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Monied Lobbying Forces Gird for Immigration Reform Battle
Wall Street certainly stonewalls Washington during financial reform battles. Big oil mobilizes in the face of energy legislation. Insurance companies set up camp in the capital during the health care debate.
Hundreds of lobbyists are primed to swarm Capitol Hill to advocate on behalf of a wide variety of business interests and ideological groups, all of which have a stake in immigration reform policy. But hundreds of lobbyists are primed to swarm Capitol Hill to
advocate on behalf of a wide variety of business interests and
ideological groups, all of which have a stake in immigration reform
policy – Congress' focus du jour. In 2009, 338
companies and organizations spent money to influence federal
legislation regarding immigration, according to a Center for Responsive Politics
analysis.
With the recent passage of an Arizona state immigration bill, the issue of immigration reform has again been catapulted into the national spotlight. Long considered a potential subject of federal legislation, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) recently announced that immigration reform legislation an urgent priority, calling for a bill to be sent straight to the Senate floor -- potentially trumping other pressing initiatives, such as climate change legislation.
The usual suspects for immigration lobbying -- vocal ideological groups on either side of the immigration debate – are preparing for this legislative fight.
In support of immigrant rights and some degree of illegal immigrant amnesty are groups such as National Council of La Raza, National Immigration Forum and ImmigrationWorks USA. Each of these organizations has experienced a definite increase in lobbying expenditures in recent years.
National Council of La Raza, an established and continuously growing force in human rights lobbying, spent $580,000 in 2009. National Immigration Forum is quickly asserting its own lobbying presence, too. A substantial increase in lobbying expenditures in 2009 brought the group's spending up to $226,000. ImmigrationWorks USA only began lobbying in 2008, but its 2009 expenditures were six times that of its 2008 expenditures. Amnesty International USA, though advocating for a wide range of human rights, spent more than $1 million lobbying in 2009.
In opposition to the kind of immigration reform many Democrats are proposing are several vocal organizations that emphasize border protection and national security.
Lobbying expenditures of the Federation for American Immigration Reform reached $390,000 in 2009, the highest amount since 2000. NumbersUSA.com also experienced a significant increase in lobbying in 2008 and 2009 after minimal lobbying expenses during the earlier part of the decade. Although there are fewer anti-reform organizations lobbying on the issue, these groups have been steadily increasing their federal influence.
It is not just ideological groups, however, that lobby on immigration reform.
Companies in the technology, entertainment, agribusiness and construction industries also have a significant interest in federal immigration policy. And while ideological groups are often non-profits with limited resources, these large companies have the money to back up their policy concerns. Although there is no way to assign a dollar figure to the amount of money a company spends while lobbying on an individual political issue -- immigration among them -- it's clear that they have significant money available to influence federal legislation.
According to a Center for Responsive Politics analysis of federal records, the company that filed the most reports regarding immigration was Microsoft, a technology giant that spent $6.7 million on lobbying in 2009. Microsoft is also a major political contributor to federal candidates and political committees. People and political action committees associated with Microsoft also ranked within the top 10 contributors to the 2008 presidential campaign of John McCain (R-Ariz.). Microsoft and other computer and technology companies such as Oracle and the Entertainment Software Association have an interest in immigrants as potential employees and seek changes to immigration policy regarding workers of different skill levels.
Numerous organizations in the entertainment industry also lobby on immigration. The U.S. Travel Association’s 2009 expenditures, for example, are more than four times the amount of the group's 2008 total. And the American Hotel and Lodging Association also experienced an unprecedented increase in lobbying between 2007 and 2008. Again, these companies have an interest in immigration reform for employment purposes.
The same goes for members of the agribusiness community. Many farms and food processing plants rely on immigrant labor to keep costs down. The National Chicken Council, National Milk Producers Federation and Western Growers Association all lobbied on immigration, as did construction/landscaping companies such as the American Nursery and Landscape Association, National Roofing Contractors Association and Associated Builders and Contractors.
The AFL-CIO advocates for immigration reform that does not deport current illegal immigrants but adjusts their working status. The AFL-CIO spent $3.8 million overall on lobbying in 2009. Another prominent labor organization in immigration lobbying is the Service Employees International Union. If its website is any indication – on it, SEIU calls the new Arizona law “despicable” – this union could also prove to be a major player in federal immigration reform debates.
The new Arizona law that sparked the focus on immigration reform allows the police to stop anyone for whom they have a “reasonable suspicion” that the person is an illegal immigrant. If the person does not have the proper paperwork, they can be arrested.
Supporters of the law, such as McCain, say that this bill will help prevent crime.
The lobbying activity by ideological organizations, interested businesses and trade organizations is almost certain to increase as a result of immigration reform’s new priority designation.
But the potential legislation is not only attracting the attention of lobbyists. The biggest obstacle to an immigration policy decision may come from discord inside Congress itself.
Some of Reid’s colleagues aren’t pleased that immigration reform is, effectively, cutting the line. The Senate was poised to consider a new climate change bill, and a co-author, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) is threatening to withdraw his support for the bipartisan climate legislation if Congress tackles immigration first. Graham says he believes that Reid’s agenda shuffling will be detrimental to the passage of both bills.
Reid’s fellow Democrats, with their eyes on November congressional elections, are divided on the issue – some are reluctant to take a stance on such a controversial issue and potentially make themselves vulnerable to political defeat.

33 Comments so far
Show AllTear that stupid damn wall down,
McCain ought to go back to Viet Nam.
Sorting out the ulterior motives of all these groups requires a column in itself. You've got the business end worried about losing slave labor, the Dems concerned with future votes, unions envision future members, the wacko nativists stressing about 'losing THEIR country', Microsoft not giving a damn about Hispanics but rather the cheap labor from Asia for tech jobs, etc.
How about, before addressing any of these issues, we first make a pre-emptive statement affirming these are human beings with the same aspirations for a decent life as the rest of us. How many are allowed to become citizens or temporary workers or deported can be hammered out later. It's the tone of Dobbs and Hayworth and the Minutemen that bothers me. Legitimate points re depressing wages and taxing public services are certainly valid. But this crap about disease, not paying taxes and excessive crime belongs in the hooey bin with Kenyan birth certificates and death panels.
Funny how you never hear the outrage over illegal Polish cleaning ladies in Chicago or undocumented Russians on either coast. As usual, people of color bear the brunt of our disdain for political and sick purposes.
For the record, I support tighter immigration enforcement. The canard about 3rd world persons doing jobs Americans won't is laughable. Pay enough in wages and benefits and they'll do it. The workforce for undocumented employees has diversified beyond the stereotypical farm worker. They toil in hotels, restaurants, as janitors, roofers, landscapers, etc. If you want to get serious about ending non-citizens taking jobs, I can do it with a single law: Anyone caught employing someone without a social security number gets fined $5000 and spends a month in jail. But that'll never happen for many reasons, least among them because it targets businessmen.
All this hoopla is gonna taper off soon. This is just a repeat of May Day a couple of years ago when the open border crowd was all up in arms. May Day tends to do that to lefties and open border types.
