Rebecca Dallas
Captive Nation
America is a prison. Held within
this prison are the past and present captives of racism that have been serving
out their sentence in the “land of the free” for centuries. The
crimes of racism in this country can be traced back to 1492, when genocide was
first enacted upon the native tribes who were America’s original caretakers.
America’s shameful history of racism has impacted all of humankind including
everything from murder and slavery to segregation and propaganda. Currently
the Arab-American/ Islamic populations have received disturbing amounts of hate-filled
attention from the media and mainstream population, due to current political
conflicts between the U.S. and the Middle East.
While the current prejudice has been rising to a peak since the September 11th attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, it is by no means a new condition in the lives of people of Middle Eastern descent, residing in America. There is also a unique and striking comparison that can be made in a historical context. During WWII Japanese Americans were made captives of racism and forced into government internment camps. This is very similar to the kind of psychosocial captivity that Arab American citizens are currently facing.
When I say “racist captivity” I am speaking of every way in which
people are kept from experiencing the inalienable rights and freedoms that were
laid out in the Constitution over 200 years ago. This captivity enslaves people
in numerous ways subtle and psychological to blatant and violent.
In Elizabeth Boosahda’s 2003 book, Arab-American faces and Voices, the
first half and last chapter of the book highlight the fact that since first
emigrating to America in the 1880’s in search of a better life, Arab-Americans
have been victimized by bigotry. In spite of the discrimination Arab- Americans
have faced, they have provided a great many economic and cultural contributions
to society. But the atmosphere in the U.S. post 9/11 has brought a new wave
of hate to the forefront.
Enemy, evil-doer, terrorist, filthy animal, fanatic, coward, cave-dweller, and sand-n***er are all examples of hate speech that the Islamic/Arab-American community come in contact with on a regular basis in today’s society. Japanese-Americans were accustomed to similar slander during WWII, especially with the phrase “filthy animal”. Media and government propaganda are by far two of the most effective mediums for trying to make the opposition be seen as something less than human. This gives life to the idea that their life is less valuable than our own. While the repetition of the media is powerful, other influential forces lie in the community of prominent people.
During WWII Theodore Seuss Geisel, better known as beloved children’s
author and illustrator, Dr. Seuss, created many propaganda cartoons filled with
racist slander against Japanese people. In David Minear’s 1999 book, “Dr.
Seuss Goes to War” the collection of cartoons are portrayed and analyzed.
On pages 143 and 145, Japanese people are depicted as both monkeys and alley
cats. On page 119 Minear writes, “Seuss draws the Japanese with a piggish
nose, coke-bottle glasses, slanted eyes, lips parted in smile, and a brush moustache.”
Currently many inflammatory anti-Islamic/political cartoons are published in
the U.S. Political writer Daniel Kurtzman has a website called, politicalhumor.about.com,
which contains many cartoons of that very nature. One cartoon depicts Osama
Bin Laden on the cover of a book entitled Jihad for Dummies. At the top of the
cover it states, “ The author of Islamic and Impotent brings you…”
If you scroll down the cover you will see a statement that implies that Bin
Laden is a pederast as well as a mass murderer. Another cartoon from the same
web site is entitled “ The Afghan Spice Girls”, which portrays five
women dressed in black robes with cloth covering their faces. The captions beneath
each woman say: Veiled Spice, Hidden Spice, Masked Spice, Covered Spice, and
Obscured Spice.
At present, along with political cartoons, politicians, religious leaders, even
musicians, freely make racist statements. In Hussein Ibish’s 2002 Report
on Hate Crimes & Discrimination over twenty examples are cited on pages
128-130 including:
“ Islam is a religion
in which God requires you
to send your son to die for him. Christianity is
a faith in which God sends his son to die for you.”
