Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
With Anti-Immigrant Law, Alabama is Again Ground Zero for Civil Rights
It’s not often that human rights and business profits line up on the same side of a political debate, but Alabama is a special place. The Cotton State was not only ground zero for some of the worst abuses under Jim Crow; it was also the flashpoint for early struggles that fused economic empowerment with civil rights, including the Montgomery Bus Boycott. Today, Alabama is once again a focal point for racial and class struggles, ignited by an anti-immigrant law that tests our definitions of economic citizenship in a world of fluid borders.
The law, HB 56, mirrors many of the “copycat” anti-immigrant bills that have gone viral in state legislatures from Arizona to Indiana. It would impose onerous identification requirements that encourage police to arrest and detain anyone who couldn’t present the right papers. Although some of the harsher provisions were blocked by a federal court earlier this year, the legislation (signed into law in June) still threatens to further demonize immigrants and to crystallize the racist ideology driving a two-tier economy, where the privileges of the elite are subsidized by the vicious exploitation of the 99 percent.
Sadly, if the law were only a matter of shamelessly scapegoating a group of vulnerable newcomers, the law might face considerably less opposition. But the debate reveals a convoluted class-based political calculus: employers contend that draconian anti-immigrant policies could cripple the economy.
They do have a point: Getting rid of the state’s undocumented population—2.5 percent of the state, according to the Center for American Progress--wouldn’t translate into more jobs for native-born workers or immigrants with green cards. It would likely shred the already-impoverished state’s balance sheet:
$40 million—A conservative estimate of how much Alabama’s economy would contract if only 10,000 undocumented immigrants stopped working in the state as a result of H.B. 56.
$130 million—The amount Alabama’s undocumented immigrants paid in taxes in 2010. These include state and local, income, property, and consumption taxes. This revenue would be lost if H.B. 56 were to do its job and drive all unauthorized immigrants from the state.
$300,000—The amount one farmer, Chad Smith of Smith Farms, estimates he has lost because of labor shortages in the wake of H.B. 56. Another farmer, Brian Cash of K&B Farm, estimates that he lost $100,000 in one single month because of the law.
This projected economic consequences (not to mention the cost of implementing and enforcing the law) would only exacerbate the state's economic turmoil: nearly one in five in Alabama live in poverty and unemployment hovers well above the nationwide rate.
The impacts of HB 56 could span across immigrants’ communities, disrupting the education of their children and subjecting even workers with papers to mistreatment and discrimination by police as well as neighbors.
Even though economic anxieties are fueling the anti-immigrant crackdown, economic concerns also inform the widening opposition. Some pro-business advocates complain that the loss of migrant labor hurts their bottom line, often because others don't step up to fill backbreaking jobs like tomato picking.
But here’s where the political landscape may slip dangerously in a direction that counters the very principles on which activists are fighting the law. Suddenly the case for a more lenient policy toward “illegal aliens” is not that they’re vital members of their families, communities, unions and workplaces, or that immigration agents shouldn’t be campaigning to tear apart families, or that everyone has a right to due process, or that democracy in a pluralistic society hinges on equality before the law. If you listen to the bosses with whom civil rights groups have formed an uneasy alliance, HB 56 is bad for Alabama not so much because it criminalizes people who want nothing more than to make a living for themselves, free of the oppression of an arbitrary and dysfunctional legal regime.
Instead, it’s harmful because it’s bad for business.
But while the strange-bedfellows strategy may be politically expedient, the opposition to Alabama’s anti-immigrant law can’t be centered on a narrow calculus that elevates capital above human rights. The Obama administration, too, has challenged immigration policies in Alabama and Arizona on anti-discrimination grounds, but overall, the White House has perpetuated the rampant abuses that plague the federal detention and deportation system.
And the deeper labor issues manifested by the immigration crisis wouldn’t go away if the law were defeated: there would still be no national discussion on combating wage theft, human trafficking, and restrictions on the right to organize--problems that affect native-born and immigrants alike.
Marisa Franco of the National Day Labor Organizing Network told In These Times:
Workers are increasingly facing situations where their bosses and even customers or clients feel the authority to threaten and harass with little recourse of justice. When local police take a mandate to enforce federal immigration laws, employers have a powerful tool to undermine hard won labor protections. It's a threat to all workers and the fundamental right to organize.
There's one way to reorient the dialogue toward rights and away from profits: help workers and organized labor understand that the zero-sum game of “competition” for the most degrading jobs keeps the economically disenfranchised divided along false lines of “legal” versus “illegal.”