Thanks for your balanced post. And you're right the 'biggest' always makes the 'biggest' target, meaning that there are many more undocumented Hispanic workers than workers from other countries (for obvious reasons). State infrastructures in this bad economy are crumbling under the weight of it all.
Many jobless citizens, now, are more than willing to do those jobs pro-immigration and NAFTA camps say they won't do. Any way you look at it, it should get interesting. Dissolving the borders is certainly not the answer, until or unless economic equality is achieved--hopefully, not an economy that offers a third world standard of living, though this seems to be the end game we're headed for.
Okay. Here goes. It's gonna be long, and take some time. But it needs to be read, known, and understood.
A Preface:
The Social Construction of “Whiteness” and “Race” in the United States
Prominent education historian Joel Spring explains and well-documents, with other historians (in the numbered excerpts that will follow), the invention of the shifting “now you see it, now you don’t” social constructs of “whiteness” and “race,” whom and what they served – and how and why.
What might these histories "laws," and ever-changing "definitions" of "whiteness" and “legality” illuminated by Spring have to do what’s happening in Arizona TODAY regarding the kind of immigration reform unfolding there?
How may these histories complicate the claim made by the bill's sponsor, GOP State Senator Russell Pearce, that: “This law is not about race,” he said. “It's about what is illegal”?
(Excerpts in the following posts are from Joel Spring’s The American School: 1642-2004, Sixth Edition, New York: McGraw Hill, 2005 - with an excerpt from historian Tim Tyson’s Blood Done Sign My Name: A True Story, New York: Three Rivers Press, 2004.)
Excerpt 1.
THE ROLE OF RACISM IN U.S. HISTORY AND IN THE HISTORY OF PUBLIC SCHOOLS
Certainly, a major strand of American history has been the quest for democracy and equality. However, another strand dating from the first arrival of English settlers is characterized by claims of racial and cultural superiority. The most violent and troubled parts of American history were a result of the clash between racism and demands for equality, including:
• Almost 1 million dead from the U.S. Civil War
• The Trail of Tears covered by the bodies of European Americans and Native Americans who died as a result of the Indian wars that began with the arrival of the first European settlers and lasted through the nineteenth century
• The lynching and beating of Chinese in nineteenth-century California
• The killing and beating of enslaved Africans
• The lynching and beating of African Americans during reconstruction and segregation periods in the South
• Race riots in northern cities in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries
• The murder and beating of Mexican Americans during the “Zoot Suit” riots in 1943
• The murders, riots, and church bombings during the civil rights struggles of the 1950s and 1960s
Violence and racism are a basic part of American history and of the history of the school. From colonial times to today, educators have preached equality of opportunity and good citizenship while engaging in acts of religious intolerance, racial segregation, cultural genocide, and discrimination against immigrants and nonwhites. Schooling has been plagued by scenes of violence, including:
• Urban riots between Protestants and Catholics in the nineteenth century
• The punishment of enslaved Africans for learning to read
• Racial clashes over the education of African Americans, Asians, Native Americans, and Mexican Americans
• Riots and killings over the integration of schools from the 1950s to the 1970s
• The racially motivated killing of a black student along with fourteen others at Colorado’s Columbine High School in 1999
How is it possible to believe in a republican form of government and political equality but still be a racist? How is it possible to argue that public schooling is the backbone of democracy but still engage in discriminatory and racist educational practices?
It is important to understand that from colonial times to the present, racism and religious intolerance have been part of the beliefs in republicanism, democracy, and equality held by some – I emphasize the word some – Americans of European descent. This intertwining of what is on the surface appear to be contradictory beliefs has been a major tragedy and a deep flaw, from my perspective, in the unfolding history of the United States and American schools. It is important to understand that for some Americans, racism and democracy are not conflicting beliefs but are part of a general system of American values.
Rogers Smith contends in Civic Ideals, his massive and award-winning study of U.S. citizenship, that most historians neglect the importance of racist viewpoints in the forming of U.S. laws. As Smith demonstrates, U.S. history is characterized by a long tradition of discrimination and bigotry. After evaluating the combination of legal restrictions on voting rights, and immigration and naturalization laws, Smith concludes that “for over 80 percent of U.S. history, American laws declared most people in the world legally ineligible to become U.S. citizens solely because of their race, original nationality, or gender. For at least two-thirds of American history, the majority of the domestic adult population was also ineligible for full citizenship for the same reasons.”4
Understanding how republicanism, democracy, and equality are compatible with racism and religious intolerance in some people’s minds is key to understanding American violence and the often tragic history of education. However, I want to emphasize that many Americans of European descent have fought against racism and religious bigotry. For those believing in racial equality, the European Americans who were abolitionists and civil rights advocates are the real exemplars of democracy and equality in American history. (5-6)
from Chapter 1: Thinking Critically about History: Ideological Management, Culture Wars, and Consumerism
2.
“Come over and help us,” a Native American is depicted as saying while standing as the central figure on the Seal of the Governor and Company of Massachusetts Bay, 1629. This figure is holding an arrow in one hand and a bow in the other; a band of leaves covers his midsection.1 Undoubtedly, English colonists sincerely believed they were bringing a superior civilization to a “heathen” and “uncivilized” people. This seal symbolized the feelings of cultural superiority that the English brought to the soil of North America.
To the surprise of the colonists, Native Americans did not rush to accept the offer of religious and cultural conversion. Native Americans responded by offering food and aid, which made it possible for Europeans to survive and expand while Indians experienced the catastrophic effects of European-introduced diseases. For Native Americans, the primary problem presented by the European invasion was physical and cultural survival. Frequently, this meant warfare or finding a means of protecting cultural traditions while adapting to the social and economic changes brought by Europeans.
For English colonists, the cultural resistance of Native Americans was an affront to the teachings of Christ and a hindrance to colonial expansion. Motivated by sincere religious convictions and a belief in the superiority of English culture, European Americans engaged in an educational crusade to turn “heathen” and “uncivilized” Indians into models of Protestant and English culture.
It is my hypothesis that the educational crusade for the religious and cultural conversion of Native Americans contributed to the nineteenth-century vision of the public school as the primary means for ending crime, poverty, and social and political conflict. As I will argue in later chapters, there was little difference in the minds of nineteenth-century Protestant public school advocates between “savage” Indians, unrepentant criminals, the rebellious poor, and the “heathen” Irish-Catholic immigrants. In fact, the English and Protestant sense of cultural and moral superiority originally developed during the twelfth-century English invasion of Ireland. Many English colonialists likened the “savage” Indian to the “savage” Irish.2 (9 - 10)
from Chapter 2: Religion and Authority in Colonial Education
3.
Attitudes of cultural and racial superiority underpinned plans for the religious and cultural conversion of Native Americans. English colonists brought with them a sense of righteousness about their Protestant beliefs and the superiority of English culture. Colonists branded Native Americans as “heathen savages.” These attitudes of superiority would accompany the English around the world as their colonial empire was extended from North American to Africa and India.
For the English, the invasion of Ireland in the twelfth century initiated a colonial expansion based on the supposed superiority of English culture. From Ireland in the twelfth century to India in the nineteenth century, the English were convinced that colonialism was just because it spread Anglo-Saxon culture around the world. According to historian Ronald Takaki, when the English invaded Ireland in the twelfth century, they felt the Irish were inferior savages who could be redeemed only by adopting English culture. Eventually, English opinion was divided between the possibility of civilizing the Irish and a belief in the innate inferiority of the Irish. The latter position became part of a generalized English belief in their racial superiority.
