WSMV-TV is running a survey on it’s website that asks, “Are you in favor of the English Only initiative, which would make English the official language of Davidson County?”

Before you click on the link, try and guess which answer is winning, Yes or No. If you guessed “No,” you would be really, really wrong. As of about 2:15 pm on Wednesday afternoon, 4904 people have said they are for the English Only initiative and 1420 have said they are against it. 78% to 22%. Shocking, isn’t it? Especially since everyone you know to is against it, right? Right? Wrong.

You won’t hear a call from us to click on over to WSMV’s website and vote in their survey. Could care less. We need you where it counts and what we are asking you to do will take more effort.

First, have you voted yet? If not, get yourself to the polls. The last days of early voting at the Howard School are today, tomorrow, and Friday from 8 am to 5:30 pm, and on Satuday, from 9:00 am to 12 noon. Has your husband, wife, boyfriend, girlfriend, mother, father, sister, brother, aunt, uncle, cousin, niece, nephew, best friend, best friend’s friend, yadda yadda yadda, voted yet? If not, then get them to the polls. We’re playing a numbers game here, voters, and we have to have more people vote Against/Against then For/For or we lose. Wait, let me rephrase that, or the city of Nashville loses.

Second, send out a mass email about voting in this important election to your personal email lists. All the information you need to create one to urge the people you know to vote Against/Against – from quick facts about the English Only referendum to who’s part of the large and growing locally-based Against/Against coalition – can be found at Nashvilleforallofus.org. Here’s is an example:

Bad for business.
• Nashville boasts 76 companies with some level of foreign investment. Those companies employ 7,660 Nashvillians and generated more than $19.6 billion in sales last year. At a time when Nashville is enjoying tremendous success recruiting international companies, the English-only effort sends a negative and inaccurate message to the world. Tom Oreck, CEO of Oreck Corporation, said, “I can tell you that if this had been the law when we were considering Nashville, Oreck might not have chosen this city.” (Tom is also featured in the Against/Against TV ad)
Bad for Nashville’s tourism industry.
• Tourism is important to Nashville, and international visitors comprise one of the fastest growing tourist segments. Last year, Nashville hosted more than 300,000 visitors from foreign countries, who averaged three days in Nashville and spent more than $150/day. As a result, those visitors contributed more than $135 million to Nashville’s economy.
A tremendous waste of taxpayer dollars.
• Its own language states that it will not apply to services that could affect public health or safety, or that are required by federal or state law. That means there are only a handful of services now being provided that would be halted. We are spending hundreds of thousands of dollars in an effort to eliminate services that don’t exist so we can save approximately $495.00 per year.
Unnecessary.
• English is already the “official and legal language” of Tennessee, and Nashville. Our city does not need to change its own constitution for that to be true. Immigrants know better than anyone the importance of learning English. They also know that the faster they learn English, the faster they can assimilate into the society. If the concern is that immigrants are not learning English quickly enough, we should create more opportunities for them to learn.
Inconsistent with our values as a city.
• Nashville is a city of faith. For many people, of various faiths, the attempt to make English the only language in Nashville rings false. The Hebrew Bible, the New Testament and the Qur’an, all offer text supporting a more tolerant view of those who may not speak our language. “English-only,” not “English-first.”
The Sponsor of the referendum, Councilman Eric Crafton, does not have the best interest of Nashville in mind.
• Rather, it is his own self-interest and agenda that motivate him. While the coalition against the referendum is made up of Nashville’s business, community and spiritual leaders, Crafton’s “coalition” consists of one out of state company, Pro English, with deep pockets and ties to organizations designated as “hate groups” by the Southern Poverty Law Center. And if he did have the best interest of Nashville in mind, then why would Mr Crafton insist to the New York Times that “We’ll make English the official language here” and then “go city to city, show them how we’ve done it here, and let the dominos fall.”

