
This open letter by Joi Ruth Orr, Director of Organizing, Faith Leaders for Community Change, needs to be spread far and wide. It first appeared on Huffington Post.
Mr. Gingrich,
For this you still owe our children an apology:
“Some of the things they could do is work in a library, work in the front office, some of them frankly could be janitorial; what if they clean up the bathrooms, what if they mopped the floors, what if in the summer they repainted the school; what if in the process they were actually learning to work, learning to earn money; if they had their own money, they didn’t have to become a pimp or a prostitute or a drug dealer. [If] they had the dignity of work and learned how to be around adults who actually wanted to mentor them and help them. This is not a casual comment… It grows out of a lot of thinking over many years of trying to figure out how do we break out people trapped in poverty who have no work habits.” – Gingrich
We, the students and faculty of the Delaware Annual Conference Ministerial Institute of the AME Church, representing over 34 congregations and their constituents throughout Delaware and southern Pennsylvania are outraged at your continued demeaning of poor children and their families.
As a candidate vying for the Republican Presidential nomination, to suggest that poor children collectively lack a work ethic and drive for legal and productive work is entirely classist. Your national platform is no place for such irresponsible remarks. Our children deserve better than your degrading rhetoric.
In fact, they deserve an apology, and we — their pastors and advocates — demand one.
Mr. Gingrich, what your remarks have demonstrated is a failure to acknowledge the resilience of many who work daily and yet are unable to escape poverty. For many, low wages, a poor economy, and sparse full time employment opportunities have landed many families into the category of what the U.S. Department of Labor & Labor Statistics call the working poor. Contrary to what your remarks propagate, a significant number of children in households below the American poverty line (and those one paycheck away from it) are in homes with working family members; many of them are in our congregations weekly and are active citizens.
Mr. Gingrich, not only did you get the “cause” of poverty wrong, but your “solution” is just as unsubstantiated and offensive. Mandating that poor children become the janitors of their own failing public schools to better their work ethic is not a well thought out, viable, or realistic solution. Such a proposal is not only insulting, it is ridiculous.
Where would the currently employed janitors work (obviously this is a back handed assault on union employees)? If poor children are to benefit from extracurricular employment, why not at least provide STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math) opportunities to increase their competitiveness in the global marketplace? Why not invest in education reform instead of cutting back early education/head start programs? Why not put forth solutions to the unemployment crisis in our nation, so that those who have the dignity, but not the work, can have an opportunity to build a better future for themselves and their children?
But, no — instead you fan the flames of prejudice to get votes. With a move right out of Lee Atwater’s Southern Strategy play book (i.e., “Welfare Mothers” = Lazy Blacks), you have managed to stir the xenophobia and racist fears of your far right republican base with the statement:
“I’ve been talking about the importance of work, particularly as it relates to people who are in areas where there is public housing, et cetera, where there are relatively few people that go to work.” (Emphasis added)
Mr. Gingrich, the poverty of many poor minority children is the byproduct of systemic injustices that bar them from participation in the American Dream because of their racial and social location — not laziness.
We understand that you are of the “pull yourself up by your bootstraps” camp, but the last time we checked Mr. Gingrich, it is impossible to pull yourself up by your own boot straps, and even more difficult when you have no boots to begin with.
Consequently, as pastors and leaders of the poor and their children, we are called to champion those without the boots of opportunity, fair play, and justice. For us not to mandate an apology for such biased, erroneous and offensive remarks would be as irresponsible as the remarks themselves. Today, Mr. Gingrich, we extend to you the opportunity to recant your “war on poor children” rhetoric and the opportunity to apologize to our children for speaking such falsehoods over their lives.
Awaiting your response,
Delaware Annual Conference Ministerial Institute
The Rev. Dr. Janet J. Sturdivant, Dean of Ministerial Institute
The Rev. Silvester S. Beaman, Chairman of Board of Examiners
Sis. Joi Orr, M.Div, Organizer & Institute Student




15 Comments


After he apologizes to the children, he can then apologize to the janitors. He has so much respect for work, he doesn’t think people who clean the toilets should be paid. In point of fact that whole speech made it clear that he has little knowledge about the challenges that face children living in poverty, and absolutely no respect for work that isn’t white collar.
Gingrich’s comments were his “Let them eat cake” moment, completley lacking in any kind of compassion or understanding. Kudos to the pastors who speak out on behalf of the poor and vulnerable.
Apology??? The Newter has absolutely no shame. This was a twofer: a swipe at unions combined with a racist dogwhistle. I expect him to double down.
Shades of Ann Richards: “He can’t help it; he was born with
a silver foot in his mouth.” Clueless.
I’ve been waiting.
The silence, if not complicity, of our churches about the republican attack on everyone who is not them has been astonishing.
Have they forgotten what Jesus preached!
In the case of far too many “Christian” churches, esp those mega-churches run by one of Doug Coe’s “Family” grifters, the operative question is:
Did they ever even read what Jesus preached?
Sure doesn’t seem like it to me.
In order for someone to have ‘shame”, one must first have an awareness of the reality which surrounds them. Only then can they realize and understand the obnoxious and obscene nature of their grandiose statements and actions. Gingrich’s “ideas” are so obscene that they have become a pornography of political blather. With each passing day, Gingrich demonstrates his ineleigilbility to serve the public good.
Uhhhh…Pam; don’t hold your breath. It’s hateful gibberish like that, which is fueling Newt’s comeback.
Except, now that the peckerhead express has left South Carolina for Florida, it’s going to be a different story.
Florida is not the old Confederacy. It’s a mish-mash of voting dynamics, and relatively few of them will be Gingrich-friendly. If he can win there, I will take him seriously; otherwise, all he did in S.C. was, out-kneejerk the other knee jerks.
Good letter. Thanks for the post.
Big Grifter Newters has no concept of the meaning of the word “shame,” and he will *stand by* what he said until the end of time because that’s what he truely, genuinely & sincerely *believes.*
As a prior post indicates: it’s a FUCK YOU to non-white collar job-holders, especially dreaded Union members who, you know, demand to get paid a decent wage, plus it’s an every bigger FUCK YOU to the poor, especially minority poor people, who, you know, have the effrontery to exist in the “country” as adulterous skanky pervy grifter Newticles.
Plus, his behavior GETS VOTES… as we witnessed in SC.
Good point, ‘Cruiser. The silence of the mainstream “Christians” about the tea-party snake-handlers and the politicians pandering to them has been deafening.
While I agree with the above mentioned letter 100%, I think we’re missing the point here. In Newt’s teabag Republican reality, he’s said/done nothing wrong, so there is no need to apologize. They are actively trying to bring about medieval serfdom again. Every great imperial power in history has become the dominant force of their time through slavery. Remember, there are 2 resources necessary for power and wealth: natural and human. We’ve so poorly managed natural resources, that they’ve become unsustainable and more importantly, too expensive. Therefore, every effort must be made to assure that human resource remains cheap or it all falls apart for the “1%”. Just ask Romulus Augustus, Louis the XVI or Mehmed VI, amongst many others.
Hasn’t newt been on the public dole in one way or another since he was born?
All of them have forgotten.
Makes you wonder what they are thinking…
Also,
‘With each passing day’, the people who vote for Gingrich demonstrate their ignorance of the issues that really matter that would make this country a better place to live.
Well they’re not doing God’s work.
Who’s “work” are they doing?