English colonists in North America compared their experiences with Indians to their experiences with the Irish. Takaki found many written comparisons during colonial times between the “wild Irish” and the “wild Indians.” As with the Irish, English opinion was divided over the possibility of civilizing Native Americans.30 Extreme racist opinions led to the conclusion that the only solution to the Indian problem was genocide. This attitude continued into the nineteenth century and is reflected in General Philip Sheridan’s comment in 1967 after defeating the Cheyenne, “The only good Indians I ever saw were dead.” This statement was refined by one of Sheridan’s officers to the famous saying, “The only good Indian is a dead Indian.”
Also, many European Americans envisioned North America as a land that would be primarily inhabited by whites. Benjamin Franklin worried that there were larger numbers of Africans and Asians in the world than European whites. He considered expansion into North America an opportunity to increase the white race. Shortly before the Revolution, as Takaki points out, Franklin argued that the English were the “principle body of white People” that should populate North America. The clearing of the forests, Franklin noted, would serve to make room for more whites. “Why,” he asked, “increase the Sons of Africa, by Planting them in America, where we have so fair an opportunity, by excluding all Blacks and Tawnys, of increasing the lovely White…?”32
In the British colonial empire, English feelings of cultural superiority and racism were used to justify economic exploitation and the expropriation of lands. For many European Americans, Indians were an obstacle to the spread of white Europeans from coast to coast. To make room for the expansions of whites, the options were genocide or containment on small farms and reservations. In Takaki’s words, “This social construction of race occurred within the economic context of competition over land.”33 (23 - 24)
from Chapter 2: Religion and Authority in Colonial Education
4.
…In the 1830s, Irish immigration along with the continued impact of African and Native American cultures made the goal of achieving a common culture through schooling difficult. The common school movement of the 1830s and 1840s was, in part, an attempt to halt the drift toward a multicultural society. Self-proclaimed protectors of Protestant Anglo-American culture worried about the Irish immigrants streaming ashore, the growing numbers of enslaved Africans, and the racial violence occurring in northern cities between freed Africans and whites. Also during the 1830s, President Andrew Jackson implemented his final solution for acquiring the lands of the southern Indians by forcing the tribes off their lands and removing them to an area west of the Mississippi. Upon completion of this forced removal, the government was to “civilize” the southern tribes through a system of segregated schools. In addition to the concern about the risk posed to Anglo-American culture, there was a hysterical fear among European Americans during the common school period that Africans and Indians would contaminate their white blood. This fear resulted in a demand by some whites for laws forbidding interracial marriages.* (102)
from Chapter 5: The Common School and the Threat of Cultural Pluralism
[*NOTE: For further history regarding the social construction of "whiteness" and race in the United States in direct relation to maintaining the institution of slavery, see Tim Tyson's Blood Done Sign My Name (2004), particularly the following excerpt below:
...The sexual obsessions of white supremacy, which were so evident to the children of Jim Crow, had their origins in the fundamental structure of the colonial economy three hundred years earlier. In 1662, the Virginia legislature passed a statute that read, “Children got by an Englishman upon a Negro woman shall be bond or free according to the condition of the mother.” This reversed English common law, under which the status of a child followed that of the father.
The new statute meant that white men who fathered children by their slave women increased their own material worth. Violating their own deeply held beliefs, they sired offspring that would work in their houses and fields without fee and care for them in their old age without fail. Children born of white fathers and black mothers became black, not white, and remained slave, not free. Without that provision, growing numbers of apparently “black” people who were legally “white” would have populated the American colonies. The whole system of racial bondage rested upon the fact that free white men could father “black” slave children, while black men could never father “white” children. The children of slave mothers or fathers must always inherit that status. If large numbers of white women had birthed mulatto children by black fathers, the system of slavery based on racial caste would have been undermined and might have been rendered unworkable. Some from of unfree labor would have persisted for a time but racialized slavery, justified in the name of white supremacy, might well have never evolved the way that it did. “Race” itself could have meant something entirely different without these rules about sex...
It was a different thing, of course, for a white man to father “black” children. Annie Bell Cheatham remembered her grandfather, born a slave in Granville County, telling her that white men would often have sexual relations with the slave women who worked in their houses, even if the woman had a black husband. “They would keep the woman in the house,” Cheatham said, “and she would do the cooking, and the white men would go with the black women. They didn’t have no choice.” The slave husband, her grandfather explained, “better not say anything about it – they will hang him.” Some white men who had black families on the side chose to free their black children, who were often called “free-issue Negroes,” “’Free-issue’ people was white men taking black women and them having children,” Rachel Blackwell, born in Oxford 1891 remembered. “And they would call them ‘issued free.’ The white man would help support that old colored woman and them children, and they would be real light-skinned but the other children would be black. My mother told me about this,” Blackwell continued, “but she couldn’t say or do anything about it.”
The sex and race taboo that grew from these roots in slavery remained a mighty oak in my boyhood. The challenge to segregation that arose in those years shook that tree like a hurricane, and the white supremacists clung to its trunk for dear life. “What the white man fears and what the white man is fighting to prevent at any cost,” the editor of the Warren Record wrote in 1955, “is the destruction of the purity of this race. He believes that integration would lead to miscegenation, and there is some basis for his fears.” Of course, “miscegenation” was not the real concern; a system that gave all the power to the men in one group and virtually no power to the women in another group made “race mixing” in one direction almost inevitable, as many African Americans in Granville County could attest. The social order permitted white men in the South, by virtue of their position atop the race and gender hierarchy, to take their liberties with black women, while white women and black men remained strictly off-limits to each other. The much traveled sexual back road between the races was clearly marked “one way.”
(part 4 continued)
When I was growing up, many whites assumed that “race-mixing” in schools would lead to rampant interracial sexual activity and that “the death of the white race” would inevitably follow. White purity and white power were imperative, all things good and decent hung in the balance, and sex was the critical battleground. Mainstream white conservative James J. Kilpatrick, whose national influence would persist well into the Reagan era, declared that white Southerners had every right “to preserve the predominately racial characteristics that have contributed to Western civilization over the past two hundred years.” William F. Buckley’s National Review agreed, and justified not merely segregation but disfranchisement for blacks, arguing that “the White community in the South is entitled to take such measures as are necessary to prevail, politically and culturally, in those areas where it does not predominate numerically.” The race-sex complex, with all its hypocrisies and contradictions underlay the entire struggle. James Baldwin’s was one of the few public voices that could pierce the fog of “miscegenation” rhetoric, and he offered a timeless retort to the question “Would you want your daughter to marry one?” In a television debate with Kilpatrick, he explained, “You’re not worried about me marrying YOUR daughter – you’re worried about me marrying YOUR WIFE’S daughter. I’ve been marrying YOUR daughter since the days of slavery.” (36-39)]
5.