-Attorney General John Ashcroft
and
“ I think Mohammed was a terrorist. I’ve read
enough of the history of his life written by both
Muslims and non-Muslims, that he was a violent
man, a man of war.”- Rev. Jerry Falwell
After September 11th country music performer Charlie Daniels released a song entitled,
“ It ain’t no rag, it’s a flag, and you don’t wear it
on your head”; which contained the
following lyrics:
“ This ain’t no rag/ It’s the flag/ And we don’t wear
it on our heads/
It’s a symbol of the land where the good guys live/ Are you listening
to what I said/ You’re a coward and a fool/ And you broke all the rules/
And you wounded our American pride/ now we’re coming with a gun/
And you know you’re going to run/ but you can’t find no place to
hide…
Our people stand proud/ The American crowd is faithful and loyal and tough/
We’re as good as the best and better than the rest. You’re going
to find out
soon enough…”
Ibish states on page 91, “ Federal law prohibits employment discrimination,
codified in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. This act makes it illegal
to discriminate against an employee or one seeking employment on the basis of
eight categories: race, religion, color, age, sex, disability, national origin,
or citizenship status.” Yet the law seems to elude some American employers.
Ibish reports over 90 cases of employment discrimination due to the September
11th backlash.
Two incidents included occurred in the Bay Area of California: “ A Muslim
woman working in the South Bay area said that she received a death threat from
a co-worker. Her supervisors treated it as a joke, but ultimately she left the
job because she didn’t feel safe there any longer.” The next one
occurred in San Francisco. “ A man from Iraq, who is a U.S. citizen said
he was fired from his job and was specifically told it was because he was Middle
Eastern.”
Japanese Americans had the opposite experience in the internment camps as they
were forced to work rather than deprived of work. The Marriott Library at the
University of Utah has a website ( www.lib.utah.edu) which contains photographs
of the labor camps in Tule, California and Topaz, Utah. The one in Tule was
famous for workers’ strikes due to horrible conditions in the camps. Monica
Sone recalls her experience working at the camp in Puyallup, Washington in the
1953 book, Nisei Daughter, “ My day was filled, hurrying to Area D for
work, hurrying back to area A for lunch, then back to D for work again, and
finally back to A for the night.”
Racial profiling is a plague infecting the heart of America. It encompasses
people of numerous races and is becoming the rule rather than exception. Profiling
is the act of singling someone out based on their specific race. This act in
itself sets a canvas for heinous crimes to be carried out, both legal and illegal.
These profiling perpetrators inhabit our government, our media, our airports,
our police force, our education system, and even our own back yards.
Justification was given for the blatant profiling and relocation of Japanese
American citizens over 50 years ago in bizarre ways. In Stacy Kowtko’s
2000 historigraphical analysis, Issei, Nisei, and Our Say, the author states
on page 25, “ Government administration proposed ‘protective custody’
as a major argument for relocation, yet the rebuttal to this idea counters with
examples like the fact that between Pearl Harbor and the order for evacuation,
less than ten documented cases of violence against any Japanese in the Pacific
Coast area appeared in the two major newspapers in California.” Kowtko
asserts, based on readings of racist publications of the time that, “Through
fault of their ancestry, Japanese Americans were not to be trusted.” (p.20)
After the attack on Pearl Harbor Japanese Americans were viewed as traitors,
this being the true reason for the internment.
The Arab American/ Islamic community of today has never been forced into concentration
camps, but they suffer at the hands of abhorrent profiling every day without
any kind of lasting protection. Part of the problem is the fact that the some
of the so-called protectors are actually the perpetrators. Much guilt again
lies in the hands of the American government.
The ACLU website( www.aclu.org ) provides a brief explanation of Patriot Act
II which was instilled 45 days after 9/11: “ Patriot Act II gives the
FBI power over medical, student, and library records. It also inhibits various
other freedoms of citizens.” This action put into effect is further proof
of how the words citizen and captive are becoming interchangeable in the United
States of America.
The media, under the protection of the second amendment is arguably the worst
racial profiler in existence. The inhumanity committed within this powerful
medium perpetuates a breeding ground for both psychological and violent forms
of racism.
Author and professor Evelyn Shakir provides numerous interviews with Arab American
women in her 1997 book, Bint Arab. A thought-provoking interview with an Iraqi
woman named Hind Rassam Cullhane is cited on page 175 where she states:
“ I’m thinking that my whole life in the United Sates has been punctuated
by nothing but misery and bad news of the Middle East, news of wars,conflicts,
killings. If it’s not Iraq, it’s Lebanon; if it’s not Lebanon
it’s Egypt. And after the wars, the prejudice against us because we are
Arabs and the whole media portrayal of ‘ these terrorists.’ During
the Arab Israeli wars in the 1970’s, my sons were beaten up in grade school
and in high school because they were half Arab. My son says, ‘Sometimes
I don’t want to say I’m an Arab.’ I feel badly for children
that they have to hide their identity. I’m a psychologist, and I think
that the hostility here (against Arabs) has led to depression; I think it has
led to a shaky identity. People have not even done studies on what it has done
to our identity as an ethnic group.”