Third, please volunteer some phone banking and or canvassing time to get the word out about this very important issue. Nashville For All of Us has an official headquarters located at 1814 Church Street, Nashville. Phone banking will be done at the HQ from Monday to Saturday from 10am – 8pm and on Sunday from 1pm – 6pm. You can also go there to schedule a canvassing shift. President-elect Obama is calling for Martin Luther King, Jr. day (Monday, January 19) to be a day of service. Make defeating the English Only referendum your much-needed service.

  • Share/Bookmark

This is what you’ll be reading in the Tennessean on January 23 if you don’t get out and vote Against/Against referendums #1 and #2. Seriously, what are you waiting for? And if you have already voted, why haven’t you made your friends and family vote?

You may think this referendum won’t pass but without the your vote – and the vote of everyone you know – it WILL. And then Nashville will have to spend four years and hundreds of thousands of dollars more to fend off challenges to something that is, at its core, unconstitutional.

Early voting continues this week, from 8:00 A.M. to 5:30 P.M., at the Howard School. The last day to early vote is this Saturday, January 17, from 9:00 A.M. to 12:00 P.M..

Election Day is next Thursday, January 22, and if you wait until then you can vote in your normal polling place between 7:00 A.M. and 7:00 P.M.. But don’t wait. Do it now.

  • Share/Bookmark

It’s been a very telling day.

Nathan Moore, an English Only opponent and a “keen conservative legal mind”, digs up some pertinent info from Green Bay, Wisconsin, one of the bigger cities to have passed an English Only ordinance.

Councilman Eric Crafton, the English Only referendum sponsor, attempts to back out of a scheduled debate obligation because “If Karl Dean doesn’t have enough time to come,” he said. “I don’t see why I should.”

Sean Braisted, English Only opponent, calls Crafton on some of his New York Times-worthy anecdotal evidence (and makes an appropriate analogy).

Lady with a car, who is either for Crafton’s referendum or just really loves signage, almost runs over FOL* and Loews Vanderbilt Plaza Hotel Managing Director Tom Negri, while stealing an “Against/Against” lawn sign.

A day like this makes it even more apparent that the clearer heads in this English Only battle are those who are against the referendum.

*Friend of Liberadio(!)

  • Share/Bookmark

Summary: Guests include Tom Negri, Managing Director of the Loews Vanderbilt Plaza Hotel, and Dr. David Rosnick, economist for the Center for Economic and Policy Research.

Part 1 – Straight Only, White Only, Christian Only, Republican Only, Women Only – Oh when oh when will it end? When you get out and vote against/against! [6 MB 03:48 download MP3]

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Part 2 – Interview with Tom Negri. Tom is the Managing Director of Loews Vanderbilt Plaza Hotel, on the board of the Chamber of Commerce, and a founding member of Nashville’s Coalition For Education About Immigration. He knows real immigration reform and what’s good for business and Councilman Eric Crafton’s English Only referendum is neither. [40.2 MB 25:04 download MP3]

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Part 3 – Vote Vote Like a Baby Stoat – Our listeners weigh in on English Only and help us, with apologies to CuteOverload.com, urge everyone to get out and vote vote like a baby stoat. And then tell your friends to do the same. [45.7 MB 28:33 download MP3]

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Part 4 – Interview with Dr. David Rosnick – In this interview, bearded economist Dr. Rosnick of the Center for Economic and Policy Research does just what his organization promises, he presents the economic crisis, President-Elect Obama’s stimulus package, and the bailout in a progressive, accurate and understandable manner. And it’s always nice to hear an economist giggle. [25MB 15.34 download MP3]

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Part 5 – The Nashville Last Crowd – We’re told that we’re anti-English if we’re against English Only, which is both not true and kinda funny because we’re all, you know, speaking English. What’s not funny is Steve Gill and his Nashville Last crowd who will vote for the English Only referendum despite the documented negative impact it will have on the city. Plus, the Tennessee General Assembly reconvenes with some Republican-led turmoil (shades of things to come?), President Bush personally authorized torture, and don’t just listen to what President-elect Obama says, watch what he does. [46.5MB 29:00 download MP3]

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

  • Share/Bookmark

Anti-Anti-English

On this morning’s This Week with Bob Mueller, Steve Gill labeled those who are against Councilman Eric Crafton’s English Only referendum the “Anti-English crowd.” I know he likes his catch phrases – leaving out any semblance of a nuanced argument makes it easy for him to inflame the masses with feelings of false persecution – but considering all involved in the discussion were, you know, speaking English, it was terribly absurd.