Many New Englander hoped common schools would eradicate these “savage” cultures The sensuous and emotional rhythms of African and Indian drums and the incense and ritual of the Irish Catholic Church offered a start contrast to the stiff, repressed, and self-righteous way of life of white New Englanders. With the possibility of a multicultural society existing in North American, many European Americans hoped the common school would assure that the United States was dominated by a unified Protestant Anglo-Saxon culture.
As Carl Kaestle argues in Pillars of the Republic: Common Schools and American Society, 1780 – 1860, the common school movement was designed to protect the ideology of an American Protestant culture. Most of the common school reformers, Kaestle documents, were native-born Anglo-American Protestants, and their public philosophy “called for government action to provide schooling that would be more common, more equal, more dedicated to public policy, and therefore more effective in creating cultural and political values centering on Protestantism, republicanism, and capitalism.”1
“No Irish Need Apply,” a famous folk song of the common school period, referred to rental and employment signs telling Irish Americans they were not welcome as residents or workers. English colonists in North America stereotyped the Irish as “savages” and “slaves of their passions.” These stereotypes developed during the long course of English domination of Ireland, which by 1700 left the Irish owning only 14 percent of Ireland.2
By the time of the great Irish immigration to the United States, English exploitation of Irish workers had reduced the average Irish family to a life of misery and famine. Living in one-room mud huts with straw roofs with only a hole cut through the straw for a chimney, the typical Irish family ate little more than a daily ration of potatoes. By 1845, one million Irish had immigrated to the United States. When the smell of decay from the potato blight crossed the land in 1845, another million-and-a-half Irish set sail to escape starvation. For those who stayed behind, the choice was often a deadly one. By 1855, the potato famine had killed one million people.3
As the Irish arrived at the great port cities, such as Boston and New York, they found themselves greeted with open hostility. Competing with freed Africans for jobs, the Irish found employment building roads and railroads, working in mines, and digging canals. Irish workers were thought of by other European Americans as “dogs” and “dray horses” to be worked like animals in the building of a new nation.4
Protestant Anglo-Saxons feared that the “drunken Irish,” acting mainly out of “passion” rather than reason, might destroy the American dream. The Reverend Theodore Parker warned his congregation of “The Dangerous Classes,” who were “inferior in nature, some perhaps only behind us in development…a lower form…[consisting of] negroes, Indians, Mexicans, Irish, and the like.”5
The Catholicism of the Irish also bothered Protestants. By the nineteenth century, many Protestants feared that the Catholic Church was the church of Satan, and they worried that the pope had sent an army of Irish Catholics to undermine Protestant churches. Ironically, it was the English who forced the Irish to become Christian and, after the Church of England became Protestant, most Irish remained Catholic. The majority of Irish immigrating to the United States in the nineteenth century were Catholic.6 (102- 103)
from Chapter 5: The Common School and the Threat of Cultural Pluralism
6.
[This excerpt is the longest - posted in 4 parts - yet key to understanding what happened - and is still happening in Arizona.]
In the latter half of the nineteenth century, the educational treatment of Mexican, Asian, Native, African, and Puerto Rican Americans ran counter to the common school ideal of uniting all children in the same schoolhouse. Issues of racial segregation, language policies, and attempts to destroy cultures clouded efforts to provide equality of educational opportunity for all children. Entangled in the educational issues was the problem of citizenship. The Naturalization Act of 1790 provided for naturalized citizenship only for those classified as “white.”
….The educational treatment of Mexican Americans reflected the racial attitudes of Anglo-Americans toward Mexican Americans who generally were of Native American and Spanish ancestry. Popular Anglo-American writers in the nineteenth century argued that the mixture of Spanish conquerors and Native Americans resulted in “wretched hybrids and mongrels [who were] in many respects actually inferior to the inferior race itself.”1 At the time, Anglo-Americans did not consider the Spanish to be “white” and therefore believed they were an inferior race. Representative William Brown envisioned “the Anglo-Saxon race, like a mighty flood [spreading over] all Mexico.”2 This flood of Anglo-Saxons, Brown hoped, would eventually cover all of Central and South American, creating republics whose “destinies will be guided by Anglo-Saxon hands.”3
At the time of the U.S. invasion of Mexico in the 1840s, Secretary of State James Buchanan and Secretary of the Treasury Robert Walker expressed their views that northern Europeans, whom they identified as Anglo-Saxon, were the superior racial group. Within the racial ideology of these American leaders, Mexican mestizos were a substandard racial mixture because they were descended from an inferior European race and Native Americans. The Mexican-American War was, among other things, a race war.
The struggle over inclusion of Mexican Americans and other Hispanic Americans as full citizens of the United States became a serious issue in 1848 with the ending of the Mexican-American War and the ratification of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. During treaty negotiations, the Mexican government demanded that Mexicans remaining in the territory that Mexico lost become U.S. citizens. This demand created a dilemma for U.S. leaders.
Today, few U.S. citizens are aware of the importance of this war for the territorial expansion of the United States and the disaster for Mexico in losing almost one-half of its total territory. At the war’s conclusion, the United States added territory that included major parts of the future states of California, Colorado, New Mexico, Nevada, Arizona, Utah, and Texas. While many U.S. citizens fail to remember the territorial gains, Mexicans are constantly reminded of their loss by the huge monument standing at the entrance to Chapultepec Park in Mexico City commemorating the young Mexican boys who died trying to defend the spot against the U.S. military.
The events leading to the Mexican-American War occurred during the period of the racial and cultural genocide of the Five Civilized Tribes as they were removed from the Southeast to Indian Territory. In the area that is now Texas, U.S. settlers had been waging a war that culminated in 1837 with the Mexican government accepting the loss of part of its land and recognizing Texas as an independent nation. While the Five Civilized Tribes located on land just north of Texas and organized their governments, the U.S. settlers controlling the nation of Texas formed a government and debated whether or not they should remain independent or allow themselves to be annexed by the United States.
In the minds of some Anglo-Americans, the United States was destined to rule the continent because of its Protestant culture and republican form of government. In the minds of many U.S. citizens, Mexico stood for Catholicism and feudalism. After the Texas government agreed in 1845 to be annexed to the United States, President James Polk sent a small army to the Rio Grande. Under the leadership of General Zachary Taylor, the army was to protect the Texas border. Taylor’s presence sparked a military reaction by Mexico that resulted in the U.S. Congress declaring war – on May 13, 1846. Later in the century, former president Ulysses S. Grant wrote about the declaration of war and the subsequent military campaigns as “the most unjust war ever waged by a stronger against a weaker nation…an instance of a republic following the bad example of European monarchies.”4
The United States did not confine its military actions to Texas. Within one month after the congressional declaration of war, President Polk ordered a war party under the command of Colonel Stephen Kearny to travel from Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, and occupy the Mexican city of Santa Fe, New Mexico. After entering Mexican territory, Kearny issued a proclamation saying: “The undersigned enters New Mexico with a large military force for the purpose of seeking union with and ameliorating the condition of the inhabitants.”5 Kearny promised, without authorization from President Polk that all Mexican citizens in New Mexico would be given U.S. citizenship, and he convinced many local officials to take an oath of allegiance to the U.S. government. The Mexican governor fled Santa Fe, and Kearny entered the city on August 17, 1846, without encountering any significant resistance.
