Fighting to Raise the Minimum Wage in Mountain View, CA


Ever since the Occupy Wall Street movement three years ago, many activists have been directing their energies towards alleviating the economic inequality in our country. One way in which many people have been trying to address the growing economic inequality in this country has been to raise the minimum wage. Several members of Congress have tried to get bills through Congress to raise the minimum wage, only to run into a conservative Republican roadblock. With little likelihood for a national action on raising the minimum wage, activists have redirected their energies towards lobbying state and city governments to raise the minimum wage. Here, in Mountain View, California, activists have been working in these past few months to get the City Council to raise the minimum wage so that lower income citizens can stay above water in the Silicon Valley.

On February 19, 2014, there was a rally for a higher minimum wage that took place in Mountain View, California. I went during my lunch and listened to the speakers and took photos. It was cool to see the Raging Grannies attend the rally and sing a few songs. I didn’t have much of an opportunity to talk to the people who were attending the rally, but I enjoyed listening to the speakers talk about the growing inability to keep up with the rising rents and housing prices in the booming Silicon Valley area. The economy in the Bay Area is doing well for a certain segment of the population, but many of the middle class and the poor are not sharing in the prosperity of the area. Here are a few photos from that February rally.

Two months later, on April 22, 2014, I went to a City Hall meeting where several activists spoke to the City Council to urge them to raise the minimum wage. The beginning of the meeting, the mayor thanked a group of people who were promoting bicycle riding and were in charge of a Bike-To-Work Day. After that, the meeting was opened up for speakers to discuss issues that they were concerned about. Thirteen people came up to the microphone to speak up for the minimum wage. Various groups sat in the audience to support the speakers. It was a wonderful meeting. Here are photos of that City Hall meeting.

I end this blog with passages from the Old Testament prophets. The Old Testament prophets had a strong sense of social justice for the poor, the widow, the orphan and the marginalized. Isaiah, Jeremiah, Amos, Ezekiel, and the great prophets of Israel inspired later day human rights activists like Martin Luther King Jr., Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel, William Sloane Coffin, Ralph Abernathy, Pauli Murray, Bayard Rustin, Cesar Chavez, Bishop Desmond Tutu, and countless others to fight for the poor and the marginalized in society. The beauty of the prophet’s poetry inspired activist poets like Muriel Rukeyser, Allen Ginsberg, Alicia Ostriker and June Jordan.

Stephen Colecchi wrote an article about the influence of the Old Testament prophets on Catholic Social Thinking. He wrote:

The ancient Israelites were inspired by God’s Spirit to build a society that ever more clearly protected human life and dignity. And like us, they were not always successful.

In their day the prophets raised their voices to defend the poor and call for greater social justice. The prophet Isaiah proclaimed:

Ah! Those who enact unjust statutes,
who write oppressive decrees,
Depriving the needy of judgment,
robbing my people’s poor of justice,
Making widows their plunder,
and orphans their prey! (10:1-2).

Time and again the prophets of the Old Testament defended the poor and powerless.

Dr. Claude Mariottini, Professor of Old Testament at Northern Baptist Seminary, wrote about the Old Testament prophet Amos:

Amos spoke to an oppressed society and his concern for the poor and the oppressed made him a prophet for all times. Amos is also a prophet for the twenty-first century, a time when the gap between rich and poor has never been greater.

The sources of oppression and injustice may look different today, but people’s concern for material prosperity reflects the days in which Amos lived. Amos’ message of God’s opposition to injustice, his criticism of the people’s worship of material things, and his witness of God’s special concern for the poor and oppressed, affirm that the worship of God in any age is worthless if social oppression and injustice are ignored.

Amy Clampitt wrote a wonderful essay titled “The Poetry of Isaiah” for the book Out of the Garden: Women Writers on the Bible a collection of women writers’ essays showing the female perspective on the Bible. Clampitt wrote about the prophet Isaiah:

In the approximately two and a half millennia since Isaiah lived, human nature can hardly be said to have pulled out of such crass unconcern for the victims of misfortune. A society that goes on arguing over entitlements and curtailments, as of the right to beg on subway platforms, seems to have come no nearer to what could be called social justice. Nor have we very noticeably advanced beyond the mayhem and the hypocrisy of organized religion…

…Poets are always a nuisance, and often dangerous. On public matters they are anything but the last word. That is in a way their virtue- that what gives them their power comes from somewhere beyond allegiance to any system of belief or behavior. By nature they are unstable, sometimes unruly, now and then giving way (as in Alice in Wonderland) to subversive fits of merriment, as well as to an uncensored sublimity. Without them, who is there to tell us the best, along with the very worst, about ourselves?

Here are some passages from the prophets of the Old Testament.

Learn to do right; seek justice. Defend the oppressed. Take up the cause of the fatherless; plead the case of the widow.

