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Filed: Country: Belarus
Timeline
Posted

The Good Ship Cesar Chavez

by Daniel J. Flynn

Posted 05/23/2011 ET

Christening a Navy ship for Cesar Chavez holds about as much logic as naming a brand of grapes after him. But with Democratic lawmakers seeking to curtail the collective bargaining rights of public-sector unions even in labor strongholds such as Massachusetts, the symbolic gesture makes perfect political sense.

The Obama administration’s decision, announced last week, to name a cargo ship for the United Farm Workers leader and serial boycotter of fruit is perhaps fitting tribute for a man adept at manipulating the media but bereft of the skills needed to sustain a union. Just as Chavez played the media by playing a labor leader, Democrats play unions by playing up a labor icon.

Democrats are better off. Working people aren’t. A U.S.N.S. Cesar Chavez is a lot like its namesake’s life work. It’s all about the image, the gesture, the symbolism.

Chavez’s work certainly didn’t improve the lives of farm workers, despite his best efforts. The lot of field hands hasn’t gotten much better since Chavez captured national notice in the mid 1960s. Organizing seasonal, unskilled laborers into a union worked neither in theory nor in practice. When anybody can do your job, employees simply don’t have much leverage over employers.

But the flawed idea didn’t stop the media canonization. The wretched farm workers led by a mystical Hispanic with an 8th-grade education proved so seductive a narrative that Time magazine placed Chavez on its cover in 1969. But the union that he founded retains just a few thousand members today. It takes in less money in dues than in donations.

There may be power in a union. There was only pity for the United Farm Workers. And pity fuels charities, not organized labor.

Cesar Chavez the symbol is still universally adored on the Left. Cesar Chavez the person proves more troublesome.

A fierce opponent of illegal immigration for most of his life, Chavez once commissioned a newspaper cartoon depicting INS agents as strikebreakers aiding big business through lax border enforcement. “The jobs belonged to local workers,” Chavez reasoned. “The braceros were brought only for exploitation. They were just instruments for the growers.” Get it—not people, not undocumented workers, not illegal aliens even: just tools.

He spoke critically of the hyper-nationalism of La Raza: “We can’t be against racism on the one hand and for it on the other.”

And his use of religious imagery—holding protest masses at the state capitol and staging riveting holy-man fasts—was especially unsettling to secular leftists. “Cesar feels that liberals are liberal right up to the steps of the Catholic church,” lieutenant Dolores Huerta explained in 1975. “Guys can be liberal about homosexuality, about dope, about capital punishment, about everything but the Catholic church. There the liberalism ends.”

If the Left doesn’t get the real Cesar Chavez, they can be forgiven. Cesar Chavez didn’t always get Cesar Chavez.

He depicted his family’s poverty growing up as a product of the exploitative nature of capitalism. Alas, in Arizona and California, voracious tax collectors forced the Chavezes off their land due to nonpayment. The victims of big government have brown, black, yellow, and red faces, too.

Treatment he depicted as discriminatory undoubtedly proved helpful to him in life. When the American-born Chavez called himself a Mexican, a teacher forcefully rebuked: “You are an American. All of us are Americans.” The Spanish he spoke in the home wasn’t welcome in the school. “They wouldn’t let us speak Spanish,” he recalled to biographer Jacques Levy. “If we did, we were supposed to sit on a wooden bench in the back.”

Unlike other secular saints of the era, Chavez relied more on the image than the word to convey the point. Even so, it’s hard to envision his success without the ability to speak English—or the sense instilled in him that he was a citizen, due the rights accorded to every other American.

A U.S.N.S. Cesar Chavez seems an ironic fate for the one-time seaman. “Those two years were the worst of my life: this regimentation, this super authority that somehow somebody has the right to move you around like a piece of equipment,” Chavez recalled of his two years in the Navy. “It’s worse than being in prison.”

Now, reincarnated as a cargo ship, Cesar Chavez serves the Navy again. Then, he enlisted during the fight to save civilization. Now, he is a conscript in the Obama administration’s pretend fight to rescue the endangered American worker.

What does it profit the labor movement to gaineth a ship but loseth jobs?

http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=43657

"Credibility in immigration policy can be summed up in one sentence: Those who should get in, get in; those who should be kept out, are kept out; and those who should not be here will be required to leave."

"...for the system to be credible, people actually have to be deported at the end of the process."

US Congresswoman Barbara Jordan (D-TX)

Testimony to the House Immigration Subcommittee, February 24, 1995

Filed: AOS (pnd) Country: Canada
Timeline
Posted

It's pathetic to name anything after him.