Again in the 2002 Report on Hate Crimes and Discrimination a quote is cited
published by the National Review Online, journalist Ann Coulter made a hostile
statement in print, 9/13/01: “ We should invade their countries, kill
their leaders, and convert them to Christianity.” This is only one of
many inflammatory comments made by Coulter.
Japanese Americans during WWII were forced to travel in order to relocate to
their designated internment camps. Arab American citizens of this time are kept
from traveling freely due to the institutionalized epidemic of profiling in
airports. Hussein Ibish states on page 23 in the 1998 –2002 Report on
Hate Crimes and Discrimination, “ Institutionalized discrimination includes
racial or ethnic bias which occurs within a specific system, procedure, or organization.”
And also, “ Profiling is a system that compares an individual with an
officially compiled abstract of characteristics thought typical of someone who
might be a threat to airline security.” Many incidences were occurring
long before September 11th. Ibish lists twenty reported cases through 1998-2000.
One incident on page 26 goes as follows, “ In July 1999 at the Chicago
Midway Airport in Illinois an Arab American man traveling on business had answered
all the routine questions at the ticket counter. When the ticket agent placed
a tag on his bag, she claimed she smelled something unusual. The traveler then
took his bag off the counter to inspect it. A curious bystander asked what was
going on and if there was a bomb. The ticket agent then claimed that she heard
the traveler say that he had a bomb in his bag. The police then came and asked
him several questions relating to his name and address. They did not ask him
to relate his version of the facts. He was arrested and the charges against
him remained even after nothing was found in his bag and it was discovered that
the smell of something burning originated from a trash can that was on fire
outside the terminal.”
Post September 11th excuses for airline profiling became pettier. The 2002 Report
on Hate Crimes and Discrimination cites an incident on page 25, “ On November
5, 2001 in the Boston Logan International Airport in Massachusetts an Arab American
passenger scheduled to fly from Boston to Los Angeles International Airport
was singled out during the boarding process and forbidden by an AA manager to
enter the aircraft. The manager explained to him, ‘One of the passengers
is not comfortable flying with you.’”
The average citizen might turn to the police for protection and assurances of
safety at the hands of racial profiling; but these days some police officers
are the perpetrators of unethical misconduct against Arab Americans, fortunately
this is the exception rather than the rule. However, in the same report on discrimination
cited above Ibish references such an incident. “ On October 4, 2001 an
Arab American motorist was pulled over by a police car following an illegal
U-turn. The sergeant approached the car holding his gun. He ordered the motorist
out, threatened him and called him a ‘ Bin Laden supporter,’ before
searching his car.”
In Densho: The Japanese American Legacy Project : A Teacher’s Resource
Guide, former internee Mutsu Homma describes a very similar incident of hateful
harassment by a guard, “ In camp guarded by very young soldiers, one time
a soldier stopped me and said, ‘ Hey you.’ ‘You want to talk
to me?’ He said ‘Yeah, Are you a human being?’ I said, ‘
Yeah, don’t you think so?’ ‘ Yeah you look like a human being,
but when I came from South Carolina, they said that Jap is not a human being.
They are like a gorilla so if you want to, kill them. That’s what I learned.’”
The Anti American Discrimination Committee is very concerned with the growing number of incidences of educational discrimination and its psychological effects on children. Ibish Hussein writes on page 39 in the 1998- 2000 Report on Hate Crimes and Discrimination, “ When discrimination manifests in schools, it clearly has a damaging effect on Arab American students. ADC hears reports of children who want to hide their Arab identity…A hostile educational environment can create a sense of shame about their national origins. Other children may tease Arab Americans associating them with terrorism and incidents of political violence.” The ADC did a case study in Detroit Michigan, which turned out to be a breeding ground for many incidences of educational discrimination. On page 42 Ibish reports, “ In November of 1998 an Arab American student was expelled after he was allegedly hit and beaten by two of his teachers. A law suit against the school was filed.” Ibish also reports an incident on page 47 in Maryland; “ A parent complained that kindergarten students had a number of lessons on Hanukkah but none on Ramadan. The teacher responded to her with the comment, ‘ What is Ramadan? It’s not an American religion. We’re doing local religions.’”