(continues)
6. continues
One month later, on September 25, 1846, Kearny left Santa Fe for the Mexican province of California. A year before Kearny’s departure from Santa Fe, a small military force under the command of Captain John C. Frémont had arrived at Fort Sutter, California. Aided by the presence of Frémont’s force, a group of American settlers declared that California was the Bear Flag Republic. Their action was similar to that in Texas on July 4, 1846. The leaders of the new nation created a flag featuring a single star and a crude grizzly. At the celebration for the new republic, Frémont announced that he planned to conquer all of California. Military historian General John Eisenhower writes regarding Frémont’s proclamation: “This pronouncement was remarkable because it was made at a time when Frémont had no knowledge of whether or not Mexico and the United States were at war.”6 On December 12, 1846, Kearny arrived in San Diego to complete the final conquest of California.
Eventually, the expanding war led to the occupation of Mexico City by U.S. military forces on September 14, 1847. The war ended on May 30, 1848, when the Mexican congress ratified the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, which ceded to the United States Mexican territory from Texas to California. Besides creating lasting resentment toward and suspicion of the U.S. government by the Mexican government, the acquisition of Mexican lands presented the problem of what to do with the conquered Mexican citizens. During negotiations regarding the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, Mexican leaders were concerned about the racial attitude of U.S. leaders and demanded that Mexicans living in ceded territory be given full citizenship rights in the United States. However, when the treaty was discussed in the U.S. Senate, the majority of senators did not believe that Mexicans were ready for “equal union” with other U.S. citizens. Consequently, the final treaty postponed the granting of U.S. citizenship to the conquered Mexican population. Article IX of the treaty stated that Mexicans in the ceded territory “shall be incorporated into the Union of the United States, and be admitted, at the proper time (to be judged by the Congress of the United States), to the enjoyment of all rights of citizens of the United States.”7
Despite the treaty’s provision for citizenship, citizenship rights were abridged throughout the Southwest through limitations placed on voting rights and through segregation in public accommodations and schooling. As with cases involving Asian Americans (discussed later in this chapter), courts wrestled with the issue of racial classification. In 1897, Texas courts ruled that Mexican Americans were not “white.” In California, Mexican Americans were classified as Caucasian until 1930, when California’s Attorney General Webb categorized them as Indians; he argued that “the greater portion of the population of Mexico are Indians.” Therefore, Mexican Americans were segregated in accordance with a provision of the California school code, that gave school districts the “power to establish separate schools for Indian children, excepting children of Indians…who are the descendants of the original American Indians of the U.S.” Though classified as Indians, Mexican Americans were not considered “the original American Indians of the U.S.”8
The attitude of racial, religious, and cultural superiority provided motivation for the United States to take over Mexican land, fueled hostilities between the two countries throughout the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and was reflected in the treatment of Mexicans who remained in California and the Southwest after the U.S. conquest and later Mexican immigrants. Segregated schools, housing, and discrimination in employment became the Mexican American heritage. Reflecting the attitude of the Mexican government toward the anti-Mexican feelings in the United States, the president of Mexico, General Porfirio Diaz, was reported to have remarked in the latter part of the nineteenth century: “Poor Mexico! So far from God and so close to the United States.”9
The evolution of discriminatory attitudes and practices toward Mexican Americans occurred in two stages. The first stage involved the treatment of the Mexicans who remained after the conquest. The second stage occurred in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, when U.S. farmers encouraged the immigration of farm laborers from Mexico and political and economic conditions in Mexico caused many Mexicans to seek residence in the United States.
In Anglos and Mexicans in the Making of Texas, 1936-1986, David Montejano argues that a victor has the choice of either eradicating the conquered population or assimilating them into its own culture.10 Montejano identifies two patterns in the treatment of the Mexican Americans in Texas in the nineteenth century. The pattern of extermination and ejection occurred in central and southeastern Texas with the uprooting of entire communities. Mexican Americans were physically driven out of Austin in 1853 and 1855 and out of the counties of Matagorda and Colorado in 1856. A large part of the Mexican population of San Antonio was driven out by 1856.11
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6. continues
The ejection of the Mexican population was justified by racist attitudes. Frederick Law Olmsted recorded many of these attitudes while traveling through Texas in 1855 and 1856 as a reporter for the New York Times. Olmsted overheard newly arrived settlers complaining that Mexicans “think themselves as good as white men” and that they were “vermin to be exterminated.”12 He found a general feeling among Anglo settlers that “white folks and Mexicans” were never meant to live together. He quoted a newspaper article published in Matagorda County that began: “The people of Matagorda county have held a meeting and ordered every Mexican to leave the county.”13 The article went on to justify the expulsion by calling the Mexicans in the area “lower class” and contending that the Mexicans were likely to take black women as wives and to steal horses.
One of the important consequences of this negative action against Mexicans was to make it easier for American settlers to gain land in the area. In this case, racism served as justification for economic exploitation. While the Mexican population declined in these areas after the war, it rose again during the twentieth century. The same racist arguments were then used to justify paying Mexican farmworkers lower wages and establishing a segregated system of schooling.
In the southern part of Texas, a different pattern developed for the treatment of the conquered Mexican population. Montejano calls this pattern a “peace structure” with two major components. One component involved bringing the Mexicans under the authority of the Anglos in political matters; the other involved an accommodation between the Mexican and Anglo elites.14 This accommodation served as a basis for the creation of large cattle ranches. Anglo cattle raisers gained access to large tracts of land either by marrying into elite Mexican families or through direct purchase. In this accommodation, Anglos made a distinction between what they identified as the “Castilian elite,” who controlled vast amounts of land, and the average Mexican, who was identified as a “peon.” In the minds of Anglos, this division involved a racial distinction. Peons were considered racially inferior to the Castilian elite because they were mestizos. The Castilian elite were accepted because of their supposed lack of Indian heritage and their Spanish ancestry. In other words, Anglos held the same racist attitudes toward peons as they did toward Indians.15
One of the keys to understanding the continuing patterns of racism and segregation is the fact that the immigration of Mexicans was encouraged by U.S. farmers – because Mexicans were an inexpensive source of labor in the booming agricultural regions of Texas and California. By the 1890s, the era of the cowboy was drawing to a close. Railroads had penetrated Texas, making the cattle drives across Indian Territory unnecessary. In addition, because of a variety of economic changes, the cattle industry itself was in decline. Consequently, many Texans turned to farming. As the twentieth century unfolded, the expansion of the railroad made it possible to ship agricultural goods from California to the East. Similar to Texans, California farmers needed cheap labor. For some farmers, Mexicans were ideal laborers. As one Texas cotton grower put it: “They are docile and law-abiding. They are the sweetest people in this position that I ever saw.”
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6. continued to end
Anglo attitudes about the education of the children of immigrant Mexicans involved two conflicting positions. On the one hand, farmers did not want Mexican children to go to school – because school attendance meant that they were not available for farmwork. On the other hand, many public officials wanted Mexican children in school so that they could be “Americanized.” In addition, many Mexican families were reluctant to send their children to school because of the loss of the children’s contribution to the family income.
