Post by the Scribe on Mar 20, 2021 13:15:33 GMT
LINDA RONSTADT AS HUMAN RIGHTS ACTIVIST
ronstadt.proboards.com/thread/771/human-rights-advocate
Nov 8, 2012 14:59:36 GMT -5 the Scribe said:
Linda Ronstadt isn’t just a legendary singer. She’s also a fierce defender of migrant rights
dailysoundandfury.com/linda-ronstadt-isnt-just-a-legendary-singer-shes-also-a-fierce-defender-of-migrant-rights/
By Associate Editor - December 26, 2019 300 0
The 9 on KTVU / YouTube
Legendary performer Linda Ronstadt was among the recipients at the Kennedy Center Honors this month, where she was recognized for a lush, decades-long career that has spanned musical genres, languages, and generations. But what’s not often as recognized—and should be—is the Grammy winner’s activism, especially on the issue of migrant rights. The Mexican-American performer grew up in Arizona and discussed her work along the border in a September interview with The New Yorker.
“I spent time out in the desert when I was still healthy, working with a group of Samaritans who go to find people that are lost,” she told The New Yorker. “You meet some guy stumbling through the desert trying to cross, and he’s dehydrated, his feet are full of thorns, cactus, then you see this Minute Man sitting with his cooler, with all of his water and food and beer, and his automatic weapon sitting on his lap, wearing full camouflage. It’s so cruel. People are coming to work. They’re coming to have a better life. You have to be pretty desperate to want to cross that desert.”
When the Trump administration tried to imprison a No More Deaths humanitarian worker for leaving food and water in the desert for migrants, Ronstadt urged the public to support the group’s life-saving mission. “I can think of no more compelling crisis than that now facing the borderlands and my view is this: Every individual has the right to receive and the right to give humanitarian aid, in order to prevent suffering and death—no matter what one’s legal status,” she said at the time. “To criminalize human kindness is a dangerous precedent.”
“People have been caught in this web of suffering, dying in the desert,” she continued in The New Yorker interview earlier this year. “They’re incredibly brave and resourceful, the people who make it. A C.E.O. of a big company once told me—when I said, ‘What do you look for in hiring practices?’—she said, ‘I look for someone who’s dealt with a lot of adversity, because they usually make a good business person.’ And I thought, You should hire every immigrant who comes across the border.”
While Ronstadt’s singing career has been tragically halted by Parkinson’s disease (she retired from performing a decade ago and now spends much of her time in San Francisco), her will to speak truth to power has not. During a recent State Department event for Kennedy Center honorees, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo apparently mused about when he would be loved, a reference to Ronstadt’s hit song, “When Will I Be Loved.” She reportedly shot back, “I’d like to say to Mr. Pompeo, who wonders when he’ll be loved, it’s when he stops enabling Donald Trump.”
ronstadt.proboards.com/thread/771/human-rights-advocate
Nov 8, 2012 14:59:36 GMT -5 the Scribe said:
I know we've discussed this before but as I read through this post I am reminded how thirsty and in need these people (immigrants and laborers from Mexico and other countries, mostly south of our border) are for someone on this side of the border to be their advocate, their voice. They need help. They need protection. They need their dignity left intact. Time after time I read about their great love and appreciation for Linda Ronstadt who is one of the few celebrities to stand up for them. They obviously gravitate towards her because of her heritage, her music and the fact she has been willing to take on the establishment in their behalf. There are so many misconceptions about them (mostly contrived mean spirited non-factual) and a well known voice like Linda's gives them hope, pride and a feeling of self-worth in a society that seems to be doing its best to criminalize, demoralize and take advantage of their good will and willingness to please.
It may be the celebrity part of life that took Linda to this point but this is more important than anything she has ever done. Just like the waves of a rock that is thrown into a pond the most minimal effort on her part reverberates through that community. And doesn't it help to know you have someone on your side? It is very comforting but also a great responsibility.
Personally, I have come to understand this in my work with stray and abandoned animals. (not meaning to relate immigrants to animals but they need help too. They need someone to watch over them in an uncaring and hateful world where they are abused and have no rights.) They need a hand and are very responsive to those that help.
