Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Latinx groups doing the work

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Re “Scandal paralyzes City Hall,” Oct. 14

I am glad that former City Councilwom­an Nury Martinez and Councilmen Gil Cedillo and Kevin de León were caught expressing values and attitudes that sadly many Latinx people hold and share only in “private.” But I am deeply enraged about how these biases also result in public policy that continues to maintain white supremacy.

For the last 10 years, I have engaged hundreds of Latinx leaders throughout California to challenge anti-Black and anti-Indigenous indoctrina­tion that is a part of the racism we have internaliz­ed. Latinx people expressing bias and even hatred toward Black and Indigenous people is predictabl­e given the systemic miseducati­on that exists in the U.S., Latin America and the Caribbean about the history of colonizati­on and enslavemen­t.

I also know that I am a part of a growing community of Latinx people who are committed to building justice for Black and Indigenous people because we know that our oppression is intertwine­d. As growing multiracia­l communitie­s, we loudly and unequivoca­lly reject anti-Black and antiIndige­nous prejudice and any efforts to be seduced by the racist white ideologies this country was founded on.

We reject the prejudiced brand of leadership that Martinez, Cedillo and De León offer.

Ámate Pérez Oakland The writer is founding director of the Latinx Racial Equity Project.

It took a year for the recording of the now-former City Council president making racial slurs against the son of a fellow councilmem­ber to be reported to the public.

While the community is rightly angry, I have yet to hear anyone express shock at Martinez’s statement that she would take the child around the corner and bring him back as a wellbehave­d child. To me this implies child abuse, certainly verbal if not physical. Pamela Voetberg

North Hollywood

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