These conflicting positions represent the two methods by which education can be used as a method of social control. One is to deny a population the knowledge necessary to protect its political and economic rights and to economically advance in society. Farmers wanted to keep Mexican laborers ignorant as a means of assuring a continued inexpensive source of labor. As one Texas farmer stated, “Educating the Mexicans is educating them away from the job, away from the dirt.” Reflecting the values of the farmers in his district, one Texas school superintendent explained, “You have doubtless heard that ignorance is bliss; it seems that is so when one has to transplant onions….So you see it is up to the white population to keep the Mexican on his knees in an onion patch or in new ground. This does not mix very well with education.”25 A school principal in Colorado stated, “never try to enforce compulsory attendance laws on the Mexicans….The banks and the company will swear that the labor is needed and that the families need money.” 26 (168-175)
from Chapter 7: Multiculturalism and the Failure of the Common School Ideal
7.
The hostility of Anglo-Americans was a rude surprise to Asian immigrants….
Nineteenth – and twentieth-century court rulings specifically denied Asian American immigrants the right to be naturalized citizens. However, unlike most Native Americans until 1924, Asian Americans born in the United States were considered native-born citizens after the passage of the 1866 Civil Rights Act. A legal issue was the racial classification applied to immigrants from northern and southern Asia, southeast Asia, and India. In the nineteenth century, California laws simply classified immigrants from all these areas as “Mongolian.” Later, despite the wide-ranging cultural and language differences among these regions, European Americans used the term “Asian” in reference to immigrants from these areas.
Confusion over the legal racial category of Asians began in 1853 with a California court case involving the murder of another Chinese immigrant by one George Hall. The California Supreme Court overturned the murder conviction of George Hall by applying a state law that disallowed court testimony from African Americans, mulattoes, and Native Americans. The state law was a reflection of the racist undertones of the state government of California. California’s chief justice ruled that the law barring the testimony of Native Americans applied to all “Asiatics,’ since, according to theory, Native Americans were originally Asians who crossed into North America over the Bering Strait. Therefore, the chief justice argued, the ban on court testimony from Native Americans applied to “the whole of the Mongolian race.”
U.S. Supreme Court interpretations of the Naturalization Act of 1790 made it clear that race was primarily defined according to skin color. In denying citizenship to Chan Yong in 1855, a federal district court in California ruled that under the 1790 Naturalization Act citizenship was restricted to whites only and, consequently, immigrant Chinese were not eligible for U.S. citizenship.31 In addition, the Naturalization Law of 1870 extended U.S. citizenship to “aliens of African nativity and to persons of African descent” while retraining the word white, which meant the continued exclusion of Asian immigrants and Native Americans from citizenship.
After the Chan Yong decision, California continued to be a hotbed of anti-Chinese and anti-Japanese sentiment. Race riots accompanied laws designed to deny Asian Americans full citizenship rights. However, despite the sentiments of California congressman James Johnson, who labeled Asians “barbarians” and considered them an “inferior” race, the U.S. Congress in 1864 ratified the Burlingame Treaty with China, allowing unrestricted immigration of Chinese nationals to the United States but continuing to deny them U.S. citizenship.32 Then in 1875 Congress limited unrestricted immigration with the passage of the Page Law, which forbade entry into the United States of Chinese, Japanese, and “Mongolian” contract labor.33
Many California Anglo-Americans objected to the Burlingame Treaty. Demanding an end to Chinese immigration, John Miller told the 1878 California constitutional convention: “Were the Chinese to amalgamate at all with our people, it would be the lowest, most vile and degraded of our race, and the result of the most detestable that has ever afflicted the earth.”34 Announcing that the “experiment of blending [the] habits and mutual race idiosyncracies [of Chinese and European Americans was] unwise, impolitic, and injurious to both nations,” President Chester Arthur signed the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Law denying entrance into the United States of all Chinese laborers for ten years while allowing merchants, students, teachers, and diplomats.35 The legislation specifically banned the naturalization of immigrant Chinese. In addition, it required all Chinese residing in the United States to obtain certificates of registration. The Chinese Exclusion Act was one of three immigration acts passed in 1882 that gave major control over immigration to the federal government (as opposed to state governments).
Massachusetts senator George Hoar led opposition to the Chinese Exclusion Act. He argued that the principles of republican government, the Declaration of Independence, and Christianity required racial equality in the United States and in immigration laws, and he rejected the “doctrine that free institutions are a monopoly of favored races.” 36 Tennessee senator William Moore opposed the law because the United Stats, as “the recognized champion of human rights,” should be “the land where all men, of all climes, all colors, all conditions, all nationalities, are welcome to come and go at will.”37
Those who “won the day,” however, were proponents of the idea that a republican or democratic government could only survive only with a population limited to “whites.” Vermont senator George Edmonds and Wisconsin representative George Hazelton declared that the survival of republican institutions required a “homogenous population.”38 Survival of the U.S. government would not be possible according to Ohio representative Alden McLure, with an “ethnological animal show.”39 California senator John Miller referred to the Chinese as a degraded race unfit for citizenship when compared to the higher “Anglo-Saxon.” California representative Romualdo Pacheco argued that the “Chinaman [is] a lithe, sinewy creature, with muscles like iron, and almost devoid of nerves and sensibilities. His ancestors have also bequested to him the most hideous immoralities. They are as natural to him as the yellow hue of his skin, and are so shocking and horrible that their character cannot even be hinted.”40
While Chinese were specifically excluded from citizenship by the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act and the 1790 Naturalization Law, a Japanese immigrant in 1894 was denied citizenship by a U.S. circuit court in Massachusetts with the argument that Japanese were not eligible because they were “Mongolians.” In 1909, a person with an English father and a half-Chinese and half-Japanese mother was denied citizenship for not being sufficiently “white.”41 (175-179)
from Chapter 7: Multiculturalism and the Failure of the Common School Ideal
The needed excerpts below have been posted for educational purposes. They come from education historian Joel Spring’s The American School: 1642-2004, Sixth Edition, New York: McGraw Hill, 2005 (with an shorter excerpt included from historian Tim Tyson’s Blood Done Sign My Name: A True Story, New York: Three Rivers Press, 2004.)
These neglected and complex histories - their implications regarding the kind of "reform" in Arizona or anywhere else, and all else that they reveal - are profound, shall not be denied, and MUST BE carefully understood and considered in ANY socially just and comprehensive "immigration" reform in the United States of America.
As a female,"Caucasian," "legal," US citizen, I cannot NOT share these histories - or remain silent about them.
I STRONGLY encourage everyone to carefully read them, read the book (and more of the historians referenced by Spring), and share them and discuss them with everyone you know.
Spring carefully reveals how the legal definition of "whiteness" strategically changed and changed - and changed, again - and often across states at the same time - and always to exclude certain groups who had land that was desired by those defining themselves as "white." In one state you were legally "white" - and, thus, a citizen, while in another, at the same time, you weren't. Furthermore, during one year you were "legally" "white" and a citizen, but in later years you weren't. Then, maybe, but only AFTER anything and everything you ever had was taken, you may be deemed "legal" and "citizen."
It got "confusing," as was intended.
And those definitions often had very little to do with the actual color of one's skin, even as skin-tone was used to create the "bogus" category.