  • Share/Bookmark
Tagged with:
 

We learned three things from Nathan Moore today. One, Nashville does not employ many physically-present interpreters (they are only found in the Health Department and the courts) but rather we use AT&T’s translation service; Two, we spend $110,00.00 per year for this service; And, three, Eric Crafton’s English Only Amendment will save the city of Nashville approximately $495.00 per year.

Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act (along with Executive Order 13166) determines that any local government department receiving federal funds must provide its services in multiple languages, because the law says we cannot disciminate against individuals based on national origin.

Here is the useage breakdown of Metro’s interpretation services (these numbers were provided to me by the mayor’s office)

Health 41.71%
Police / Sheriff 33.13%
Juvenile / Courts 7.95%
Metro Water 6.62%
General Hospital/Bordeaux 9.43%
Nashville Career Advis. 0.71%

All of the above departments receive Title VI funds. The total is 99.55%. It appears I was more than generous with my previous estimate of 97%. This means that the passage of English Only could only affect 0.045% of the money spent, which means that Metro would save $495 per year. Or, we could just give back $250 million in federal funds each year.

The election is going to cost somewhere between $300,000 and $500,000 to conduct. This means it will take somwhere between 606 years and 1010 years to realize the nominal savings on this election.

Ah, I love the smell of number crunching in the morning.

  • Share/Bookmark
Tagged with:
 

Mayor Karl Dean will join Governor Phil Bredesen at the Howard School Building on Monday morning, Jan. 12, at 8:00 am to early vote against Councilman Eric Crafton’s “English-only” charter amendment and Amendment No. 2, which would make it absurdly easy to bring these kinds of referendums to a public vote (twice a year!). Then, the next day, Andrea Conte (Mrs. Governor Bredesen), Anne Davis (Mrs. Mayor Dean) and Martha Cooper (Mrs. Congressman Cooper, who let’s us call her “Mrs. Coop!”*) will do the same at 12:30 p.m.

Today, African-American leaders, community organizers, and public officials including Rep. Brenda Gilmore, Councillady Erica Gilmore, and Councilman at large Jerry Maynard, held a press conference in front of the Howard School to encourage votes of “Against/Against.” The coalition standing with them included representatives from the Nashville branch of the NAACP; the Urban EpiCenter; the Urban League of Middle Tennessee; the Interdenominational Ministers Fellowship (IMF); the Tennessee Immigrant & Refugee Rights Coalition (TIRRC); the Nashville Movement; the Tennessee Alliance for Progress (TAP); Jobs with Justice (JwJ); and the National Organization for Women (NOW).

The remarks focused on the social, economic, spiritual and moral impact of the referendum as well as the myth that most African-Americans were for the referendum. Although no statistics were cited, Councilman Maynard did explain that a lingering resentment over a lack of coalition building in response to school rezoning, the operation of Metro General Hospital, and juvenile crime statistics could be responsible for fueling pro-English Only sentiment in the African-American community. Maynard’s answer to such resentment is to cite the potential negative impact of the English Only referendum on the city and offer the tried and true adage of “two wrongs don’t make a right.”

The Mayor, the Governor, respected community leaders of all kinds. The coalition against the referendum is impressive. The list on the NashvilleForAllofUs.org website even includes the strange bedfellows of the Chamber of Commerce and the ACLU.

And who’s for the referendum? Well, there’s no list of Nashville-based groups or community leaders on the English Only website so one would have to assume that their coalition consists of Councilman Crafton, Svengali Jon Crisp, ProEnglish (the Virginia-based group helping to fund Crafton’s referendum that was designated a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center because of it’s affiliation with John Tanton’s U.S. Inc.), and one not-so-friendly neighborhood truth-stretching talk radio host who, despite knowing that not all non-citizens who come to this country are sources of cheap labor (they are students, executives of international corporations, scientists, etc.) nor are they all seeking citizenship, wrote in the Tennessean last week:

It’s an undisputed fact that people who don’t have a working knowledge of English are either non-citizens or are illegal immigrants. How do I know? Because you are required by law to speak, write and understand English to become a U.S. citizen. Opposition to this measure, disguised as a pro-diversity coalition, is all about one thing: keeping a steady flow of cheap, illegal labor streaming into Nashville.

