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March 27, 2006

“You Bug So Much You Woke Up The Sleeping Giant”

Antonio'sviewlisten130  Antonio'sviewbridge130  Antonio'sviewopen130

Back in 2001, in working with the first Villaraigosa mayoral campaign to create a series of identifying web and print graphics, we imagined a different character for L.A.’s City Hall.

The vision involved an emphasis on listening, openness and the capacity to build bridges between radically disparate communities. Plenty of marketing hype? Sure. Still, we were already identifying with what would surely be going through the mind of that kid on the balcony (lower right, below) as he marveled at this crowd.

Latimmigration

In studying not just dozens of newswire photos, but also hundreds of pro and amateur Flickr shots of L.A.’s massive pro-immigration rally on Saturday, there was one attribute that stood out for me more than any other.

Immigrationpatriotism

Yes, the patriotism. (I understand the crowds were encouraged to wear white and bring American flags. Still, surveying the images from protests across the country, it seemed more than a natural and fitting gesture.)

Let’s just say, however, that not everyone appreciated the impact of the day.

Nytimmigrationnumbers

For example, the NYT did an immigration story on its front page Sunday, but it wasn’t focused on the street. Instead, it looked at the political quandary Republicans (such as Texas Senator John Cornyn) are facing over the immigration issue. As has been consistent lately, The Times managed to lend extra compassion to the arch-conservatives. But on top of that, The Times not only relegated Saturday’s rallies to a passing interest, it stated that the L.A. event only drew some “tens of thousands.”

(A conservative estimate by the police settled on 500,000. Organizers, however, believe the actually number was closer to a million. …I should also add, by the way, there wasn’t a single reported arrest.)

As impressive as the L.A. rally was, however, one critique of the event was how much it was ultimately brown. Martini Republic (via blogging.la) pushes the point rather hard, lashing out at L.A. bloggers for not getting more excited or involved, even musing whether “most Anglo bloggers took the [day] to shop at Home Depot … while the parking lots were clear.”

In this regard, I was interested in the fact that Sunday, simultaneous with its rally coverage, The LA Times happened to be running an extensive feature about power in L.A., and the history of The LA Times.

Disneyhallstrikers

If this shot accompanied the former story, it could have also informed the latter.
Yes, the political composition of Los Angeles and its political establishment is comparatively liberal. Considering this 2003 image of striking janitors on Bunker Hill, however, you can almost feel a dividing line between L.A.’s working poor on one side of the street, and its cultural elite (represented by Frank Gehry’s soaring Disney Concert Hall) on the other.

(Title Credit: Eecue.com with photo)

(illustrations: Michael Shaw/BAGnewsnotes.com.  photo 1:  Gina Ferazzi/L.A. Times. March 26th, 2006.  p. A1.  photo 2: eecue (Dave Bullock). http://eecue.com/ Via blogging.la.  original version here.  photo 3: Brian Vander Brug/L.A. Times.  March 26th, 2006.  p. A24.)

  • marysz

    At least here in the east, the media is giving more coverage to the protests in France than to the pro-immigration marches here in the US. The US media prefers to gloat over political protests in places like Western Europe and ignore what goes on at home. One hundred years ago, it was waves of immigrants just off the boat from Russia, Italy and Eastern Europe who had native-born Americans in a snit. Poor people are on the move again and, in demonstrations like this weekend’s, they make themselves visible in a way that the larger culture finds extremely unsettling.

  • Cactus

    I can’t seem to get the above photos in focus….guess my computer’s inner geek is asleep.
    Several years ago, California had a ballot proposition about immigration and there were large demonstrations against it then, too. However, the demonstrators showed Mexican and Central/South American flags. The backlash was predictable. Looks like they’ve learned from that experience.

  • http://www.woodka.com donna

    Good. I hope they’re totally ignoring the protest marches, strikes and what-not. I hope they’re also ignoring that Dems are signing up these Latinos in droves to vote….

  • itwasnt me

    An immigrant Latina friend of mine (from El Salvador illigal in 1982, a citizen now) whispered her pride about the march to me at her daughter’s Quincinera Saturday night. Her take: think about how much money all the people were losing by marching instead of working (about 30-40 million is my take, conservatively). This willingness to put their money where their feet march should be noted when considering the impact on the immigrant community, and should be noted by government, as well. But perhaps nobody in the current administration knows any immigrants…

  • lytom

    Many fronts does not mean disunity!
    There is a hope and a great example of people power for antiwar movement….Both have same goal to fight repression.
    The disadvantaged demanding equal rights, sounds just right to me.

  • jt from BC

    MARYSZ, thanks for the link, page 2, “A British cartoon pokes fun at the American president and his wavering policy toward Mexico.” A skilled Mr. BAG update on a Lilaputian theme perhaps ?
    We’ve heard ad nauseam about:
    Rose Revolution of Georgia. (symbol of nonviolence)
    Orange Revolution of Ukraine, (Orange-clad supporters)
    “Cedar Revolution” is a term that was coined by the U.S. Under Secretary of State for Global Affairs Paula J. Dobriansky. (tree featured on the flag) http://www.state.gov/g/rls/rm/2005/42793.htm
    The opposition took as its SYMBOL, the white and red scarf, and the pro-Hariri blue ribbon.
    “Purple Revolution” is W’s symbolic Iraqi finger.(there is a more appropriate digit however !!!)
    http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2005/02/20050224-1.html
    How about:
    ‘American Patriotic “White” Revolution’, by mostly tanned people is my take on this massive demonstration, it was much larger and longer on CBC TV than shown on US TV networks.
    Hopefully it will inspire anti-war protesters as noted by LYTOM.
    Living in Mexico for many years I KNOW what 1/4 or 1/2 of “about 30-40 million” $$$ represents, as suggested by a friend of ITWAS’T ME.

  • http://mdhatter.blogspot.com mdhatter

    Immigrants are ideal Americans.
    and these protests are brilliant.

  • http://happening-here.blogspot.com/ janinsanfran

    For LOTS of pictures from the immigration protests in the San Francisco area, see see this post:
    http://happening-here.blogspot.com/2006/03/hunger-strike-for-justice-for.html
    Also this one:
    http://snipurl.com/ob5j
    This is not politics as usual. For the marchers, the notion that the workers who do the dirty work are criminals is profoundly immoral.

  • http://www.futurebird.com futurebird

    I just want to say: this issue is complex. It’s not just “pro-immigrant” and “anti-immigrant” — the legislation currently on the table will create two classes of us citizens… it’s modern day slavery.. I just don’t see this distinction being made — well except for the “many fronts” aspect of it.

  • http://www.futurebird.com futurebird

    At the same time, business groups have been pressing him to go further by supporting legislation that would put their illegal workers on the road to citizenship.
    And the longer they stay on the road the better from the business perspective– This is all about money– it’s not the workers or ordinary americans.