The shifting and floating legal definition of "whiteness" - and its relation to any "race" - was "made up" and used to carry out and to justify the invasion, occupation, and cultural AND economic domination of lands and people.
So, in response to the new Arizona Law and State Senator Russell Pearce's statement: “This law is not about race...It's about what is illegal.”
I can only say that THIS IS WHAT CAN HAPPEN when honest, in-depth, and critical thinking and talk about the social constructions of "whiteness" and "race," and moreover their uses throughout the history the of United States, are silenced and made shallow, if talked about at all. And moreso, when we fail to illuminate how these political and social constructs are related and intertwined with those of gender and class.
THIS IS WHAT CAN HAPPEN when histories are forgotten, glossed over, and outright erased, by those, disingenuously and ingenuously, making the claim for a "post-racial" world where we don't need to study and discuss them anymore. The constructs and their same uses still remain in operation, they just become more "invisible" and, thus, more dangerous when they are not discussed or talked about.
Certain people will do anything for more wealth and power. They are seriously mentally disordered, though as Spinoza noted in the 17th century, we tend to consider their psychopathology an ethical (choice) problem rather than a mental (function) one.
If we're able to consider it a problem at all, that is. Incredibly, they've succeeded in having their vicious greed defined as not merely normal, but desirable! Which is as crazy as robbery victims getting together to admire and laud particularly successful robbers!
Open the borders wide open, let everybody in and ruin the country
GREAT IDEA!
That "Everyone" just MAY improve it. (Considering that we've certainly opened the borders wide open and let "Goldman Sachs Inc." and "free trade" Neoliberal economics "ruin" the world.)
Why not try something else? Global "d"emocracy would be a good idea.
Incidentally, historian Joel Spring, opens his book with key questions to ponder; among them:
"What would North America be like today if English colonists had adopted the cultural values of Native Americans?"
Addressing similar problems concerning the consequences of, but moreso, what he thought about Western "civilization," Gandhi added, "I think it would be a good idea."
Those questions are both related and worth serious reflection. And they are not at all unrelated to Matt Taibbi's earlier questions regarding "civilization" either:
"Will Goldman Sachs Prove Greed is God? The investment bank's cult of self-interest is on trial against the whole idea of civilization – the collective decision by all of us not to screw each other over even if we can"
Open the borders wide open, let everybody out and save the country
It's all in your point of view •••
"America was settled by peoples of all nations....You cannot spill a drop of American blood without spilling the blood of the whole world. We are not a narrow tribe."
- Herman Melville
What a fucking waste of space. Go write a book or in this case a tome then maybe someone may take the time to read it.
Money is the false hope of curing any and everything and that is all I see in these articles, money for fighting financial regulations, money to cure immigration, money to control goldman sachs, money to keep america secure, money to have god on whoever's side, money that writes history as needs be at certain times, money to keep dems in charge, money to replace dems with repubs, money to wipe one's ass, money to burn.
This whole country is sold out to a bunch of money whores that have placed money above all else, even the god of choice when the price is right and it is damn sure showing that it is creating the volatile strain amongst the people in this country. I bet those fuck head clowns from wall street in the committee hearings in congress are really laughing their collective asses off at the vehement hostility of the people in this country towards each other. CRAP!!!!!
I think this comment eloquently states the case for immigration reform without the insults and racist code words. Our immigration policies stink and need to be addressed. Better to do it now than let the coming police state take care of it for us.
The Export Freedom Initiatives
Somewhere, there are the last eleven Americans who see refugees. The rest of us are finally seeing the statistics.
If you park illegally, it's an infraction and you get a ticket. If you or I don't pay --we go to jail. If you enter the US illegally, which is a felony, you get a job, a drivers license, government aid, business loans, easy access to housing, bank accounts, and if you get caught? The cops do nothing~! It's a free pass on crime. And ten thousand new abusers arrive each day. A blinking welcome-light to every criminal in the world. And now, the first hundred million are walking our streets.
The Border Fence is costing a fortune --and failing. The EFI will generate a fortune for the US Treasury while giving the great reform movements of the world a boost, and a direct opportunity to participate in the grandest adventure in human history --as leaders in a movement to save it --all while preserving and uplifting the places of paradise from which they come.
There is no need to overcrowd our already overcrowded prisons and jails. There will be no police roundups. If they entered on a crime, and then continue to remain with that crime unadjudicated, They will simply pay their fines, then be repatriated by a nation who has the right to choose a future free of crime. But the EFI goes farther and in a breathtaking new direction.
Imagine a new global alliance. Shining smart cities rising out of the rainforest replacing the worn slums of Central America, giving an alternative to global contamination from China, a path to international admiration for the Muslim world, and new partnerships so the former soviet bloc may become the gem of light that their great scholars --and humble mothers -- have dreamed for their children for centuries. Such is the Export Freedom Initiatives International Wing.
Now when someone asks; How do you address the largest crime wave in history? We can tell them; With the largest criminal rehabilitation program in history. And when they ask; How can we rescue the oceans and atmosphere? It's simple. By reuniting the reformers of the world with those who have either deliberately or absentmindedly --abandoned them.
The Export Freedom Initiatives
US immigration reform with justice, compassion and common sense.
Darrel Hudson
Commonsensenow.org
""The Border Fence is costing a fortune --and failing. ""
Did you not realize that is was made to fail? That is the new american paradigm and method of rewarding cronyism, 'here's a project, get elmer fudd to build and maintain it pay him handsomely and don't worry about it if it doesn't work.
Kind of fits the description of marvin bush, w's brother, being in charge of the company providing security to the wtc complex up to the day it was ravaged. Good grief, the information that could be got from this iteration of the bush crime family!
So, stop and think a bit about anything the 'elite' do as in being 'good for america', that is euphemistic lingo or doublespeak for 'what it is and not what it is'.
"These companies have an interest in immigration reform for employment purposes."
That's right. Microsoft, Oracle, Big Ag, meat processors, construction companies, landscaping companies, roofing companies, hotels and restaurant chains, and other illegal employers who are currently recruiting low-wage replacement workers (wage slaves) in foreign countries, want their billions of dollars in fines retroactively forgiven. They want current U.S. law—the 1986 Comprehensive Immigration Reform bill—replaced with a slavery normalization bill.
All for greed. They don't want to hire U.S. citizens. Not the teens who traditionally worked in restaurants, not college students who did construction work in the summers, not the African-Americans who traditionally worked in manufacturing, not the working-class citizens who worked in manufacturing, meat packing and construction, and not the properly trained and educated U.S. citizens who used to have jobs as software programmers and engineers.
The teens and college students can go into massive debt to pay for their educations, the blacks can go to prison, the working class can have two working spouses and latch-key kids and still be impoverished, and the engineers can work for half salary or lose their homes, or both. And we can all—except the Wall Streeters and corporate titans—work for less pay and reduced benefits.
All for greed. Corporations want migrant wage-slaves who work two full-time jobs, live in groups in barracks-style housing, and whom they can abuse and cheat with the threat of "there's a lot more where you came from" if they dare object. And, of course they want their labor costs subsidized by U.S. tax payers and charities, in the form of food, housing, health care, etc.