Oh, Teddy Roosevelt is with them too. Happy New Year 1919!

*No, she doesn’t.

  • Share/Bookmark

Summary: Guests include Rev. James Lawson, civil rights icon and Distinguished Vanderbilt Professor; Elbert Ventura, research fellow for Media Matters for America.

Part 1 – Get Your French On – Freddie shows off his french to make a point, this week’s news droppings, and Tennessee Republicans commend Bush’s legacy. Really? [43.2 MB 26:58 download MP3]

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Part 2 – Interview with Rev. Jim Lawson – Rev. Lawson, civil rights icon, Distinguished Professor at Vanderbilt, and a most thoughtful human being, weighs in on the need to continue to teach the principles of nonviolence; the similarities and differences between the civil rights struggles of various communities (women, African-Americans, gays, etc.); and Nashville’s English Only referendum. He called the election of Barack Obama a gift to the American people. We think his being a guest on our show is a gift, and not just because it’s (almost) Freddie’s birthday. [35 MB 21:52 download MP3]

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Part 3 – It’s a NKOTB Birthday – The English-Only discussion continues. Nashville for all of us v. Making Nashville difficult for all of us. [40.8MB 25:27 download MP3]

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Part 4 – Media Matters for America Smackdown – It’s the “It’s (Almost but not Quite) Freddie’s Birthday” edition of the Media Matters for America Smackdown with Elbert Ventura. NBC has their fingers in their ears about General Barry McCaffrey’s war profiteering. But don’t worry, they have a good excuse. [18.4MB 11:29 download MP3]

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Part 5 – Against/Against Again – There is not a lot of good that comes out of English-only – and our callers agree. [27.8MB 17:20 download MP3]

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

  • Share/Bookmark

So, Eric Crafton’s a good guy. A smart guy. He’s just a little too “alarmingly left-brained” to understand that learning a foreign language with the “full backing and resources of the American Navy…is so removed from the life of your average Nashville non-native speaker that it might as well take place on another planet.” He’s a no-nonsense, black or white, right or wrong, pull-yourself-up-by-your-bootstraps family man. According to those who know him best, his colleagues on the Metro Council, he’s not a bad guy.

Let’s say, for argument sake, that all of the above is true. If so, then Crafton is also a little too “alarmingly left-brained” and a little too driven by his ideals to see that he’s being manipulated by Jon Crisp, his “friend” and former head of the Davidson County GOP.

Because Crisp, in this week’s Nashville Scene cover story, let the singular purpose of the “English Only” Amendment slip:

Crafton certainly saw no gray in English Only when he and his friend and adviser Jon Crisp devised it a couple of years ago. Crisp says that English Only came to be during one of his and Crafton’s regular spitball sessions.

“Eric and I pick up on topics that we think are timely,” he says. “And you know as well as I do that any given day I can make an issue out of illegal immigration.”

Yes. We know. You’re, uh, doing it right now. You topic is “timely” because since 2004, when then-Senator Majority leader Bill Frist first introduced immigration as a problem, the unholy alliance of right-wing cable TV anouncers, talk radio hosts, and Fox News have increasingly inflamed nativist sentiment. Nashville’s version of the cookie cutter “English First” website may say that having English as the official language is “truly inclusive” and “essential to unifying our increasingly diverse population,” but Crisp’s transparent words say “purposefully exclusionary” and “essential to dividing in order to conquer.”

The well-being of the city and people of Nashville may be part of the Crafton/Crisp (aka Crispton) official talking points, but the truth is that they could really care less. My thanks to Crisp for finally admitting it.