For now, activists may form strategic alliances to fight anti-immigrant bills like Alabama’s. But if they let bosses and big business frame the debate going forward, they’ll lose the real battle—for economic justice for all.


213 Comments so far
Show AllWhen someone identify's a bill or law aimed at illegal immigrants as " anti-immigrant" you can generally be sure they are in the pay of big business, want to hopefully increase their political power, want to increase the wealth of their churches or simply want to destroy the American worker and their families.
That is what it has come to. People so greedy and self serving they favor foreign interest's over the interests of their own countrymen and their own country.
The real question Ms. Chen might want to pose is how does any abuse take place if someone doesn't break the law?
The imorallity of these types of arguments encouraging law breaking and theft are self evident. The heartbreak of the worker's and their families that are the victim's of these anti-American policies is hidden away behind the propaganda.
Chen is clearly pushing a corporatist agenda. It would be interesting to know whose payroll she is on, sounds like it could be agribiz or SEIU. She could very well be just a hired gun. As far as her self-serving, Sinclair once said “It is difficult to get a man(woman) to understand something when his salary depends on his not understanding it.”
Michelle Chen is pushing a corporatist agenda? Yes, and the Pope is a closet Baptist. Give me a break!
Anyone that uses "corporatist" language or talking points would at least be suspect of pushing their agenda, wouldn't you agree?
When she speaks of immigrants rather than illegal immigrants which is who she is plainly referring to, surely it gives you pause? That is what the cheap labor group uses to deflect attention. Their framing of the argument.
I grant you I could be wrong, but the article seems to me to encourage illegal immigration.
Please point out the "corporatist language or talking points" in the article.
"$40 million—A conservative estimate of how much Alabama’s economy would contract if only 10,000 undocumented immigrants stopped working in the state as a result of H.B. 56."
A corporatist talking point, justifying cheap, super-exploitable labor, if there ever was one.
(I don't support HB 56, though)
What an interesting comparison -Chen and the Pope.
The connection between the anti-immigrant agenda and extreme right wing, neo-Nazi and white supremacist groups is extensive and rock solid.
On the other hand, the connection between Chen and a "corporatist agenda?" Do you really expect people to believe that?
The Nazis again?
Your material's gettin' old.
How bout a NAFTA rant. Yeah, NAFTA , NAFTA, NAFTA
Yes, when we are talking about the racist anti-immigrant hysteria, it is entirely appropriate to talk about the Spanish Inquisition, the pogroms in Europe, the rise of neo-Nazis in the eastern Bloc countries, the genocide waged against indigenous people in the "New World," slavery, the imperialist wars and occupations and the entire litany of persecution, torture and murder that is associated with the issue.
Two Americas,
You're on the right track! Don't let Logitech force you into submission or silence. In fact, I had heard the rightwing complain that OWS is backed/funded by American Nazi Party and the Communist Party. I did look it up and indeed, I saw a few articles that said just that about ANP. A good place to look also, see "Secret Societies Threaten to Take Over America." Also notice how it seems entirely appropriate for people to call the Pres. Hitler, and it seems entirely appropriate to hold NSM anti-immigrant rallies - so again, I say, don't be silenced.
Skinnyminny
I don't think we have to worry about our friend TA being forced into submission or silence. Mr. Logitech picked the wrong person to play the logic game with.
Thomas Gilbert-
Oh! it's the spokesperson for the indigenous people of the "New World" again. Calling everyone neo-Nazis committing genocide and murder and in previous posts, racist and ignorant. You have changed your name 3 times from "Bloodmeridian".
The indigenous people of the US ARE American citizens.
ALIEN (dictionary):
1. Foreign; not belonging to the same country, land or government. And Undocumented - which means illegal.
People who IMMIGRATE here wait on line and get NATURALIZED and grant their allegiance to this nation. This is our procedure. If you don't like it expect to be kicked out because you'd be kicked out of any other country for gate crashing.
$130 million is didley squat when you consider the cost of tax credits, health care, and education. They you wide up in the RED.
Claudia L sez: " They you wide up in the RED."
Sounds like a nasty cold. Make some hot tea with honey and lemon, then settle down with a book and a box of Kleenex. You'll feel better.
Sorry you don't like the AMERICAN dictionary.