He made a name for himself for being a pain in the #######.

Now every Mexican (especially here in TX) wants every other street named after him. It's old and annoying.

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02/07/2011 - Medical!

03/15/2011 - Interview in Montreal! - Approved!!!

Posted

Let freedom ring eh Paul? Or is liberty only for white folks?

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Filed: AOS (pnd) Country: Canada
Timeline
Posted

Let freedom ring eh Paul? Or is liberty only for white folks?

What the hell are you talking about?

nfrsig.jpg

The Great Canadian to Texas Transfer Timeline:

2/22/2010 - I-129F Packet Mailed

2/24/2010 - Packet Delivered to VSC

2/26/2010 - VSC Cashed Filing Fee

3/04/2010 - NOA1 Received!

8/14/2010 - Touched!

10/04/2010 - NOA2 Received!

10/25/2010 - Packet 3 Received!

02/07/2011 - Medical!

03/15/2011 - Interview in Montreal! - Approved!!!

Filed: Country: Belarus
Timeline
Posted

No obsession with Mexican-Americans, nope.

Nope...just an obsession with typical liberal stupidness.

"Credibility in immigration policy can be summed up in one sentence: Those who should get in, get in; those who should be kept out, are kept out; and those who should not be here will be required to leave."

"...for the system to be credible, people actually have to be deported at the end of the process."

US Congresswoman Barbara Jordan (D-TX)

Testimony to the House Immigration Subcommittee, February 24, 1995

Filed: Lift. Cond. (apr) Country: Spain
Timeline
Posted

It's pathetic to name anything after him.

He made a name for himself for being a pain in the #######.

Now every Mexican (especially here in TX) wants every other street named after him. It's old and annoying.

A pain to you = all the reason to go forward wih it.

One ship, one name.

Filed: Lift. Cond. (apr) Country: Spain
Timeline
Posted

Nope...just an obsession with typical liberal stupidness.

The article wasn't that bad - except for the writer's fail at connecting Spanish and English in a cultural setting with the politics of Chavez. Your rushing to a political kneejerk is obvious though.

Posted

The article wasn't that bad - except for the writer's fail at connecting Spanish and English in a cultural setting with the politics of Chavez. Your rushing to a political kneejerk is obvious though.

You're right, it wasn't a bad article.

If you can get past the politics of the gesture; it does seem strange to name a ship after someone who hated being in the Navy that much. :lol:

 

 

 

Filed: Lift. Cond. (apr) Country: Spain
Timeline
Posted

You're right, it wasn't a bad article.

If you can get past the politics of the gesture; it does seem strange to name a ship after someone who hated being in the Navy that much. :lol:

Other accounts of Chavez in the Navy paint a mixed feelings sort of experience. This article just focuses on the bad. Chavez did not invent the 'Never again volunteer yourself' joke. :lol:

Bad op piece with obviously incomplete info.

Filed: Country: Belarus
Timeline
Posted

Other accounts of Chavez in the Navy paint a mixed feelings sort of experience. This article just focuses on the bad. Chavez did not invent the 'Never again volunteer yourself' joke. :lol:

Bad op piece with obviously incomplete info.

Thousand of Americans have been in the US Navy and don't have the honor of having a ship named after them. And it wasn't his service record in the Navy that is the reason for it. He is the darling of the Left and the Obama administration has been and is pandering the Hispanic vote along with the union vote.

Certainly these are not valid reasons to name the ship after Chavez. There most certainly is no shortage of more worthy persons to bestow this honor on.

"Credibility in immigration policy can be summed up in one sentence: Those who should get in, get in; those who should be kept out, are kept out; and those who should not be here will be required to leave."

"...for the system to be credible, people actually have to be deported at the end of the process."

US Congresswoman Barbara Jordan (D-TX)

Testimony to the House Immigration Subcommittee, February 24, 1995

Filed: Other Country: United Kingdom
Timeline
Posted

Thousand of Americans have been in the US Navy and don't have the honor of having a ship named after them. And it wasn't his service record in the Navy that is the reason for it. He is the darling of the Left and the Obama administration has been and is pandering the Hispanic vote along with the union vote.

Certainly these are not valid reasons to name the ship after Chavez. There most certainly is no shortage of more worthy persons to bestow this honor on.

Why should anyone give a ####? Its a bloody cargo ship, not the USS Enterprise. Stop obsessing over every piece of ####### that happens to drop out the ####### of any and every third rate hack who writes about anything tenuously linked to immigration. It makes you look effing crazy!

 

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