And as much as I would love to hear more of Linda's voice on a recording I think I would rather hear her voice being used towards these efforts. And if she has any time left over and she has the urge to record then all the better.
Linda Ronstadt, the San Diego Chargers, Braceros and the Cortito
www.huffpost.com/entry/linda-ronstadt-the-san-di_b_1444573
Posted: 04/24/2012 7:42 am
The fan at a concert or football game and the farm worker stooped in the field, might doubt that there is a thread tracing Linda Ronstadt, the San Diego Chargers, Braceros and the tool used in the hot dusty fields.
In 1942, a severe shortage of laborers available to carry on California's pivotal role of producing food for the country, farm workers were Imported into the United States from Mexico as Braceros. For little pay, they stooped in the fields from dawn to dusk to bring food to our tables. The first Braceros went to Stockton, California, to harvest sugar beets. During the following years, the Bracero program expanded to importation of nearly 500,000 in 1956, and a total of four million Braceros before ending in 1964. Each year, the Braceros were returned to Mexico when the season ended.
While toiling in the hot fields, Braceros used the short-handled hoe or cortito to weed and thin the crop. They needed food and housing. Stockton-born Alex Spanos, now owner of the San Diego Chargers, the son of a Greek immigrant who operated a bakery in Stockton, returned from military service, to work for $40 a week n his father's bakery. Soon, Spanos and his wife Faye began making and selling bologna sandwiches to hungry Braceros. When Stockton growers complained to Spanos about their need for more workers, Spanos recognized that more workers meant more business selling bologna sandwiches. Spanos travelled to the Imperial Valley and gained additional workers for the Stockton growers. When Spanos' sandwich business grew, he expanded to provide Braceros additional food and housing. Spanos saw the need for housing, began developing, and soon the astute businessman was wealthy enough to become owner of the San Diego Chargers.
To show respect for the historic work of the Braceros, erected in the Port of Stockton a statue of a stooped farm workers using a short handled hoe.
Until San Jose State University professor Maria Alaniz and federal court judge Felton Henderson told Latina Linda Ronstadt, recipient of eleven Grammy Awards, Academy of Country Music award, an Emmy Award, an ALMA Award, and numerous United States and internationally certified gold, platinum and multiplatinum albums, !(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/)!, the story of the farm workers' struggle to ban the cortito that crippled hundreds of thousands of farm workers, forcing them to spend long days stooped in hot fields, the Stockton stature remained a lonely figure without designation on why it was there or what it stood for. Linda Ronstadt changed that.
About the time the Bracero program was ending, Cesar Chavez was commencing his struggle to improve the lives of farm workers. I was a new lawyer in Soledad, California. One night, playing pool, a farm worker Sebastian Carmona told me he had a disabling back injury from stooping all day in the field with the cortito, a hoe with an eight-inch handle. At the urging of former farm worked Hector De La Rosa, I joined him in a field near Greenfield thinning sugar beets with the cortito. I left the field in such pain that I swore to abolish the short-handled hoe. De La Rosa reminded me that the short hoe was the symbol of growers' power and had replaced the masters' whip as the means of keeping workers stooped. A year later, the day after Cesar Chavez was released from jail in Salinas for struggling to nonviolently improve the lives of farm workers, he asked me to stop stoop labor. Over the years that followed, attorney Marty Glick and California Rural Legal Assistance with whom I was employed, obtained evidence describing the suffering stoop labor caused farm workers, doctors' statements explaining how stoop labor leads to permanent back disability, and evidence that the normal hoe is used in other parts of the country to do the same work done with the short hoe in California.
After five years of hearings across the state and argument before the California Supreme Court, Governor Jerry Brown outlawed the short handled hoe in California. When the Supreme Court ruled for the farm workers in Carmona's lawsuit, Carmona handed me his short-handled hoe and said "Gracias, Abogado. No necesito este, mas" (Thanks, lawyer. I don't need this anymore), I nearly cried.
