Friday, August 31, 2007

The New Frontier: Money Made at the Border

















Photo: Border Patrol Agent at the Canadian Border



Who says immigrants are costing the U.S. lots of money? Its actually quite the opposite. Companies and large corporations are making a fortune providing services and technology to the U.S. government to help protect "the frontier."
Its a money maker.

Some people are calling it "the immigration industrial complex."
_____

The Border Boondoggle
By Andrew Cockburn
Washington Post
Sunday, September 2, 2007; Page B01


The U.S. Border Patrol has just unveiled a total makeover of its traditional uniform. Shiny badges and other emblems of law enforcement are out. Our frontier troops will now have a look more in keeping with their role as frontier troops, with lightweight fatigues and better weapons. Agent Ramon Ramirez told the Associated Press that the new garb looks more military, "like you mean business."

When it comes to frontier security, business is booming all over.

In Stafford County, Va., a 50-man company called McQ has started work on a $100,000 contract to develop a "smart rock" for the Department of Homeland Security. McQ, whose motto is "Tough sensors for an insensitive planet," says that its rocks, embedded with acoustic and motions sensors, will be able to detect illegal immigrants and other miscreants sneaking across our borders.

The firm expects its contract for developing the rocks to grow to $1 million by fall -- a sure sign that while immigration "reform" bills may come and go, the threat of illegal immigration will continue to expand. This is a certainty not because of the state of the Mexican economy or because of government laxity here, but because border control is now an integral part of the military-industrial national security system, which has a long history of profiteering from purported dangers to our safety.

...Now, however, we are moving into an era of serious money, set to surpass previous border-control initiatives by a wide margin. All those extra Border Patrol officers may be expensive, but as any general or admiral worth his salt will tell you, it's technology -- the more complex and "state of the art," the better -- that really runs up the bills and brings home the pork.

This trend is typified by the soaring surveillance towers, not to mention soaring cost, of SBInet (as in Safe Border Initiative), a high-technology surveillance system managed by Boeing. It's being marketed as a "virtual fence" that will detect intruders from Mexico and ultimately Canada. The fence employs radar, cameras, acoustic and other surveillance technology sensors. These are all linked by a complex computer network that theoretically will enable agents in some distant command post to monitor any and all illegal incursions and take appropriate action, including broadcasting high-volume warnings from tower-mounted loudspeakers.

One useful indication of where all this is headed can be found in the Army's ongoing Future Combat Systems program, also managed by Boeing. This $168 billion extravaganza of computers, sensors and robots is theoretically able to automatically detect and target battlefield threats, making it so deadly to a foe, its proponents claim, that it may be possible to dispense with armor on U.S. military vehicles.

Conceptually and in other ways, FCS and SBInet have much in common. Both are based on the notion that technology can confer total awareness of a situation, leading to the automatic destruction of an enemy tank or the apprehension of a would-be tomato picker sidling across the border...

SBInet...was endorsed by Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff in 2005. The southern portion is projected to cost $7.6 billion by 2011. But Richard L. Skinner, DHS's inspector general, has reported that the cost could reach $30 billion. (Old Pentagon hands refer to this disparity between present and future costs as "front loading.") Boeing, the prime contractor, is largely being left to itself to define the program objectives. As the Government Accountability Office delicately reported earlier this year, the project's budget "lacked specificity" on "anticipated costs" and "expected mission outcomes," meaning that DHS has no idea what it will cost or what it will do...

For complete article: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/31/AR2007083101464.html

Photo: Reuters http://www.insurancebroadcasting.com/062006-p3.jpg

Thursday, August 30, 2007

More On Denouncing No-Match SS Letters

Planned Crackdown on Immigrants Denounced
By Spencer S. Hsu
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, August 30, 2007; Page A04


The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the AFL-CIO this week separately assailed a new White House-backed crackdown on illegal immigration, warning of massive disruptions to the economy and headaches for U.S. citizens if the proposal goes ahead as planned in the coming days.

The Bush administration intends to begin writing to 140,000 employers on Tuesday regarding suspect Social Security numbers used by an estimated 8.7 million workers, as a way of pressuring them to fire illegal immigrants. President Bush disclosed the plan three weeks ago as part of a repackaged, 26-point enforcement program after Congress failed to overhaul U.S. immigration laws this summer...