Isaiah 1:17

The Lord will enter into judgment

With the elders of His people

And His princes:

“For you have eaten up the vineyard;

The plunder of the poor is in your houses.

What do you mean by crushing My people

And grinding the faces of the poor?”

Says the Lord God of hosts.

Isaiah 3:14-15

Woe to those who make unjust laws,

to those who issue oppressive decrees,

to deprive the poor of their rights

and withhold justice from the oppressed of my people,

making widows their prey

and robbing the fatherless.

What will you do on the day of reckoning,

when disaster comes from afar?

To whom will you run for help?

Where will you leave your riches?

Isaiah 10:1-3

You have been a refuge for the poor,

a refuge for the needy in their distress,

a shelter from the storm

and a shade from the heat.

For the breath of the ruthless

is like a storm driving against a wall

Isaiah 25:4

“Come, all you who are thirsty,

come to the waters;

and you who have no money,

come, buy and eat!

Come, buy wine and milk

without money and without cost.

Isaiah 55:1

“Is not this the kind of fasting I have chosen:

to loose the chains of injustice

and untie the cords of the yoke,

to set the oppressed free

and break every yoke?

Is it not to share your food with the hungry

and to provide the poor wanderer with shelter—

when you see the naked, to clothe them,

and not to turn away from your own flesh and blood?

Isaiah 58:6-7

The Spirit of the Sovereign Lord is on me,

because the Lord has anointed me

to proclaim good news to the poor

He has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted,

to proclaim freedom for the captives

and release from darkness for the prisoners,

to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor

and the day of vengeance of our God,

to comfort all who mourn

Isaiah 61:1-2

Like cages full of birds,

their houses are full of deceit;

they have become rich and powerful

and have grown fat and sleek.

Their evil deeds have no limit;

they do not seek justice.

They do not promote the case of the fatherless;

they do not defend the just cause of the poor.

Jeremiah 5:27-28

If you really change your ways and your actions and deal with each other justly, if you do not oppress the foreigner, the fatherless or the widow and do not shed innocent blood in this place, and if you do not follow other gods to your own harm, then I will let you live in this place, in the land I gave your ancestors for ever and ever.

Jeremiah 7:5-7

Woe to him who builds his palace by unrighteousness,

his upper rooms by injustice,

making his own people work for nothing,

not paying them for their labor.

Jeremiah 22:13

“He defended the cause of the poor and needy,

and so all went well.

Is that not what it means to know me?”

declares the Lord.

“But your eyes and your heart

are set only on dishonest gain,

on shedding innocent blood

and on oppression and extortion.”

Jeremiah 22:16-17

This is what the Lord says:

“For three sins of Israel,

even for four, I will not relent.

They sell the innocent for silver,

and the needy for a pair of sandals.

They trample on the heads of the poor

as on the dust of the ground

and deny justice to the oppressed.

Amos 2:6-7

You levy a straw tax on the poor

and impose a tax on their grain;

Therefore, though you have built stone mansions,

you will not live in them;

though you have planted lush vineyards,

you will not drink their wine.

For I know how many are your offenses

and how great your sins.

There are those who oppress the innocent and take bribes

and deprive the poor of justice in the courts.

Amos 5:11-12

At that time I will deal

with all who oppressed you.

I will rescue the lame;

I will gather the exiles.

I will give them praise and honor

in every land where they have suffered shame

Zephaniah 3:19

So I will come to put you on trial. I will be quick to testify against sorcerers, adulterers and perjurers, against those who defraud laborers of their wages, who oppress the widows and the fatherless, and deprive the foreigners among you of justice, but do not fear me,” says the Lord Almighty.
Malachi 3:5

Raise the Minimum Wage! Rally in Mountain View, CA 2/19/14.
Emcee/Rally Organizer – Josh Wolf, Organizing for Action
Speaker – Paul George, Director, Peninsula Peace and Justice Center

About angelolopez

From April 9, 2008 to April 2011, Angelo Lopez was the regular cartoonist for the TRI-CITY VOICE, a local newspaper of the Milpitas, Fremont, and Union City areas in California. From December 2011 to March 2023, Angelo has been the regular cartoonist for the PHILIPPINE NEWS TODAY, a Filipino American community newspaper based in the San Francisco Bay Area. Angelo Lopez's cartoons are currently published in THE CARTOON MOVEMENT, PITIK BULAG AND PINOYABROD CANADA. Angelo Lopez is a member of the ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN EDITORIAL CARTOONISTS, PITIK BULAG and THE CARTOON MOVEMENT Angelo won the 2016 Robert F. Kennedy Book and Journalism Award for Editorial Cartoons. He has also won the 2013, 2015, 2016 and 2018 Sigma Delta Chi award for editorial cartooning for newspapers with a circulation under 100,000. Angelo won first prize for the Best of the West contest in 2016 and third prize in 2017.
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