"Definition of NON SEQUITUR
1
: an inference that does not follow from the premises; specifically : a fallacy resulting from a simple conversion of a universal affirmative proposition or from the transposition of a condition and its consequent
2
: a statement (as a response) that does not follow logically from or is not clearly related to anything previously said"
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/non%20sequitur
STUPIDO! ctrl-z
Was referring to the previous definition of "alien" taken from the dictionary. As in "Illegal alien." You know people who don't like waiting on line and want to dictate our immigration policy and refuse to learn English. Guess you were too busy with the kleenex thing.
Claudia
ctrl-z really hasn't all that much to say; not one of the brightest or interesting posters here. I seldom give him a reply.
Thanks for the info. Sounds like our friend has a bunch of names. No one else on this site or other sites sinks to calling names. Just one person we know.
Oh God, how can I go on? Bigots have tried to insult me. Maybe if I make a bunch of jingoistic, racist comments they'll be nice again.
Sob, cry.
You must be affiliated with the other "name caller" - Bloodmeridian - Two Americas. Whenever you can't defend your position you use "Bigot", Jingoist", "Racist", "Nazi", "Zionist". My views represent people of all colors. I represent more than just the rights of "Browns" (your term) to go wherever and do whatever they want at any cost to everyone else.
" I seem to remember the original people of Central America cutting open babies and pulling their hearts out so the sun will come up. Yah! Lets go back to that."
Sorry, you're impossible to take seriously (but fun to play with).
Claudia L. sed: " I represent more than just the rights of "Browns" (your term)"
I don't know where you got the "term". I see you tried to blame it on someone else upstream. Better luck next time.
Thats what the Aztecs did. Cut out the hearts of babies. Your right Two Americas uses this "Brown" thing all the time and uses "White" like a curse.
Wow. Good observation! She slipped right by me.
I too am familiar with the brown racist who goes by readbetween, bloodmeridian, pheran, among others.She's toned it down a bit and changed her writing style. Even tweaked her online identity a bit. She does have a propensity for violence in her comments and I called her out on one at the end of this thread.
The illegals are changing our school system for the worse. One third of the students in our system come from non-English speaking households; people have had it with property taxes, and middle-class families are making sacrifices to move their kids to private schools. Even the Mexican-Americans are moving their kids to Catholic schools. The public school achievement levels usually reflect the ethnic makeup of the student body and the kids come out with barely literacy skills. My kids got thru OK but that was years before this crush of illegals.
YES Bloodmaridian/pheran has been kicked off this site for calling names instead of having a civil discussion.
High schools are laying off Advanced Placement teachers and hiring "Interpreters". Once again lowering our standard of living.
Ask her to list the contributions her country has made to humanity. I seem to remember the original people of Central America cutting open babies and pulling their hearts out so the sun will come up. Yah! Lets go back to that.
Great! Could we burn some witches too?
Don't you want to cut their hearts out first so the sun will come up?
Surely you'd be happier with domestic antiquated religious nonsense. No need to import foreign practices.
"The Salem witch trials were a series of hearings before county court trials to prosecute people accused of witchcraft in the counties of Essex, Suffolk, and Middlesex in colonial Massachusetts, between February 1692 and May 1693. Despite being generally known as the Salem witch trials, the preliminary hearings in 1692 were conducted in a variety of towns across the province: Salem Village (now Danvers), Ipswich, Andover and Salem Town.
The best-known trials were conducted by the Court of Oyer and Terminer in 1692 in Salem Town. Over 150 people were arrested and imprisoned, with even more accused but not formally pursued by the authorities. All twenty-six who went to trial before this court were convicted. The four sessions of the Superior Court of Judicature in 1693, held in Salem Village, but also in Ipswich, Boston and Charlestown, produced only three convictions in the thirty-one witchcraft trials it conducted. The two courts convicted twenty-nine people of the capital felony of witchcraft. Nineteen of the accused, fourteen women and five men, were executed by hanging. One man, Giles Corey, refused to enter a plea and was crushed to death under heavy stones in an attempt to force him to do so. At least five more of the accused died in prison."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salem_witch_trials
The kettle calling the pot black.
or brown
bigotech sez: "The public school achievement levels usually reflect the ethnic makeup of the student body and the kids come out with barely literacy skills."
Bull.
The reason for the problems in the schools is due to increasingly reduced budgets and the insane No Child Taught To Think policy. You can't continually defund public education and expect to get the same level of achievement.
But here you go, blaming immigrants instead of our insane tax policies. That's just what those who benefit from the current system want: Useful idiots who will blame those at the bottom of the economic ladder instead of the gluttonous pigs at the top.