But leaders of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and a coalition of trade groups representing the politically influential construction, lodging, farming, meatpacking, restaurant, retail and service industries appealed on Monday to the Department of Homeland Security and the Social Security Administration to postpone the plan's implementation for six months.

Raising the possibility of plant closings, autumn-harvest interruptions and other destabilizing consequences for the U.S. economy, 50 business organization members of the Essential Worker Immigration Coalition signed a letter warning of "uncertainties, disruptions, and dislocations throughout broad swaths of the workforce," as well as discrimination against Hispanic and immigrant workers...

for complete article: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/29/AR2007082902267.html?hpid=moreheadlines

Jefferson's Vision and a Malevolent Virginia GOP







There is a small announcement just below to the right of the article announcing the new bill in the Virginia Legislature presented by state Republicans that would keep all undocumented students from attending college. It shows an image of the top left corner of the Jefferson Memorial. The announcement says "JEFFERSON'S VISION, in 1785 the cornerstone for the Virginia Capital was laid.."

How ironic that Jefferson's Vision accompanies an article that describes a law that will take away the basic right of education for undocumented college students. Maybe its there to remind everyone that basic rights are only for a select few in this country.

What a way to start the semester.

______

Va. Republican Bill Would Bar Illegal Immigrants From College
By Tim Craig
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, August 30, 2007; Page A01


RICHMOND, Aug. 29 -- Virginia Republicans announced legislation Wednesday that would prohibit public colleges and universities from accepting illegal immigrants even if they attended a public high school and were brought to the United States at an early age by their parents.

...Del. David B. Albo (R-Fairfax), chairman of the Courts of Justice Committee, said the House would focus on the proposal outlined Wednesday because the GOP leadership is confident it would be upheld in court.

But the issue of denying a public college education to an illegal immigrant will probably be controversial.

...In past sessions, the House of Delegates and more moderate Senate have failed to agree on proposals to deny in-state tuition rates to illegal immigrants.

Howell and Stosch say they are ready to go much further.

Under the GOP proposal, a public college such as Virginia Tech or George Mason University would have to prove an applicant is a legal resident or has a valid student visa.

Northern Virginia Community College allows the admission of illegal immigrants, but they must pay out-of-state tuition.

But most four-year colleges prohibit illegal immigrants, advocates and college officials said. "We don't enroll illegal aliens," said Jeff Hanna, a spokesman for the University of Virginia. "A student who applies and is accepted must produce documentation." In 2004, a federal judge in Alexandria upheld the right of U-Va. and six other Virginia colleges and universities to deny admission to illegal immigrants. The suit was brought by illegal immigrants upset that they were being denied entry.

O'Brien couldn't present any evidence Wednesday that illegal immigrants are gaining access to Virginia's colleges.

But GOP leaders offered statistics showing that 36 percent of applicants to a four-year public college in Virginia were rejected last year. They couldn't say how many of those denials occurred because the applicants weren't academically qualified.

In some cases, students at Virginia public schools do not have legal status -- even though their younger siblings do -- because they were brought into the country at a young age by their parents. In those circustances, O'Brien said, it would be up to "the parents of that child to seek legal presence for that child."


for complete article: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/29/AR2007082901619.html?hpid=topnews

cartoon: http://www.conservatives.com/UploadedFiles/GRAPHIC/PHOTOTHUMB/thumb-cartoon-education4.jpg

ACLU & AFL-CIO File Suit Against No-Match SS Law
















Statue of Liberty during its assembly process




With the No-Match Social Security Letter law about to go into effect, the ACLU and the AFL CIO, along with other organizations have filed suit against the U.S. Dept. of Homeland Security. Lets hope the Judge handling the case is not a hard nosed Bushie. If the new rule is not stopped, the U.S. could see chaos in a few days.

-----

LABOR
Immigrant-rights groups sue to block U.S. crackdown

Advocates say a plan to target workers whose names don't match Social Security numbers will result in discrimination and wrongful firings.
By Anna Gorman and Nicole Gaouette
Los Angeles Times
August 30, 2007


A coalition of labor and immigrant rights groups sued the U.S. Department of Homeland Security on Wednesday to block the agency's planned crackdown on employers who hire undocumented workers.

The lawsuit, filed in federal court in San Francisco, contends that the rules would lead to mass firings of workers who are U.S. citizens and to discrimination against employees who look or sound foreign. It also names the Social Security Administration as a defendant.

