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Oct 11, 2008 at 07:33 PM
Front Page arrow Opinions arrow Jesse Jackson arrow Divide Us Not
Divide Us Not
Written by Rev. Jesse Jackson, (Columnist), on 02-14-2008 01:11
Favoured 26

Hillary wins Hispanics; Obama wins Blacks.” Increasingly pundits suggest this voting pattern reflects not these candidates, but more permanent divisions. Hispanics and Blacks are rivals, we’re told, reluctant to vote for one another.

Bull. This statement which threatens to become conventional wisdom simply isn’t true. It’s not based on history or on circumstance. Instead of reporting on a division, it threatens to create one that isn’t there.

The reality is Blacks and Hispanics may have come over on different boats, but they are in the same boat now. The housing foreclosures stemming from the subprime crisis hit them the hardest. Blacks and Hispanics were targeted for subprime loans. They are the biggest victims of rapacious mortgage brokers, peddling loans with hidden prepayment fees, or rapidly rising interest rates. They had to reach the farthest to be able to afford a decent house; they are suffering the most when the bottom fell out.

Blacks and Hispanics compete for jobs, particularly among low skilled workers. But that means that they have a shared concern for raising the minimum wage, for guaranteeing paid sick leaves, for enforcing fair labor standards, and occupational health and safety laws. Employers that exploit undocumented workers or trample the rights of workers trying to organize are a shared threat. Now as the US economy slows, Blacks and browns, the last hired, will be the first fired.

Blacks and Hispanics share the same schools, and the same desire for ending the savage inequality of American schools. They strongly support new commitments to high quality education—universal pre-K, after-school programs, skilled teachers, affordable college. And just as Latinos push to learn English, I always urge Blacks to learn Spanish. That is the language of our neighbors, of our key trading partners. Rather than English Only, America will benefit when we become multilingual in a global marketplace.

Black and brown should be an alliance, not a division. Together, we represent the majority in America’s largest cities. We have shared interests, shared agendas and shared neighborhoods. That can lead to tensions, as gangs war over turf. But more unites us than divides us. In fact, there are more Black South Americans than there are Black Americans. The slave ships stopped in South America first.

When we come together, we can win. Dr. King and Cesar Chavez worked together and marched together on the war on poverty. In Chicago, Harold Washington was elected Mayor with the help of Latino voters. In Los Angeles, Antonio Villaraigosa lost his first race for Mayor because the Black community voted for someone whose family had long ties to the community. Villaraigosa worked hard to develop relationships, and won on his second try, with significant African American support. Latinos supported Wellington Webb in Denver; they voted with David Dinkins in New York... They stood with me in 1988. They voted in large numbers for Barack Obama when he ran for the Senate.

In these presidential primaries, Hillary and Bill Clinton are well known in the Latino community; Barack Obama is a relative stranger outside of Illinois. They largely share the same political platform. So it isn’t surprising that Latinos have voted for the candidate they knew rather than the one they were just learning about. Or that Obama’s support in the Latino community has risen as he’s gained more exposure in successive primaries.

So don’t spread the lie that Blacks and browns can’t come together or won’t support one another. We have just begun to forge the coalitions and alliances, to develop the leaders and the agenda that together will make America better.

Reverend Jesse Jackson Sr. n can be contacted by e-mail at

Published in : Op-Ed, Jesse Jackson
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Users' Comments (2)
Posted by Jesse, get you head out of the, on 02-16-2008 01:30,
You said, 
"Black and brown should be an alliance, not a division. Together, we represent the majority in America’s largest cities. We have shared interests, shared agendas and shared neighborhoods. That can lead to tensions, as gangs war over turf. But more unites us than divides us. In fact, there are more Black South Americans than there are Black Americans. The slave ships stopped in South America first." 
 
The Crips have more in common with the Bloods than divid them as well. but their killing one another, nevertheless. Yes, we should come together, but they don't have any incentive to do that when they have a 5 to 1 advantage, and pushing to through legalizing their brothers who are crossing into this country illegally. Look at what's going on in our prisons. wake up.
 

Posted by Wattree, on 02-17-2008 04:53,
Jesse, 
 
With all due respect, good brother, I thing you're looking at what SHOULD BE, as oppose to what is--and of course, you don't have to compete with them for housing or a job.  
 
Brother, I understand your dedication to a Rainbow Coalition, but efficient thought requires that we first, see life as it is, and only then, as we should have it, and the fact is, there is no Black in a raindbow. 
 
Eric L. Wattree
 

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