A historical comparison can be made while reading Renee Tawa’s 1997 article
in The LA Times, Childhood Lost: The Orphans of Manzanar. A former orphan of
the Japanese internment camps, Sakamoto, recalls her feelings of dealing with
racial slurs in her junior high school after the war was over, “ I wished
I were never Japanese.”
As a person living in the United States I am able to say whatever I want, because
my right to free speech is protected under the Constitution. Unfortunately that
means that I also have to hear many things that I find offensive and slanderous.
I had a neighbor in my own home a few months ago, who will remain unnamed, make
an incredibly ignorant and nauseating remark about the current war in Iraq.
She said, “ We should just go over there and nuke them all.” This
is a person I thought was decent for the most part, but it turned out that she
was a bigot. That is one of the scariest devices of racism, you can never be
sure of people’s ethics. This free vocalization of bigotry by everyday
people contributes to the growing number of hate crimes occurring in America.
I recently spoke to Tina Webb, a taxi driver in Seattle, who told me that many
of her friends and co-workers had been assaulted and deported due to post September
11th backlash. Tina was on the news recently because one of her co-workers,
Hassam Farah, from Somalia was murdered. “ He was shot in the back of
the head five times.” Webb stated. “ The police believe that it
was not a racially motivated crime, but due to a robbery.” However, this
crime and the other many assaults on cab drivers in the Seattle community, due
to racial profiling, have led cab drivers to demand safety measures be implemented
within their vehicles. Tina said that cab drivers want video cameras and bulletproof
glass installed inside their vehicles, so they are less afraid of being attacked
while on the job.
Hussein Ibish refers to a confirmed hate crime murder on page 69 in The Report
on Hate Crimes and Discrimination against Arab Americans: September 11, 2001
to October 11,2002. “ On September 15, 2001 in Mesa, Arizona a 49 year
old Indian Sikh, Balbir Sigh Sodhi, was shot while planting flowers outside
his Chevron station. His murderer, 42 year old Frank Roque, had spent the day
drinking and raving about how he wanted to kill the “ rag heads”
responsible for the terrorist attacks four days earlier. After being kicked
out of a bar, Roque went on a shooting rampage. He first shot and killed Sodhi,
and afterwards fired on the home of an Afghan family. He then shot several times
at a Lebanese American clerk who escaped injury. During his arrest he yelled,
“ I am a patriot!” and “ I stand for America all the way!”
The Department of Justice investigated the slaying as a hate crime murder.”
The forcible imprisonment of Japanese Americans during WWII was in itself a
hate crime based on ancestry. In Nisei Daughter, Monica Sone describes her first
moments at Camp Harmony in Puyallup, Washington. “ I remembered the wire
fence encircling us, and a knot of anger tightened in my breast. What was I
doing behind a fence like a criminal? If there were accusations to be made,
why hadn’t I been given a fair trial? Maybe I wasn’t considered
an American anymore. My citizenship wasn’t real after all. Then what was
I?”
Japanese Americans were exiled to camps within America, but Arab Americans are
currently being deported at astonishing rates back to their own countries. On
page 33 in Singh’s Report on Hate Crimes and Discrimination, it states,
“The Department of Justice has admitted to holding over 600 secret detainee
hearings since 9/11. In one instance, the government chartered a plane and performed
a mass deportation of 132 men to Pakistan.”
Millions of people in this country are the victims of racism. Ironically, these
victims are held captive by prisoners of ignorance. These prisoners of ignorance
are abundant and dangerous. The solution starts in ending the silence surrounding
every instance of racism people come across in their daily lives. Indifference
can often be more venomous than an actual incident. One way to begin ridding
the world of racism is to abolish stereotypes. The poet Mohja Kahf states it
beautifully in a poem entitled Hijab Scene #7 from her 2003 book E-mails from
Scheherezad. “ No I’m not bald under this scarf. No I’m not
from that country where women can’t drive cars. No I wouldn’t like
to defect. I’m already an American… Yes I speak English. Yes I carry
explosives. They’re called words. And if you don’t get up off your
assumptions they’re going to blow you away.”
