villaraigosa A win for Villaraigosa, but the city is still loosing (UPDATED)

(I just updated this piece with a point that I forgot to mention. You will find the update at the end of this posting)

The city of Los Angeles has its first Hispanic mayor in over 100 years. This may be a victory for diversity in government, but there is yet another milestone that has been delayed for numbers of years for this city–literacy amongst its workforce.

Living here in a Los Angeles suburb, the mayoral election campaign has been the hot issue on all the local radio and TV networks since the beginning of this election season. It is during this season where constituents get to hear all of what is right and wrong with the city. Listing to a local radio station recently, I came across this bit of unbelievable information:

51% of the workforce in Los Angeles is illiterate

I knew that it would be pretty high considering the fact that we have a high number of illegals that live and work out here, but 51%? I just could not believe my ears.

Then I turned to the Internet for some more factual information behind this claim. Here is what I was able to find:


It classified 3.8 million Los Angeles County residents as “low-literate,” meaning they could not write a note explaining a billing error, use a bus schedule or locate an intersection on a street map.

And despite hundreds of millions of dollars spent in public schools over the past decade to boost literacy rates, functional illiteracy levels have remained flat because of a steady influx of non-English-speaking immigrants and a 30 percent high school dropout rate, authors of the report said. (source: LA Daily News)

And this…


According to the report, an astounding 3.8 million Los Angeles adults (or 53 percent of L.A. County’s working age population) have low literacy skills, posing a serious barrier to their employability and workforce productivity. (more..)

The last quote was taken from a report written last year (2004). So it appears that the actual illiteracy rate may be in the neighborhood of 53% as of last year! The fault of this problem also lays on the doorstep of former mayor Hahn and those that preceded him. Here is one more:


Despite the fact that there are more books being published in Spanish, said Antonio Mejillas of Los Angeles Spanish-language newspaper La Opinion, “I wouldn’t be surprised to find out that reading is down.” Readership of La Opinion, he said, which claims to reach 452,640 readers daily, has not increased recently. There is very little coverage of books and literature in the entertainment sections of the newspaper.

“After discussion groups and research,” Mejillas says, “we found that readers aren’t interested in literature.”…more

One of Villaraigosa’s favorite taglines (like all other politicians) has been “The city of Los Angeles is ready for change and new leadership”. Yet after browsing his campaign website under Homeland security, he makes no mention of the current border situation that is contributing to this extremely high illiteracy rate in the city.

Here you have a city that is home to some of the most richest Liberals (people who claim to speak for the poor) in the world, yet for some reason the poor amongst them are still not able to read. This is further proof that simply throwing money at the situation will not fix this problem of illiteracy. As I have mentioned on this site many of times in the past, without the poor, Liberals do not have a cause. Think about it, some of America’s most harshest critics who greatly profit from Hollywood seem to lack the ability or concern to at least equip at least one school with all of the latest tools that it needs to provide a great education (no it is not their responsibility, but it would add some validity to their concern for the poor). Instead, you will find many of these “actors” (not all of them) going down to LAX, flying over poor neighborhoods in order to take care of the poor in another country only to accuse America for not doing enough for the poor. Go figure! We have some of the most highest taxes in the nation and still most of our schools are crap.

Villaraigosa’s relationships with both the past and present presidents of Mexico is further proof that the illegal immigration situation is not going to get any better.

I personally want to see this border issue resolved for two reasons: #1- So that the sovereignty and safety of this nation is intact. and #2 – I am tired of seeing the plight of Mexican people (like blacks) being used as political fuel to bolster someone’s political ambitions. Mexicans, like Haitians (hmmm, I won’t touch that right now) and other people who come from an impoverished situation deserve a second chance. If that “second chance” means relocating to America, I say “let them come”;however, it has to be done legally. For some reason, demanding ANYTHING from the poor and needy these days has become a great sin.

This problem is not new to the city of L.A. Until Villaraigosa (like Bush) deals with the illegal immigration issue head on, Los Angeles will continue to be known as the city of the illiterate.

>>You may be wondering “Where do blacks fit in all of this?”. The answer is simply many of us are not fitting in like we used to. In a city that is increasingly becoming a requirement to speak Spanish, many blacks are moving out of the city and relocating either to another county (Riverside or San Bernardino), or out of state altogether. This has kinda been a blessing in disguise because blacks are finding much better housing and employment opportunities elsewhere. But again, this is another loss for the city.

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Another point I forgot to mention

Black Americans who choose to stay silent on the issue of illegal immigration and border control only shoot themselves in their own foot.

It has been the repeated message of the Democratic party that it is the middle and low class that has been taxed the greatest. Why then will these same Democrats not point out that in states where illegals are given health care, and other assistance AT THE EXPENSE OF THE TAXPAYER, it is the poor and the minimum wage earners amongst us that feel the brunt of it since it is they that pay most of the taxes in this country?

Seems to me that they have found themselves a new nig–.




 

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