On March 31, 2012, Cesar Chavez birthday, I fought back tears when Stockton Braceros unveiled the statue Spanos erected and Linda Ronstadt placed a dedication in Stockton rain that reads,
" In honor of the Braceros, soldiers of the field, who toiled in San Joaquin County. With profound gratitude for their indelible contribution to the living of our community. (Bracero Program 1942 - 1964.
With deepest appreciation to Maurice Jourdane who, as an attorney with California Rural Legal Assistance led a relentless and ultimately victorious legal battle to abolish the short-handled hoe. Carmona v. Division of Industrial Safety, 13 Cal2d 303 (California Supreme Court 1975)."
On this nineteenth anniversary of the death of Cesar Chavez, thank you Alex Spanos, thanks you Linda Ronstadt, thanks you Cesar, and thank you millions of farm workers who suffered stooped in the torrid fields to bring food to our table.
It may be the celebrity part of life that took Linda to this point but this is more important than anything she has ever done. Just like the waves of a rock that is thrown into a pond the most minimal effort on her part reverberates through that community. And doesn't it help to know you have someone on your side? It is very comforting but also a great responsibility.
Personally, I have come to understand this in my work with stray and abandoned animals. (not meaning to relate immigrants to animals but they need help too. They need someone to watch over them in an uncaring and hateful world where they are abused and have no rights.) They need a hand and are very responsive to those that help.
And as much as I would love to hear more of Linda's voice on a recording I think I would rather hear her voice being used towards these efforts. And if she has any time left over and she has the urge to record then all the better.
Linda Ronstadt, the San Diego Chargers, Braceros and the Cortito
www.huffpost.com/entry/linda-ronstadt-the-san-di_b_1444573
Posted: 04/24/2012 7:42 am
The fan at a concert or football game and the farm worker stooped in the field, might doubt that there is a thread tracing Linda Ronstadt, the San Diego Chargers, Braceros and the tool used in the hot dusty fields.
In 1942, a severe shortage of laborers available to carry on California's pivotal role of producing food for the country, farm workers were Imported into the United States from Mexico as Braceros. For little pay, they stooped in the fields from dawn to dusk to bring food to our tables. The first Braceros went to Stockton, California, to harvest sugar beets. During the following years, the Bracero program expanded to importation of nearly 500,000 in 1956, and a total of four million Braceros before ending in 1964. Each year, the Braceros were returned to Mexico when the season ended.
While toiling in the hot fields, Braceros used the short-handled hoe or cortito to weed and thin the crop. They needed food and housing. Stockton-born Alex Spanos, now owner of the San Diego Chargers, the son of a Greek immigrant who operated a bakery in Stockton, returned from military service, to work for $40 a week n his father's bakery. Soon, Spanos and his wife Faye began making and selling bologna sandwiches to hungry Braceros. When Stockton growers complained to Spanos about their need for more workers, Spanos recognized that more workers meant more business selling bologna sandwiches. Spanos travelled to the Imperial Valley and gained additional workers for the Stockton growers. When Spanos' sandwich business grew, he expanded to provide Braceros additional food and housing. Spanos saw the need for housing, began developing, and soon the astute businessman was wealthy enough to become owner of the San Diego Chargers.
To show respect for the historic work of the Braceros, erected in the Port of Stockton a statue of a stooped farm workers using a short handled hoe.
Until San Jose State University professor Maria Alaniz and federal court judge Felton Henderson told Latina Linda Ronstadt, recipient of eleven Grammy Awards, Academy of Country Music award, an Emmy Award, an ALMA Award, and numerous United States and internationally certified gold, platinum and multiplatinum albums, !(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/)!, the story of the farm workers' struggle to ban the cortito that crippled hundreds of thousands of farm workers, forcing them to spend long days stooped in hot fields, the Stockton stature remained a lonely figure without designation on why it was there or what it stood for. Linda Ronstadt changed that.
