January 30. 2013 ®t'e ^ o r t la n h (©beeruer Page 7 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. How We Can Truly Honor Dr. King U ri n 4-1«.^ Redeeming the soul of America za by M arian W right E delman In his last Sun­ day serm o n at W ashington N a­ tional Cathedral, Dr. King retold the parable of the rich man Dives who ignored the poor and sick man Lazarus who came every day seek­ ing crumbs from Dives’ table. Dives went to hell, Dr. King said, not because he was rich but be­ cause he did not realize his wealth was his opportunity to bridge the gulf separating him from his brother and allowed Lazarus to become in­ visible. He warned this could hap­ pen to rich America, “if we don’t use her vast resources to end poverty and make it possible for all of God’s children to have the basic necessi­ ties of life.” At his death in 1968, when he was calling with urgency for an end to poverty in our nation, there were 25.4 million poor Americans includ­ ing 11 million poor children and our Gross Domestic Product was $4.13 trillion. Tndav there thprp are » i - az 46.2 IA 9 million poor « .... Today nation’s tax subsidies, loopholes cation practices that push them out were killed by guns in 1968 - includ­ people including 16.1 million poor and bailouts to feed and house and of school and towards prison, and ing the lives o f approxim ately children and our GDP is three times educate our children and employ efforts to undermine the hard earned 148,000 children and teens. larger. Twenty million of our neigh­ their parents. right to vote. Let’s not return to Jim Let’s honor Dr. King by standing bors are living in extreme poverty Let’s honor and follow Dr. King Crow shenanigans that strangled up and doing whatever is required including 7.3 million children. by naming and changing the con­ our democracy far too long. for as long as needed to break the Disgracefully children are the tin u in g rac ial d isp a ritie s, Let’s honor and follow Dr. King political grip o f the National Rifle poorest age group in America and undergirded by poverty, that place by building a beloved community in Association and their allies who the younger they are the poorer one in three black and one in six America where all have enough to seek to add more guns to the ap­ they are and one in four preschool Hispanic boys bom in 2001 at risk of children are poor. More than one in prison in their lifetimes. Incarcera­ eat, a place to sleep, enough work at proximately 300 million in circula­ decent wages to support a family, tion and continuing production and three black children and the same tion is the new American apartheid. buy a home, raise children, and send sales of assault weapons and high proportion of Latino children are Let’s reroute our children into a them to public schools that empower volume ammunition magazines that poor. Children have suffered most pipeline to college and productive children with hope, confidence and should not be in the hands o f civil- since the recession began. work to compete with children from skills for the future. lans. I have no doubt that Dr. King China and India. Let’s truly honor Dr. King by The day after Dr. King was shot, would be mounting a nonviolent Let’s honor and follow Dr. King transforming our education system I went into riot tom Washington, poor people campaign to end ram­ by speaking truth to power and that sentences millions of children D.C. neighborhoods and schools pant hunger, homelessness, and demanding justice for poor and to social and economic death by urging children not to loot, get ar­ poverty today. vulnerable children with urgency failing to prepare them and our coun­ rested and ruin their futures. A young Let s honor Dr. King by our com­ and persistence and effective non­ try for the future. That a majority of black boy about 12 looked me mitted action to end child poverty violent direct actions to bring our all children in all income and racial squarely in the eyes and said, “Lady, and close the morally obscene gulf nation back from the brink of self between rich and poor in our nation destruction fueled by the unbridled groups and 76 percent of black and what future? I ain’t got no future. I Hispanic children cannot read or ain’t got nothing to lose.” Let us where the 400 highest income earn­ greed of the few and a military bud­ compute at grade level in fourth and followDr. King by provingthat boy’s ers made as much as the combined get that dwarfs our early childhood e ig h th g rad es is a th re a t to truth wrong in our militarily power­ tax revenues of 22 state govern­ development budget where the real America’s future economic and mili­ ful, materially rich, but too spiritu­ ments with42 million citizens in2008, security of our nation lies. tary strength. ally