Slavery once had a negative connotation in this country. Now industries, their foundations and their lobbyists openly promote it. Not to mention the "intellectually captured" who have bought their propaganda.
"So, its a low-wage policy that's the root of this approach, and a lot of liberals have bought into it because they confuse this strategic policy by the Wall St. Journal types, with civil rights! ... Anybody who thinks we should have open borders is an apostle of the Wall St. Journal low-wage policy, in this country, against minorities."
Ralph Nader, 2008
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gYnQjDlCeXU
Great post. We have indeed been sold down the river. So targeting illegal immigration alone will not suffice; we must target those who would make wage-slaves of us all, and who are profiting from all this chaos and confusion.
Naturally, I like your term "illegal employers." I hope it catches on. Illegal employers - that's the party that deserves to be criminalized. They break the law out of greed - somehow it seems different than breaking the law out of desperation.
It's interesting when we talk about profiling and racism as if they are the same thing. They very well MIGHT be, but not NECESSARILY so. We 'profile' and sort or distinguish all the time, no? If we didn't could any useful work get done? No. Even under the pretense of not profiling--as not to offend--we profile. For example, checking the shoes of a little old lady at the airport. Secretly in the backroom, profiling is alive and well; the rest is just for show.
Now the question is: can 'profiling' be done humanely and without prejudice? This means looking at the statistical likelihood of something being this or that and investigating it accordingly. While this approach would certainly be more efficient, it would likely be offensive to those being 'profiled.'
My only point is that statistical profiling is not always racism, but there is certainly such a thing as racist profiling, which some will use as an excuse to harass others.
We 'profile' and sort or distinguish all the time, no?
-----------------------------
Yes, it's called 'pattern-matching' and is *the* key ability for most multi-cellular life.
Immigration is essentially driven by America's OWN grievously immoral, underhanded, fraudulent and criminal actions under a policy of neo-liberal exploitation that has occasioned massive theft, political intrigue and election-tampering, coups, propping-up of corrupt dictators and brutal autocrats, blackmail, assassinations and death-squads, institutionalized terrorism, IMF/WTO/World Bank-imposed privatization and 'restructuring' and subsidized agricultural exports that have displaced huge numbers of small farmers, 'drug-war' skullduggery and forced de-funding of critical social services and public infrastructure -- the concept of 'illegal immigration' falls-apart. It is actually economic and political self-defense.
Illegal immigration is a wedge issue primarily because most Americans are ignorant about, in denial, or unwilling to face the fact that America has taken outrageous advantage of and abused the basic civil and human rights of Latin American citizens in order to prop-up America's bloated standard of living and overextended debt. The principles of rule of law governing allowable and acceptable economic trade practices and respecting the sovereignty of foreign nations have been consistently violated by America's appeal to its imaginary sense of exceptionalism -- which constitutes a huge nationalistic blind spot.
Americans in general tend to be astonishingly uninformed and misinformed about genuine history and the real consequences of American foreign policy-- thanks in large part to its disingenuous mass media and the co-opted public education industry. For all the popular rhetoric about America's National pride, honor and sense of values, and championing the causes of freedom, peace and justice, to a very large extent the American public is clueless about how hypocritical and self-serving the US has been, and how complicit they are by not holding their leaders and policymakers accountable for America's devastating Imperialist pretensions.
I strongly believe that they should close the border to Mexico. On one condition, which is you close it not only to people but to resources. If you say you want to
close it to people but not resources, what you're saying, one thing, is that you're a racist, but another thing you're saying is - I don't want you but I want the coffee that's grown on the land that used to be yours.
Why is this migration taking place? It's not taking place because suddenly a bunch of people from Guatemala decide they want to take an eco-tour of the strawberry fields in the San Joaquin valley. It's because their communities are being destroyed through the theft of the land. If you don't want these people moving up here then don't steal those people's lands, pretty simple solution.
Yes it is a xenophobic sleight of hand but it is used, as it has been for centuries in America preceding Republican-Democrat nonsense, to point the finger at the victim so as to keep the eyes averted from the horrors being perpetrated upon those victims and to ignore or rationalize the colossal banditry for the beneficiaries. The liberal class is particularly hypocritical and criminally ignorant on this point.
The problem is really quite simple as is the solution.
The problem: El Norte is pushing them there "illegals" off of their ancestral lands so as to steal the resources that reside in Chiapas e.g.
The solution: Stop El Norte from stealing the resources of the people in Chiapas e.g.
NAFTA is merely the latest acronym-IMF the latest international syndicate-World Bank only the latest MoneyChanger in this ongoing colonial conquest.
Neither the employer or the "immigrant" are really the fundamental issue.
Qualifier: Many who do employ "immigrants" exploit them and should be themselves forced to work in the broiling hot sun for 14 hours/day or forced to do backbreaking early death work in the maquiladoras.
Let the truth be the frame.
As for higher paying jobs these too are part of the problem and also obfuscate the issue.
People shouldn't need or even desire to make 70k/year(or even 25k). The problem is that it takes so much to live in our HP society. The solution- Elimination of rent-Free Health Care- Food stipends.
Everyone needs to be (allowed to) getting by with less-MUCH LESS.
Wealth is the problem, poverty it's necessary offspring, and it requires the aforementioned theft from other lands to maintain this obscene standard of living- a standard of living that has death of brown skinned people as one of its prerequisites.
Excellent thesis, every time an article on immigration is written most responses tend to be xenophobic or racist. Your theory is excellent and I completely agree with the solutions however, it is a call for a revolution. Capitalism has placed so much fear on the population that it has become weak, gutless and worst of all completely apathetic. Hopefully I will live to see these types of solutions implemented. Bravo!
"Neither the employer or the "immigrant" are really the fundamental issue."
Similar to the drug wars, drugs are not the problem, the demand for drugs is. Perhaps they aren't the only issues, NAFTA and other exploitative policies certainly play a role. Because of a bad economy, the issue of illegal immigration is coming to a head, especially at the state level where the problems it's created are much more immediate and pressing.
Hopefully, this will lead to a holistic solution before interracial violence breaks out, but I'm not holding my breath. We cant even seem to honestly discuss the issue--too many agendas are boiling in the pot.
The same tactics are being used that Israel employs to deflect criticism when it accuses others of 'antisemitism.' That, along with an attitude of entitlement.
I strongly believe that they should close the border to Mexico. On one condition, which is you close it not only to people but to resources. If you say you want to
close it to people but not resources, what you're saying, one thing, is that you're a racist, but another thing you're saying is - I don't want you but I want the coffee that's grown on the land that used to be yours.
-----------------------------------
I think I disagree, Chlams. It would be, I think, much more to the point to close the border to inbound illegals (as is the case in every other country I know about), *AND* close the border both ways to ownership. I.e. US citizen X and members of his/her family can do business here or do business there (if 'there' will let them), but not both. No foreign ownership in the US, no US ownership outside.
Get the US owner class --and the Marines-- out of other countries.
(Of course, the *BEST* thing to do is to eliminate all forms of business ownership except single-person sole proprietorships and multi-person Rochdale-principle co-ops, and forbid the import of any goods produced or brokered by any other sort of business. It would make quite a change in the world, and instantly too.)