It is hopeful to know that some reparations and apologies have been made to
former Japanese American internees, but that doesn’t make up for the time
they lost or the pain and humiliation they suffered. If the government were
truly sorry then why do they continue to repeat the same blasphemous mistakes
today against citizens of Middle Eastern descent? And why do they allow it in
other institutional settings?
Maybe there is a light at the end of the tunnel if you look to organizations
and individuals who have made pro-active steps to combat hate. Ibish reports
on pages 134-138, in the same report as cited above, many instances of support
for the Muslim and Arab communities. He discusses fund raising efforts to fight
“ backlash”. Also many people stepped up after 9/11 in support of
Mosques. The ADC Research Institute also received many messages of solidarity
from all over the country. One went as follows, from an undisclosed city in
the USA, “ I’m Japanese American… Today we all must feel like
what people felt when Pearl Harbor was bombed… dismay, shock, anger, a
terrible tragedy. One of the first thoughts that came to my mind was the hope
that there will not be anti- Arab sentiments like that directed at Japanese
Americans during WWII. I pray that the American people do not treat Arab Americans
now like they treated my people back then. I hope history does not repeat itself.
Take care.” Unfortunately this sentiment is more haunting than hopeful,
but at least historical connections are being seen by many.
“ No person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due
process of law. Those accused of a crime shall enjoy the right to a speedy and
public trial by an impartial jury to be informed of the nature and cause of
the accusation.” These are protections guaranteed in the 5th and 6th amendments.
If we as citizens know the rights laid out in the Constitution then is it not
our duty as ethical members of humanity to fight against racism in any form
and on any level? I will conclude with an appropriate quote from Margaret Mead
who said, “ Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens
can change the world; indeed it’s the only thing that ever has.”
Sources
Boosahda, Elizabeth. Arab-American Faces and Voices: The Origins of an Immigrant
Community. University of Texas Press, Austin, 2003.
Boosahda’s 2003 work is a history of Arab immigration to the to the United
States, centering around the community of Worcester, Mass. Issues of prejudice
and fears of deportation are covered on pp.133-170 and again on pp.204-206.
The work also discusses Arab-American men who volunteered as servicemen to fight
in U.S. wars. Concerning the current day conflicts Boosahda writes, “
The Arab-American community is outraged over tragedies befallen relatives abroad…Despite
the lack of even-handedness in the Arab-Israeli conflict by the United States
government, and negative defamation and stereotyping, their loyalty is to America
first. That loyalty and love has been passed down from generations of immigrants
looking for opportunity and a better life.” ( p.204)
Densho: The Japanese American Legacy
Project. Teacher’s Resource Guide. Funded
By Washington Civil Liberties Public Education Program, 2003.
This 2003 guide is meant to help teachers plan a curriculum to educate students
about Japanese American experiences, internment included. A timeline of events
leading up to internment is included, also includes a map of internment camp
locations, and sample lesson plans for instructors. Discusses racism and causes
of incarceration. A well-detailed guide with many informative sources cited.
Bill of Rights included here.
Foster, Heath. “ It’s Important to Right this Wrong.” Seattle
Post Intelligencer. 5 Feb.
2001. A1+.
Foster’s 2001 article refers to the wrongness of Japanese internment camps
during WWII and the necessity of apologies and reparations needed for that.
The work also goes into great detail about the life of a Japanese American man,
Yamashita. It discusses his experiences with the internment, and his fight afterwards
for civil rights justice.
Heuterman, Thomas. The Burning Horse: The Japanese American Experience in the
Yakima Valley 1920-1942. Eastern Washington University Press, 1995.
Heuterman’s 1995 book states that the racism and hate crimes Japanese
Americans experienced was prevalent before the internment camps of WWII, and
that the Yakima Valley of the Pacific Northwest was the home of some of the
most venomous of such events. Many statistics are cited in the appendix of pre-Pearl
Harbor incidences of racial cruelty.
Ibish, Hussein, ed. 1998 Report on Hate Crimes and Discrimination against
Arab-Americans. Washington D.C.: ADC Research Institute, 2001.
Ibish’s 2001 report outlines intolerance against Arab-Americans and the
issues facing Arab Americans when dealing with society’s discrimination
towards them, in both the U.S. and Europe, before 9/11. The report includes
topics such as taunting, violence, political cartoons, racist speech, false
accusations of terrorist activities, airport problems, media intolerance, employment
and education discrimination, and police brutality.
