed by this slur on their character. Afri­ can Americans have historically been compared to primates as a way to dehumanize the entire group. We were called monkeys while we were being brutally lynched and denied equal civil and human rights. In fact, a 2008 study published by the American Psycho­ logical Association found that an associa­ tion between primates and African Ameri­ cans still exists among many white Ameri­ cans. We hope that Mr. Murdoch will make good on his apology and agree to make the needed changes in the newsroom and its policies. Benjamin Todd Jealous is president and chief executive officer o f the NAACP. The offenders are still on staff and there are no measures being taken to increase diversity in its newsroom. by New Prices Effective May 1,2007 B enjamin Tom» J ealous editor in chief, the cartoonist Sean Delonas has published numerous vile cartoons tinged with racism. Fox News was widely criticized during the elections for calling Michelle Obama “Obama’s baby mama’’ and terming the affectionate and common fist bump be­ tween then-candidate Obama and his wife, a “terrorist fist jab” at a time when death net w o r k Sign your business up Save at Home For you and your employees Contact me to fin d how Michael Churbe 503-528-6012 michael.churbe@dishnetwork.com Your Care Our First Priority' Dr. Marcelitte Failla Chiropractic Physician We are located at 1716 N.E. 42nd Ave. Portland, OR 97213 (Between Broadway and Sandy Blvd.) Automobile accident injuries Chronic headache and joint pain Workers Compensation Cali^o/anappointment! (503) 228-6140 shifted from paying personnel to paying corporate contractors than any other period in U.S. history. While some jobs are created in this way, it turns out that far fewer of them are created than when investments are made in other sectors of the economy like health care, education, mass transit and infrastruc­ ture—thus a net loss of jobs. So we spend on the military and it loses jobs, produces many U.S. casualties, causes massive numbers of dead Iraqi and Afghan civilians, and wrecks infrastructures. Is it any wonder that our economy is drained flat? George “the decider" Bush, a man who inherited the largest surplus ever left us where we sit today. He didn’t even have the guts to include all his wars in his budget, since it would have looked even more lop­ sided than it did. Instead, he came to Congress once or twice each year with a ransom note for hundreds of billions of your dollars. All wasted. All gone. All the worst investment possible. And now, as we sit bloody on the pavement after the crash of the economy, the Pentagon and its contractors have the unimag­ inable gall to tell us how much we need to keep spending on Cold War relics, on overseas bases, and on contractors so no one in the armed forces has to peel a potato. They claim it creates jobs. They think we are unutterably stupid. With ‘protectors’ like these, who needs foreign en­ emies? Oh, that’s right: they do. As someone who works in a field that creates healthy, knowledgeable minds—educa­ tion—and in a field that gener­ ates about twice as many jobs per billion dollars invested as does our war machine, I’d say it's time to crunch the numbers and be the deciders to invest in our nation’s future. Put our money in mass tran­ sit, education, infrastructure and conservation. Support a civil society that can produce good food, efficient transport, excellent health care for all and a new generation of talent to compete in the global market­ place for our goods of life, not our tools of death. It's time to make our economy run on sweat and the bright light of good ideas. Enough blood has been spilled. We can do so much better for ourselves and everyone else. Tom H. Hastings is professor o f conflict resolution at Port­ land State University, director o f Peace Voice, and a founder ofWhitefeather Peace Commu­ nity in Portland.