THE THEATER OF THE ABSURD
Friday, November 16, 2007 at 12:51PM The flap in Portland over the naming of a street for Cesar Chavez is much ado about nothing. Cesar Chavez, Martin Luther King, Jr. or Rosa Parks did not live their exemplary lives to have a street named in their honor. They each lived their lives so that a person would be judged by the content of their character, not the color of their skin.
The debate over this issue trivializes the life of a great leader. And it diminishes the attention that needs to be paid to larger issues of social and economic justice in Portland, the state of Oregon and the nation. Frankly, it's time to get over it and deal with the substantive not merely symbolic issues.
Do the handpicked or self-appointed "leaders" of the Latino community up in arms about his issue represent the interests of those who are cooks or servers in area restaurants, those who work as domestic workers in local hotels or colleges, those who harvest the products on the farms near us or those who work in the construction industry?
There is a national debate over whether resident aliens, legal or illegal, should have a driver's license. When Hillary Clinton, the frontrunner in the Democratic party race for the presidential nomination, can simply say "NO" to the answer of whether aliens should have access to a driver's license aren't we letting her off the hook?
Our own Governor has made the case for some type of "special" or "provisional" license for part-time residents. That makes a lot of sense. After all, do we really want people driving around in Portland or the metro suburbs without a driver's licence? How are they going to get to work?
RAD lives in Washington County the home of thousands of Latinos, native born Oregonians and resident aliens, both legal and illegal. I want to know there is some assurance that the person driving a car, truck or tractor on highway 47 or 26 has some concept of how to drive safely and what the rules of the road are.
Given the hysteria over the immigration issue it's easy to demagogue the issue by just saying "NO". But unless Hillary Clinton and her Republican opponents join Barack Obama in a reality check - just saying "NO" is really a code word for racism not unlike Richard Nixon's use of the phrase "law and order" in the 1968 presidential campaign.
So if the city council of Portland and Latino leaders want to step up - pick a truly important issue. In the meantime, how about re-naming Portland's Park Blocks as Cesar Chavez Park Blocks? No addresses need to be changed, no street signs need to be changed.
It's time the adults ended this food fight!
R.A.D. |
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