The suit asks for a court order preventing the federal government from enacting the changes, which are part of a blitz of immigration enforcement actions announced by Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff this month.

An agency spokesman said that the lawsuit was "completely without merit" and that the agency would fight it "vigorously."

Social Security plans to begin sending so-called no-match letters Tuesday to companies where employees' names do not match their Social Security numbers. Initially, about 15,000 letters will be sent out each week for eight to 10 weeks, potentially affecting millions of workers.

Chertoff has said that businesses that don't act on the letters within 90 days could face fines.

The rules are likely to reduce employment in the construction, janitorial and landscaping industries, analysts have said, and leave farmers without workers to pick crops, restaurants without cooks and dishwashers and small businesses without a ready source of casual labor.

The coalition of plaintiffs, which includes the American Civil Liberties Union and the AFL-CIO, said the changes would have a devastating effect on legal workers because the Social Security database is full of errors. Mistakes can occur, for example, if someone gets married or divorced but does not report a name change to Social Security.

"Tens of thousands of workers are going to lose their jobs right before the holidays," said Marielena Hincapie, executive director of the National Immigration Law Center, one of the plaintiffs.

Labor groups also say they believe employers will use the no-match letters to exploit workers or to retaliate against those who are trying to organize into unions.

"Employers have used no-match letters in the past to basically quash worker organizing," said Ana Avendaño, director of the AFL-CIO's immigrant worker program.

"The Bush administration is giving unscrupulous employers another union-busting tool."

Homeland Security Department spokesman Russ Knocke defended the regulation Wednesday, saying that employers were responsible for ensuring that their workers were authorized and that employers had sufficient time under the rule to deal with no-match letters. Those who disregard the letters "should expect serious consequences," he said.

"This lawsuit is an obvious attempt to impede the department's ability to enforce our immigration laws," Knocke said.

The regulations come after Congress failed to reach a compromise on comprehensive immigration legislation.

Business associations also have expressed concerns about the regulations and the accuracy of the Social Security database. In a letter dated Monday, dozens of business groups -- including the National Restaurant Assn. and the Associated General Contractors of America -- asked Chertoff and the Social Security commissioner to delay implementation for six months.

"Employers will be overwhelmed with paperwork as the government seeks to make employers responsible for the decades-old administrative problems," the letter read. "The regulation also jeopardizes vital U.S. industries and the U.S. economy as a whole by needlessly creating uncertainties, disruptions and dislocations throughout broad swaths of the workforce."

Knocke said the government expected some resistance.

"Still, we're going to restore public credibility on enforcement," he said.

The Homeland Security Department will face challenges enforcing the regulation because Social Security is restricted from sharing certain information. Sen. Wayne Allard (R-Colo.) is expected to introduce a bill in coming weeks that would allow for more information sharing.

Immigrant-rights groups said Wednesday that the employer enforcement wouldn't result in the deportation of millions of undocumented workers. Employers either will fire them and hire a new batch of illegal immigrant workers -- or they will simply take the workers off the books and force them further underground.

"It is really not effective immigration enforcement," Avendaño said. "It's just smoke and mirrors."

anna.gorman@latimes.com
nicole.gaouette@latimes.com

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-fi-immig30aug30,1,6267261.story

photo: http://www.usconstitution.com/handtorch..jpg

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

DREAM ACT Juan Starts College

Teen facing deportation starts college
Posted on Wed, Aug. 29, 2007
BY KATHLEEN McGRORY
Miami Herald
kmcgrory@MiamiHerald.com


While facing deportation proceedings last month, Juan Gomez doubted he would ever attend college in the United States.

But on Wednesday morning, the 18-year-old Killian grad arrived on Miami Dade College's Kendall campus, smiling and ready to get to work.

He was mobbed by news cameras.

Despite the cheerful atmosphere on his first day of school, Gomez's future remains in limbo. The clock is ticking on the 45-day stay of deportation allowing him and his family to remain in the country.

Gomez and his older brother Alex, both Colombian natives, were brought to South Florida as toddlers. Their parents overstayed their short-term visas, allowing the boys to grow up in South Florida. Juan Gomez was a standout student. Alex Gomez excelled in athletics.