About the time the Bracero program was ending, Cesar Chavez was commencing his struggle to improve the lives of farm workers. I was a new lawyer in Soledad, California. One night, playing pool, a farm worker Sebastian Carmona told me he had a disabling back injury from stooping all day in the field with the cortito, a hoe with an eight-inch handle. At the urging of former farm worked Hector De La Rosa, I joined him in a field near Greenfield thinning sugar beets with the cortito. I left the field in such pain that I swore to abolish the short-handled hoe. De La Rosa reminded me that the short hoe was the symbol of growers' power and had replaced the masters' whip as the means of keeping workers stooped. A year later, the day after Cesar Chavez was released from jail in Salinas for struggling to nonviolently improve the lives of farm workers, he asked me to stop stoop labor. Over the years that followed, attorney Marty Glick and California Rural Legal Assistance with whom I was employed, obtained evidence describing the suffering stoop labor caused farm workers, doctors' statements explaining how stoop labor leads to permanent back disability, and evidence that the normal hoe is used in other parts of the country to do the same work done with the short hoe in California.
After five years of hearings across the state and argument before the California Supreme Court, Governor Jerry Brown outlawed the short handled hoe in California. When the Supreme Court ruled for the farm workers in Carmona's lawsuit, Carmona handed me his short-handled hoe and said "Gracias, Abogado. No necesito este, mas" (Thanks, lawyer. I don't need this anymore), I nearly cried.
On March 31, 2012, Cesar Chavez birthday, I fought back tears when Stockton Braceros unveiled the statue Spanos erected and Linda Ronstadt placed a dedication in Stockton rain that reads,
" In honor of the Braceros, soldiers of the field, who toiled in San Joaquin County. With profound gratitude for their indelible contribution to the living of our community. (Bracero Program 1942 - 1964.
With deepest appreciation to Maurice Jourdane who, as an attorney with California Rural Legal Assistance led a relentless and ultimately victorious legal battle to abolish the short-handled hoe. Carmona v. Division of Industrial Safety, 13 Cal2d 303 (California Supreme Court 1975)."
On this nineteenth anniversary of the death of Cesar Chavez, thank you Alex Spanos, thanks you Linda Ronstadt, thanks you Cesar, and thank you millions of farm workers who suffered stooped in the torrid fields to bring food to our table.
Nov 9, 2012 18:29:41 GMT -5 jeffmeister said:
Have you seen the documentary on Robert Kennedy's widow, Ethel? There are clips of Robert with Cesar Chavez. In the voice over, either Ethel or her daughter Rory mentions that Robert and Cesar became close. Never realized just how passionate Robert was about people and their individual rights. Nor did I realize that Ethel and Robert had so MANY kids, including one that was born shortly after he died, Rory, who made the documentary. Long story short, Linda's heart is among the best!
Have you seen the documentary on Robert Kennedy's widow, Ethel? There are clips of Robert with Cesar Chavez. In the voice over, either Ethel or her daughter Rory mentions that Robert and Cesar became close. Never realized just how passionate Robert was about people and their individual rights. Nor did I realize that Ethel and Robert had so MANY kids, including one that was born shortly after he died, Rory, who made the documentary. Long story short, Linda's heart is among the best!
Nov 9, 2012 18:55:46 GMT -5 the Scribe said:
I have not seen the video but I will now. Robert Kennedy was one of my heroes. I consider him the best President of the USA that never was. The whole family is amazing. I am from New York and RFK was my senator so he and his family made a big impression on me. The official story of his death is a hoax. I hope the truth comes out some day. His son Robert is also a favorite of mine. Great guy. Great Liberal like his dad and uncles.
Nov 11, 2012 at 11:43pm QuotePost OptionsPost by the Scribe on Nov 11, 2012 at 11:43pm
I was thinking that one of the best things Linda could do is to do those public radio spots to get the Hispanic community to register to vote and then to go vote when the time comes. There is also a love/hate relationship between the Mexican/American and Mexican Immigrant populations she could work on bridging.
Nov 19, 2012 11:10:27 GMT -5 the Scribe said:
I thought of Linda when I read this post election:
Message to pro-immigrant activists: Now is the time to push hard on your "friends" in the White House and Congress and secure a fair deal for the 12 million undocumented in our midst.