Ibish, Hussein, ed. Report on Hate Crimes and Discrimination against
Arab-Americans: The Post September 11 Backlash/ Sept. 11, 2001-
Oct.11,2002. Washington D.C.: ADC Research Institute, 2003.
Ibish’s 2003 report surveys experiences of the American community following
the 9/11 attacks, during the year after. The report includes information on
hate crimes and civil liberties concerns. Patriot Act II is discussed and the
new discriminatory immigration policies. The report also proposes solutions
directed towards the government to aid in such problems. Also highlights positive
support Arab Americans have received post 9/11 in the way of fundraisers, Mosque
support, and escorts for safety concerns.
Japanese American Internment Camps
during WWII. Photographs from Special
Collection Department at the Marriott Library, University of Utah. Internet
Source
Available at: lib.utah.edu/spc/photo/9066/9066.htm. 1 Dec. 2003.
A brief history is given here on the Japanese internment camps. The photographs
exhibited are from camps in Topaz, Utah and Tule, California. The one in Tule
is infamous for horrible labor camps and internee strikes. The Photos are very
sad and telling in their nature.
Kahf, Mohja. E-mails from Scheherazad. The University Press of Florida, 2003.
Kahf’s 2003 book is a collection of poetry from the perspective of a Muslim
woman in the United States. Many poems in the book reflect the feeling of ‘invisibility’
experienced by many Muslim women in the U.S. The topic of stereotypes is widely
addressed as well. A very touching and enlightening read.Kowtko, Stacy. Issei,
Nisei., And Our Say: A Historigraphical Analysis of Japanese
American Internment During World War II. A thesis presented to Eastern
Washington University for a Master’s Degree, 2000.
Kowtko’s 2000 historigraphical thesis uses a timeline approach to discuss
the forcible relocation of the Japanese American citizens during WWII. Efforts
to justify such events are also cited. Towards the end of her piece ( p.69)
, the author proposes that education is the solution to bring accountability
to the wrongs of the U.S. government concerning said events.
Minear, Richard H., ed. Dr. Seuss Goes To War: The World WarII Editorial cartoons
Of Theodor Seuss Geissel. The New Press, New Press, New York.1999.
Minear’s 1999 work includes in it the propaganda political cartoons of
Dr. Seuss. Laid out here is the fact that Seuss, beloved children’s author
is in reality a racist and the cartoons prove that. His work is especially racist
in nature towards Japanese people some times depicted as animals( monkeys and
alley cats). The work also includes anti-Hitler and Mussolini cartoons. Minear
makes an interesting point on p.120 that while Seuss is racist towards Japanese
people, he is also very against racism involving Black and Jewish people. Definitely
a shocking and disturbing work, but very interesting as well. This is also the
source for the “ alleycat” cartoon.
Politicalhumor.about.com
This is political writer Daniel Kurtzman’s official website. This is the
source for the “Bin Laden cartoon” and the “ Afghan Spice
Girls Cartoon.”Sone, Monica. Nisei Daughter. University of Washington
Press, 1953.
Sone’s 1953 book is an autobiographical memoir of a Japanese American
woman who grew up in Seattle and endured the internment camps during WWII. It
discusses her personal experiences in childhood and adolescence as well. Sone’s
memoir speaks of what life was like in the camps and expresses the fears and
worries of the internees.
Shakir, Evelyn. Bint Arab: Arab and Arab American Women in the United States.
Praeger Publishers, 1997.
Book discusses how Arab American women have been degraded in the US for years.
Includes many interviews with such women.Tawa, Renee. Article: Childhood Lost:
The Orphans of Manzanar.Los Angeles Times . 11 March 1997.
This article discusses Japanese American orphan internees during WWII.“
USA Patriot Act.” American Civil Liberties Union Website. 2pp. Internet.
27 Oct. 2003. Available at: aclu.org/SafeandFree.cfm.
This particular web page from the ACLU defines USA Patriot Act II, which inhibits
freedoms on citizens and gives the FBI power over medical, student, and library
records. This act was instilled 45 days after 9/11. Also includes press releases,
publications, conservative voices, and other legislative items. It is a very
helpful definition source, kept simple. Includes references to Constitution.
Webb, Tina. Interview on March 7, 2004.
Tina is a cab driver that currently works in Seattle and is also a personal
acquaintance.