In July, immigration agents seized the boys and their parents from their Kendall home and began their deportation proceedings.

But the boys' teenage friends rallied to stave off their removal. The effort caught the attention of Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart, who, in early August, introduced a private bill on the boys' behalf.

Immigration officials have granted the family a 45-day stay of deportation while Congress considers the proposed legislation.

The deadline is Sept. 14...

for complete article: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/breaking_dade/story/218899.html

Chertoff Eager to Be Attorney General - Heaven Help Us








DHS Michael Chertoff with Texas Governor Rick Perry


The New York Times presents a photograph of Alberto Gonzalez at an event to commemorate Katrina -- Albert is sitting alone, with his eyes closed. Maybe he is thinking about the nightmare that would occur if Chertoff became Attorney General. Albert only pressed for breaking the Geneva Convention, pushed the death penalty and had lots of people in the Justice department fired.

But Chertoff would do much worse. On one of his "hunches" he could imagine that he needs to change policy and try to deport all the undocumented immigrants in the U.S. He sort of looks like the Emporer in Star Wars, only skinnier.

Pardon my concern, but I have a hunch he would make a very nasty Attorney General.
-----
Democrats Say They Will Press Gonzales Inquiries
By PHILIP SHENON and DAVID JOHNSTON
New York Times
Published: August 29, 2007
WASHINGTON, Aug. 28

...The White House said it would move quickly to find a replacement for Mr. Gonzales. A spokesman would not confirm the names of candidates under consideration.

Several names continued to circulate on Tuesday on Capitol Hill and within the department, including those of Michael Chertoff, the secretary of homeland security and a former senior Justice Department prosecutor; Theodore B. Olson, who was solicitor general earlier in the Bush administration; and Larry D. Thompson, a former deputy attorney general.

Colleagues said Mr. Chertoff was especially eager for the appointment. Although lawmakers saw him as a leading candidate, several Democrats suggested he would come under unflattering scrutiny if nominated because of his role in the government’s initially disastrous response to Hurricane Katrina two years ago and his involvement at the Justice Department in legal issues related to interrogation of terror suspects after the Sept. 11 attacks.

“There would be a lot of careful questioning of Chertoff,” said Senator Charles E. Schumer, Democrat of New York, who is a member of the Judiciary Committee. “There is not confidence among Democrats that he has an instinctive desire to side with the rule of law over politics.”

Mr. Chertoff, meeting with local officials in Mobile, Ala., on the second anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, was evasive on Tuesday when asked about speculation that he was being considered as Mr. Gonzales’s replacement.

“The president will make the decisions he will make and will make any announcement when he chooses to do so,” Mr. Chertoff said. “I think I have given all the answer I am going to give as far as press speculation goes on who will fill that job..."


For complete article: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/29/washington/29gonzales.html?_r=1&adxnnl=1&oref=slogin&adxnnlx=1188390590-6renIroogep3Jq9q7oLH9w

Photo: http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.governor.state.tx.us/divisions/press/photos/ChertoffAndPerry.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.governor.state.tx.us/divisions/press/photos/ChertoffAndPerry.jpg/photo_view&h=428&w=598&sz=2683&hl=en&start=20&sig2=Jm73AjMuWpjYkof6zjzQjQ&um=1&tbnid=3sC8h4DjQdagcM:&tbnh=107&tbnw=150&ei=MGzVRvyCG4PSgAPw_Y2sCA&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dchertoff%2B%26svnum%3D10%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26client%3Dsafari%26rls%3Den%26sa%3DG

Finally Admitting to Xenophobia






















The mayor and city council of Manassa's park are stating that the current anti-immigration movement in Prince William County consists of "vigilante actions against illegal immigrants." The Washington Post editorial even used the words xenophobia and nativism. Few newspaper commentaries do this.

Is the United States xenophobic? Are we nativists.... I believe many of us are... some with more virulent traits than others. Maybe the more we admit to what we really are, the sooner the viligante groups will die down and go away.

How many of the middle class good-thinking liberals really want the U.S. to become mostly Latino? They may be supporting human rights for immigrants, and like Mexican food.. but do they really want their home country to change? If you are one of these people, if you really care about immigrant human rights, write to your Congressman and Senator, talk to all your friends and explain to them that undocumented immigrants really do pay taxes, and that using the word "illegal" is offensive (few people seem to be aware of that). Better yet, read a little about globalization and migrating labor pools - spread around what you learned... you'll be surprised that people will really listen.