  • Share/Bookmark

Right now, you probably have visions of sugar plums, peppermint mochas, or Cranberry Cosmos dancing around in your head. Yeah, it’s that time of year. But see if you can fit a little participatory democracy in there as well because come January 2, 2009, we’ll be hauling our butts back into the voting booth to vote against the Metro Charter Amendment that would force all Metro Government communications and publications to be in English only.

Today, a broad coalition of Nashville’s citizens, community leaders, and business owners launched NashvilleForAllofUs.org, the beginning of the movement to urge the residents of Davidson County to vote against the English-only Metro Charter amendment. At NashvilleForAllofUs.org you can find out more information about the coalition, sign up to volunteer and spread the word, and contribute to their work to defeat this referendum.

Liberadio(!) is part of the coalition, and on Monday we had a lengthy discussion with one of our regular listeners who thought the “English-Only” Charter Amendment was a good idea [Listen]. We, obviously, do not.

Here is what the amendment proposes:

English is the official language of the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County, Tennessee. Official actions which bind or commit the government shall be taken only in the English language, and all official government communications and publications shall be in English. No person shall have a right to government services in any other language. All meetings of the Metro Council, Boards, and Commissions of the Metropolitan Government shall be conducted in English. The Metro Council may make specific exceptions to protect public health and safety. Nothing in this measure shall be interpreted to conflict with federal or state law.

The amendment, which is clearly “English-only” and not “English-first,” is excessive, inefficient, and dangerous.

Excessive because Tennessee state law already codifies English as the “official and legal language” of our state. Inefficient because the translation of essential documents by Metro agencies makes the bureaucracy run more smoothly for all residents. Dangerous because the ability of Nashville government to communicate with all city residents, especially those who might have important information to share with government officials, is essential for public safety.

Nashville has always been known to business leaders, students, and the many visitors that our tourism industry relies on as an inclusive community. This amendment will discriminate against all foreign-born people who visit or come to live or study here, including refugees who have come to this country to escape discrimination. Ironic, ain’t it?

Some important facts:

  • On August 7 , 2008, the Metro Council voted 25-8 urging voters to oppose an English-only charter amendment. Mayor Dean himself addressed the council: “I wanted to take this time, this opportunity to make sure my voice, as mayor of this city, is heard on this issue, and to assure that everyone fully understands the consequences of passing a law that will tie our hands in the global economy, that will detract from our appeal as an international tourist destination, and that will damage our reputation as a welcoming and friendly city.”
  • According to the Nashville Chamber of Commerce, Japanese investment alone in Tennessee exceeded $9.4 billion in 2004, creating over 40,000 jobs.
  • Research indicates that 98% of Latinos think it is “essential” that their children learn English. In fact, 80% of foreign-born children from Mexico learn English “well” or “very well,” and 92 percent of second-generation Latinos are fully fluent in English. By the third generation, only 28% of Latinos are still proficient in Spanish. (Migration Policy Institute).
  • Immigrants are required to learn English before they become U.S. citizens (exceptions include older immigrants). While they are learning English and going through the long citizenship process, they must still interact with government agencies.
  • There are over 45,000 foreign-born individuals in Davidson County who are still working towards their citizenship.
  • According to the Davidson County Election Commission, January’s special election to decide the fate of this ballot initiative will cost Nashville taxpayers approximately $350,000 to $500,000. This during a time when Metro is being forced to take a good, hard, long look at our budget and make necessary cuts.

So in the midst of all that Holiday cheer you’ll be spreading with your giftees and your parties, think about what makes Nashville unique as a city in Tennessee and what we’ll lose if this amendment passes. And then take the time to tell your friends – in between cups of holiday cheer, of course – to get out and vote.

Vote against the “English-Only” referendum on January 22, 2009. Early voting begins on January 2, 2009. Last day to register to vote in this election is December 23, 2008. Call the Davidson County Election Commission for more information at 615-862-8800.

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

  • Share/Bookmark

Looking for something?

Use the form below to search the site:

Still not finding what you're looking for? Drop a comment on a post or contact us so we can take care of it!

Visit our friends!

A few highly recommended friends...