You're the one that insists on pitting the working man with the working man.
I have posted as and only as Two Americas at Common Dreams.
I am flattered though, that the bigots here have confused me with readbetweenthelines. I am honored by that.
It could also be said, that for a pig, rolling in $h!t is a great honor...........
bigotech sez: "It could also be said, that for a pig, rolling in $h!t is a great honor.........."
Ah, something to which you can aspire.
Just for future reference Bloodmeridian.
"Race, Any of the biological divisions of mankind distinguished by color and texture of hair, color of skin and eyes. There are only 3 primary divisions, the Caucasian, Negroid and Mongoloid" no brown.......sorry.
Claudia L.,
Now this one I will call you out on! How dare you say this - 'there are only 3 primary divisions...' From the onset, you have been insulting, degrading, harassing people here. But, this one has crossed the line. No one here is trying to be 'SUPERIOR,' we are only saying what is the right thing to do. No one here would even be talking about minorities and/or non-whites, if this title was forced upon them. You know, people have lived in the countries they were born in, traveled to other countries unrestricted, but, if you talk to people born on certain lands - they refer to themselves as locals/natives/original inhabitants/indigenous/tribes...people don't refer to themselves as you say above, because people do in fact come in different skin tones/different eye color/different texture-length-color of hair and all from the same family. I would say shame on you, but, I don't think you are able to feel anyone else's sense of self/pride/struggles, pretty much anything that is important to anyone else.
I am very slow to call someone a racist, but, for all of the comments you have made here regarding this thread, I think I'd have to agree with some of the other posters. Maybe I am slow to admit it sometimes, because I have some relatives on one side of the family that are white racists. It is really sad when people hate, because those people don't know how to love. My somewhat calm approach at times, why get all bent out of shape for something you change. I learn how to go with the flow. I am, however, disappointed that first the peoples of Latin America is assigned the label "brown," and now you are saying there is no 'brown.' This is something I talked about before, people are assigned labels, such as African-American, Mexican-American. And no, I don't you're sorry, as you closed your statement with, especially when you complain about the immigrants not speaking English, taking jobs...No, I not Christian, I am agnostic. I am a former Evangelical, and former Mormon, so I am not preaching to you. But do you see what you are doing to yourself - holding in hatred because you feel someone else has what you want, and how dare that person get what you are entitled to because you are Superior to the people who have what you want. You can learn something from the people of Latin America, in fact, you can learn alot from them.
This "brown" was assigned by Two Americas not me - I keep telling you SHE is the racist. READ THE THREAD! That is why I offered the dictionary definition of race which is the 1st definition. I don't hate anyone. I never bring up color. Two Americas uses "white" like a curse. READ THE THREAD!
This is the rights of people already living here vs rights of people sneaking in, not waiting on line and going through naturalization the way people who respect this country are doing. READ THE THREAD. How could you be in this discussion and miss the whole point?
READ THE THREAD!
Immigrants are people. Many of them are here because their countries economies are in the toilet because of the actions of the U.S. government in support of the ruling classes and big business interests
You and John Shade are blaming the victims.
You are mistaken, I am not speaking about immigrants at all. I am referring to anyone here illegally, i.e. Illegal Immigrants.
There are no victims here. It doesn't matter what reason someone uses to justify their decision to take from other people what is not theirs. It makes them the same as a burgler that enters my house and takes my property because he decides he "needs" it more than I do.
bittermouse sez: "It doesn't matter what reason someone uses to justify their decision to take from other people what is not theirs."
"In 1954, the democratically elected Guatemalan government of Colonel Jacobo Arbenz Guzmán was toppled by U.S.- backed forces led by Colonel Carlos Castillo Armas[9] who invaded from Honduras. Assigned by the Eisenhower administration, this military opposition was armed, trained and organized by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency[10] (see Operation PBSUCCESS). The directors of United Fruit Company (UFCO) had lobbied to convince the Truman and Eisenhower administrations that Colonel Arbenz intended to align Guatemala with the Soviet Bloc. Besides the disputed issue of Arbenz's allegiance to Communism, UFCO was being threatened by the Arbenz government’s agrarian reform legislation and new Labor Code."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Fruit_Company
For more instances of U.S. interventions in Latin America see: http://www2.truman.edu/~marc/resources/interventions.html
bittermouse sed: "It doesn't matter what reason someone uses to justify their decision to take from other people what is not theirs. It makes them the same as a burgler that enters my house and takes my property because he decides he "needs" it more than I do."