_____
Editorial
Washington Post
In Manassas Park, Sanity
Taking a stand against illegal-immigrant bashing
Wednesday, August 29, 2007; Page A16


THE LITTLE town of Manassas Park is an unassuming place -- not the sort of town you'd necessarily expect to take a courageous stand on illegal immigration. Yet that's exactly what it's done.

...Manassas Park is bounded on all sides by Prince William County, which has lately joined the nationwide rush to hound illegal immigrants by denying them public services and siccing the police on them in hopes of driving them away. Prince William's neighbor to the north, Loudoun County, has done the same. But Manassas Park, its diminutive size notwithstanding, is refusing to be bullied into joining in the immigrant-bashing.

Instead, the City Council has taken a stance opposing the nativist fever all around. The mayor, Frank Jones, and council members rejected what they characterized as vigilante actions against illegal immigrants. The danger, several said, was that all Hispanics would be tarred with the brush of intolerance and that the line between stalking illegal immigrants and whipping up a general hatred against Hispanics would blur. In a community where longtime residents know most of their Hispanic neighbors as good citizens, there was little sentiment for a xenophobic crusade.

For complete article: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/28/AR2007082801608.html

cartoon: http://www.cartoonstock.com/lowres/jdo0864l.jpg

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Now That Fredo is Gone



Fredo finally let go, we think. Hard to tell at this point if it was his decision or his boss. Interesting that Rove and Gonzalez resigned just a few days apart. Are they waiting for something to happen?

Most importantly- lets hope that Bush does not name Chertoff for Attorney General. Today on NPR there was speculation that Bush would make an appointment while Congress is in recess - like he did with Bolton at the United Nations.

Chertoff is a disturbing character. He did badly with Katrina, and has acted like a tyrant in the Homeland Security Department. Would that be any improvement over Gonzalez?

What would be worrisome is if Chertoff indeed gets appointed and he intensifies raids and harrassment of undocumented immigrants when he is A.G. - especially that he now hanging around with Senator Jeff Sessions.



-----
5 Top Contenders for Attorney General
By LARA JAKES JORDAN
The Associated Press
Tuesday, August 28, 2007; 7:56 PM


WASHINGTON -- Moving quickly to replace Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, White House officials are considering five names that "have kind of emerged" as possible candidates to take over the beleaguered Justice Department, according to a senior Bush administration official...

The official who spoke on condition of anonymity in order to speak more openly about the process declined to identify the five contenders who were being looked at "pretty seriously."
Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, also mentioned as a candidate, said little Tuesday during a to Mobile, Ala., about whether he may succeed Gonzales, instead praising the attorney general as "a dedicated public servant and a good friend."

Accompanying Chertoff was Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., who said "I know the president would like to have him as attorney general and I know he would like to have him as head of DHS...

for complete article: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/28/AR2007082801558.html?tid=informbox"

photo: Chertoff and Gonzalez http://french.belgium.usembassy.gov/uploads/images/HK2lL0Jc6cSgivdE1L3QWQ/Chertoff_Gonzalez.jpeg

ICE Raid in Ohio




Why would ICE need 300 agents, plus police from three different places to arrest 160 people? Since the article doesn't mention how many police officers... we really don't know, but they already had 2 to 1... why would they need more.

Seems like the raids arer more like fun for ICE. "The law has to be followed" as they say - but this is not about the law.

It reminds me of Vick with his dog fighting pals. How about they might be doing this for fun?


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Immigration Raid at Ohio Poultry Plant
The Associated Press
Tuesday, August 28, 2007; 5:50 PM


FAIRFIELD, Ohio -- About 160 illegal immigrants were arrested in a raid Tuesday at a poultry processing plant, authorities said.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents seized documents and other materials at the Koch Foods plant in southwest Ohio and at Koch Foods Inc.'s Chicago-area headquarters, said Brian Moskowitz, an agent in charge of ICE enforcement for Ohio and Michigan.

...Moskowitz said most of the illegal immigrants are believed to be from Mexico, other Latin American countries and Africa. ICE spokesman Marc Raimondi said deportation proceedings will begin immediately in most cases.

Some 300 ICE agents were supported in the raid by Butler County, Fairfield and West Chester police.

