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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
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- From: ww%nyxfer%igc.apc.org@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu (Workers World Service)
- Subject: "A Job Is a Right" Campaign Opens
- Message-ID: <1992Dec19.232736.21737@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Organization: The NY Transfer News Service
- Resent-From: "Rich Winkel" <MATHRICH@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu>
- Date: Sat, 19 Dec 1992 23:27:36 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 103
-
- Via The NY Transfer News Service * All the News that Doesn't Fit
-
-
- "WE NEED JOBS!"--RALLY OPENS NATIONAL CAMPAIGN
-
- By Rebeca Toledo
- New York City
-
- Although it was cold, the A Job is a Right Campaign held a rally
- in front of the Employment Center in the heart of a busy shopping
- district here Dec. 14th.
-
- As the speaker's platform, table, and signs went up, a banner was
- unfurled. It read: "Clinton, we need jobs! Necesitamos trabajos!"
- The rally was called to coincide with President-elect Bill
- Clinton's "economic summit" in Arkansas.
-
- As activists gave out leaflets and circulated a petition to
- demand "Jobs Now," speakers took the microphone to expose the
- Clinton farce. Co-chair Larry Holmes said: "Clinton, there are
- countless things that you can do in your first days in office.
- With a stroke of a pen, you could force the corporations to stop
- firing and start hiring."
-
- People coming out of the Employment Center started to gather
- around, as did passersby.
-
- Holmes continued, "Clinton, you could extend jobless benefits,
- enact a national health insurance program, and declare a
- moratorium on evictions, heat and utility shut-offs, cutting
- people off welfare, among other things." The crowd cheered in
- agreement.
-
- Teresa Gutierrez, who co-chaired, then took the mike and said in
- Spanish: "Clinton is meeting today with rich bankers and
- companies to discuss our fate. But we're here today to say that
- no matter what program for the rich Clinton comes up with, we
- will be out here every day.
-
- "We will have protests against racism and poverty on Dr. Martin
- Luther King's birthday. And we will keep up the pressure."
-
- From the Jobs for Youth Network, Albert Ramos said in both
- Spanish and English: "There are no unemployed, no youth, no poor
- people meeting with Clinton today. People in the Black, Latino,
- Asian, Arab, women's, and lesbian and gay communities have no
- confidence in Clinton.
-
- "That is why we will be holding demonstrations and rallies across
- the country the week of April 25-May 1. It will be 100 days into
- Clinton's presidency and the anniversary of the L.A. rebellions
- that took place after the hideous Rodney King verdict."
-
- "We'll Be Back"
-
- The A Job is a Right Campaign is affiliated with the Movement for
- a Peoples Assembly. MPA activists such as David Perez also spoke.
- He said: "What we need is a rise in the minimum wage to at least
- ten dollars an hour. We need jobs, but at decent pay, regardless
- of whether we're young or elderly, handicapped or undocumented."
- The swelling crowd clapped in approval.
-
- Paul Ahuja, an unemployed youth told his story. "I played by the
- rules," he said. "I joined the Army, expecting to get money for
- college, but it wasn't enough to cover the cost. So I had to
- leave school to look for a job, and haven't found one yet. What
- the youth need is real job training and affordable education, not
- more jails and police brutality."
-
- MPA activist Jelayne Miles then spoke. She said: "I know people
- want to believe in Clinton, to think that this is the man who is
- going to turn all the misery and poverty around. But, sisters and
- brothers, Clinton is not the man. He will continue to bleed us as
- did Reagan and Bush before him, unless we stop him. Join us in
- launching the A Job is a Right Campaign here and across the
- country."
-
- Campaign steering committee member Monica Moorehead said, "This
- campaign will demand of Clinton a massive public works program
- especially in the areas of health care, education, child care,
- and care for the elderly."
-
- Ashanti Morningstar, organizer for the MPA, linked the struggle
- here with the struggle abroad. Morningstar said: "Why does the
- U.S. send 30,000 troops to Somalia? It is not for humanitarian
- reasons, but to dominate a small African nation. We need that
- money spent here at home, not for war against the people of
- Somalia."
-
- As the rally came to a close and Campaign organizers began taking
- down materials, people who had listened throughout the rally
- asked if the activists would be back next week. Veronica Golos,
- who had staffed the busy table answered, "We'll be back every
- week for as long as it takes to get--jobs now!"
-
- (Copyright Workers World Service: Permission to reprint granted if
- source is cited. For more info contact Workers World, 46 W. 21
- St., New York, NY 10010; email: ww%nyxfer@igc.apc.org; "workers"
- on PeaceNet; on Internet: "workers@mcimail.com".)
-
-
- NY Transfer News Service * All the News that Doesn't Fit
- Modem: 718-448-2358 * Internet: nytransfer@igc.apc.org
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