poor nation. and the wealthiest top 1 percent L et’s honor and follow Dr. King Let’s honor Dr. King by ensuring Dr. King is not coming back. It’s hold more net wealth than the bot­ by stopping the resurgence of racial every child’s safety and right to live up to us to redeem the soul o f tom 90 percent combined. and incom e segregation in our by ending the epidemic gun vio­ America. He told us what to do. The rich don’t need another tax schools, unfair treatment of chil­ lence in our nation that has snuffed Let’s do it. break and they need to give back dren of color with zero tolerance out more than 1.3 million American Marian Wright Edelman is presi­ some of their unfair share of our school discipline and special edu­ lives since he and Robert Kennedy dent o f the Children's Defense Fund. of Times and the Worst of Times Equality and justice in America by C harles J. O gletree J r . With the death o f Trayvon M ar­ tin nearly a year ago, many won­ dered whether there could be any justice in America. The indictment o f George Zimmerman and the sub­ sequent focus on the shooting death o f Trayvon Martin has set the legal process to take its course in the near future. In looking at the overall state of race and justice in America, clearly a lot o f progress has been made. On Nov. 4,2008, the United States elected its first African-American President, Barack Obama, who is ju st beginning his second term. Clearly, the job of equality and jus­ tice is not the job of one man. But, since his election, President Obama has taken a number of steps that make the state of race and justice a positive one. If we simply look at the Supreme Court, which decides much of our legal issues that impact us greatly, the President has had the opportunity to appoint two people. And on both occa­ sions, he appointed women; including a woman of color. W hen we look at the United States Circuit Courts, which are one step away from the United States Supreme Court, President Obama has appointed the first Afri­ can-American for Mississippi to the Fifth Circuit; an African-American with Haitian connections to the Second Circuit; the first woman in Massachusetts to the First Circuit; and an African-American woman to the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals. This only begins to show the diversity and quality of his appoint­ ments. More importantly, the Presi­ dent - in his first term - persuaded Congress to support a $787 billion stim u lu s p a ck a g e, has had healthcare approved, and prevailed in the Supreme Court on protection of rights of immigrants. These suc­ cesses reveal the commitment to the state o f ju stic e , eq u ality , and progress in our country. Despite the progress of the past four years, there is still much work to be done. We still have a problem in terms of employment, housing, and an increasing negative reflection on the African-American presence in the criminal justice system. While many of these issues are influenced by local and state legis­ *** Jlort lattò CObsrmer Rakeem Washington E xecutive D irector : P u blish er : E d ito r : M ark Washington M ic h a e l L e ig h to n C reative D irector : P a u l N e u fe ld t O ffice M anager /C lassifieds : Lucinda A dvertising : Established 1970 lation, they are still troubling when you see the African-American un­ employment rates in double digits, housing foreclosures increasing, and the state of equality in our crimi­ nal justice system that leaves all of us at peril. The good news, of course, is that under the leadership o f Attorney General Eric Holder, the first Afri­ can-American Attorney General, the disparity between powder cocaine and crack cocaine has been reduced from 100 to 1 to 18 to 1. This is a step in the right direction. But leveling the playing field to a 1 to 1 ratio is still necessary. And we hope that will be accomplished in the coming years. President Obama has made clear his views on the kinds of justices he wants for the courts, what kinds of tax cuts he wants, as well as his views on a woman's right to choose, immigration, and now, stricter gun laws. Voters carefully assessed and made their decision for themselves and for their children and grandchil­ dren for generations to come. In conclusion, it is the best of times and the worst of times. We have made a lot of progress on many issues, but the job is not done. Charles Ogletree Jr. is the Jesse Climenko P rofessor o f Law at Harvard Law School and execu­ tive director and founder o f the Charles Hamilton Houston Insti­ tute fo r Race and Justice. --------------- 47 47 NE Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd., Portland, OR 97211 USPS 959-680 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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