I have not seen the video but I will now. Robert Kennedy was one of my heroes. I consider him the best President of the USA that never was. The whole family is amazing. I am from New York and RFK was my senator so he and his family made a big impression on me. The official story of his death is a hoax. I hope the truth comes out some day. His son Robert is also a favorite of mine. Great guy. Great Liberal like his dad and uncles.
Nov 11, 2012 at 11:43pm QuotePost OptionsPost by the Scribe on Nov 11, 2012 at 11:43pm
I was thinking that one of the best things Linda could do is to do those public radio spots to get the Hispanic community to register to vote and then to go vote when the time comes. There is also a love/hate relationship between the Mexican/American and Mexican Immigrant populations she could work on bridging.
Nov 19, 2012 11:10:27 GMT -5 the Scribe said:
I thought of Linda when I read this post election:
Message to pro-immigrant activists: Now is the time to push hard on your "friends" in the White House and Congress and secure a fair deal for the 12 million undocumented in our midst.
Nov 19, 2012 12:43:44 GMT -5 erik said:
I think it would behoove Linda to encourage her friends in the industry, including Jackson Browne, to give support to this growing movement. It would undercut the old, familar us-versus-"them" cannard of the GOP (IMHO
I think it would behoove Linda to encourage her friends in the industry, including Jackson Browne, to give support to this growing movement. It would undercut the old, familar us-versus-"them" cannard of the GOP (IMHO
Linda Ronstadt isn’t just a legendary singer. She’s also a fierce defender of migrant rights
dailysoundandfury.com/linda-ronstadt-isnt-just-a-legendary-singer-shes-also-a-fierce-defender-of-migrant-rights/
By Associate Editor - December 26, 2019 300 0
The 9 on KTVU / YouTube
Legendary performer Linda Ronstadt was among the recipients at the Kennedy Center Honors this month, where she was recognized for a lush, decades-long career that has spanned musical genres, languages, and generations. But what’s not often as recognized—and should be—is the Grammy winner’s activism, especially on the issue of migrant rights. The Mexican-American performer grew up in Arizona and discussed her work along the border in a September interview with The New Yorker.
“I spent time out in the desert when I was still healthy, working with a group of Samaritans who go to find people that are lost,” she told The New Yorker. “You meet some guy stumbling through the desert trying to cross, and he’s dehydrated, his feet are full of thorns, cactus, then you see this Minute Man sitting with his cooler, with all of his water and food and beer, and his automatic weapon sitting on his lap, wearing full camouflage. It’s so cruel. People are coming to work. They’re coming to have a better life. You have to be pretty desperate to want to cross that desert.”
When the Trump administration tried to imprison a No More Deaths humanitarian worker for leaving food and water in the desert for migrants, Ronstadt urged the public to support the group’s life-saving mission. “I can think of no more compelling crisis than that now facing the borderlands and my view is this: Every individual has the right to receive and the right to give humanitarian aid, in order to prevent suffering and death—no matter what one’s legal status,” she said at the time. “To criminalize human kindness is a dangerous precedent.”
“People have been caught in this web of suffering, dying in the desert,” she continued in The New Yorker interview earlier this year. “They’re incredibly brave and resourceful, the people who make it. A C.E.O. of a big company once told me—when I said, ‘What do you look for in hiring practices?’—she said, ‘I look for someone who’s dealt with a lot of adversity, because they usually make a good business person.’ And I thought, You should hire every immigrant who comes across the border.”
While Ronstadt’s singing career has been tragically halted by Parkinson’s disease (she retired from performing a decade ago and now spends much of her time in San Francisco), her will to speak truth to power has not. During a recent State Department event for Kennedy Center honorees, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo apparently mused about when he would be loved, a reference to Ronstadt’s hit song, “When Will I Be Loved.” She reportedly shot back, “I’d like to say to Mr. Pompeo, who wonders when he’ll be loved, it’s when he stops enabling Donald Trump.”