No bittermouse, we stole from them first. We went into their "house" and took what we wanted. We left them with the people we wanted in charge.How do you think we should repay them?
"How do you think we should repay them?"
I think most of us didn't have much involvement in foreign policy in 1954, or even today. By supporting illegal immigration how does it hold policymakers accountable? How does it prevent the sort of policy you mention above from happening again? It doesn't, but somehow you'll feel vindicated if ordinary Americans bear the burden or make your required payment. You certainly don't think it will be those in power or the 1%, do you? It's a weird sort of vindictiveness. The illegals are an intentional diversion put in our way by Chen and various other shills to keep us unfocused. Progressives need to learn the concept of triage.....
Oh, you want to ignore history and just blame the victims. Well, have at it. You might find a better reception over on freerepublic.com They're in complete agreement with you.
Read it again.
Try to argue the points of my comment. I do acknowledge our foreign policy but I don't blame myself or you. We have to do something about it but you insist on using it as a wedge and believe "somebody's got to pay". Let's make the policymakers pay, that's what I said. The illegals issue is a distraction and they are not allies in any fundamental way.
BTW, I'm quite comfortable here on CD because we are in disagreement.
" The illegals issue is a distraction and they are not allies in any fundamental way."
Sure, what have we got in common with a group of people being taken advantage of so some can profit from their misery? Nothing like the situation we're in at all.
You're thinking with too much emotion.
For one they can't even organize in their own countries and probably have little or no experience as you or I may have.
Most likely they have language and literacy problems.
Cultural barriers.
And finally there's the old hierarchy of needs.
Like I said, triage...
Your abysmal ignorance about the people of Latin America and the history of political struggle there - "for one they can't even organize in their own countries and probably have little or no experience as you or I may have" - disqualifies you from speaking with any authority on this topic.
Virtually the entire population here is descended from people with "language and literacy problems" and "cultural barriers."
As for "hierarchy of needs," the premise you want us to believe - that poor people are incapable of coherent political action or thought and are therefore a liability - is false. Historically immigrants have led the fight for organizing the workplace, and for progressive reform. The notion that people struggling to eat can therefore not appreciate the higher and more noble things, or are to be excluded from political or social life, or are to have their motives placed under suspicion, is arrogant and bigoted claptrap. It is the same old tired American exceptionalism and neo-colonialism that are the foundation for "middle class" support for empire.
Is that why we have all these Latin American doctors, scientists, engineers, environmentalists, authors, educators and philosophers coming here illegally and taking our jobs?
You're deluded in a comical way.
I do hope that you continue to post.
So much of the anti-immigrant rhetoric is couched in pleasant euphemisms and reasonable sounding phrases. Your posts perfectly illustrate the bigoted, authoritarian and ignorant nature of the anti-immigrant hysteria for all to see.
The hatred is out there, and it is better for people to see it for what it is before they decide to contribute their energy to this insanity.
The thinking you are using here arose simultaneously with the rise of the concept of nation states organized around ethnic and religious lines, and the idea that there were "true" citizens and "false" interlopers. The scapegoated and targeted groups were seen as "illegals" - or "infidels" or "members of a foreign race" and otherwise held in suspicion or seen as possibly disloyal, accused of "taking our jobs" or of being "parasites" taking from the "good" people.
There is nothing new in what you have to say. From the Spanish Inquisition to the fascist movements in Europe in the 20th century, to the recent rise in hyper-nationalism in the Eastern Bloc countries and the associated persecutions and expulsions of those deemed "not like us."
Always the vicious attacks are underpinned by legalisms. Simultaneous with issuing the decree sponsoring Columbus to "explore" the "New World" Queen Isabella issued the decree expelling the Jews from Spain. All nice and legal. Always it is done legally, whether it is slavery, the genocide waged against Native peoples here, the land grabs, the massacres of Jews in Europe, the persecutions and torture of those who are "other" - not like "us." And always the victims are to be seen as "illegal" is one way or another, and as "aliens."
Yes, we're all quite familiar with the tactic of conflating opposition to illegal immigration with, let me see, you've mentioned, Nazis, fascists, white-supremacists, the Inquisition, slavery, genocide, persecutions, and torture. You did however forget to mention Doctor Evil and his sharks with lasers.
In reality your illegals get free K12 education, ER treatment, their own specially paid interpreters, and their children get medicaid. We are such a harsh and uncaring country.