For complete article:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/28/AR2007082801424.html

photo: http://72.14.205.104/search?q=cache:Rsn8ghQ3ueUJ:www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12393925/+ice+raid&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=us&client=safari

Over 10,000 DREAM ACT College Students in Texas

Looking for information on the DREAM ACT population, I contacted the office of State Senator Rick Noriega to ask if they had the most recent statistics on DREAM ACT students. The latest figures are over 10,000 undocumented students in Texas colleges and universities.

Boycott in Prince William County Virginia

Sign at Primero Mercado in Prince William County


PRINCE WILLIAM IMMIGRATION
Latinos Launch Economic Boycott
Resolution Leads Many to Shop Outside County
By Pamela Constable
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, August 28, 2007; Page B06


Maria Rivera, a hotel maid from Woodbridge, drove her two daughters to Lorton last weekend to buy school supplies. Juan Padilla, who owns a tropical-themed restaurant in Manassas, purchased all his cooking ingredients yesterday in Fairfax County.

On the first day of a one-week boycott called by immigrant groups in Prince William County, both of these county residents said they were shopping elsewhere to send a message that Latino immigrants are an important, unified economic force and can't be intimidated...

The boycott has both galvanized and divided the county's large Latino population, which has tripled in the past decade and is now estimated at 30,000. One group, Mexicans Without Borders, hopes economic pressure will stop the measure. Another, headed by several Latino businessmen, opposes the boycott and seeks peaceful negotiations with county leaders.

There was no way to determine yesterday how many immigrants had observed the opening day of the boycott, which targeted all non-immigrant-owned businesses, including such chains as Wal-Mart, McDonald's and Giant supermarket as well as gas stations and convenience stores.

Boycott organizers said they had placed more than 350 of the green posters in businesses throughout the county, signifying that the store managers or owners are sympathetic -- or at least do not want to lose their immigrant customers.

A demonstration at Potomac Mills shopping center drew fewer than 100 people, who stood under a broiling afternoon sun yesterday and held aloft placards calling for immigrant rights. Some passing drivers honked in support; others swore or made insulting gestures...

[Maria Rivera}...attended the demonstration at Potomac Mills, said she was also a legal resident but was angry at the proposals aimed at driving out illegal immigrants. She said she decided to participate after hearing about the boycott through her church.

"They don't want our children in the schools. They don't want people renting to immigrants. They want to ask for families' ID cards in parks. This is wrong, and we do not accept it," she said.

For complete article:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/27/AR2007082701774.html

Photo: By Michael Williamson. Prince William County Boycott http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/27/AR2007082701774.html

Monday, August 27, 2007

ICE Still Trying to Deport Parents of Houston Soldier Killed in Iraq in 2004













Pfc. Armando Soriano




"Din and Venom" Over Immigration Reform Overshadows Individual Cases


Armando Soriano grew up in Houston. He died in Iraq on February 1, 2004. Since then ICE has continued to process deportation proceedings against his parents, even though the U.S. government allowed Soriano's family to apply for residency after he was killed.

What kind of inconsistency creates this type of problem? The stories of Soriano and Jimenez should be broadcast everywhere. Everyone needs to know what ICE is doing - Perhaps this will mobilize us as a people to stop this brutality.

_____

From the Military Times:

February 1, 2004. Army Pfc. Armando Soriano, 20, of Houston; assigned to the howitzer battery, 3rd Squadron, 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, Fort Carson, Colo.; attached to the 82nd Airborne Division, Fort Bragg, N.C.; killed while traveling in a two-vehicle convoy on a supply route Feb. 1 when weather conditions caused his vehicle to slide off the road and roll over in Haditha, Iraq.

_____

Respecting Our Troops
The cases of Spec. Jimenez and Pfc. Soriano
Washington Post Editorial
Sunday, August 26, 2007; Page B06


AMID THE din and venom of the debate over illegal immigration, the cases of Spec. Alex R. Jimenez of Lawrence, Mass., and Pfc. Armando Soriano of Houston deserve notice. Spec. Jimenez, of the 10th Mountain Division, disappeared in May when his Army convoy was attacked south of Baghdad. Pfc. Soriano, of the Army's 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, died three years ago when his vehicle rolled off the road in Iraq. The two men are missed and mourned by friends and family, in both cases including illegal immigrants who have faced the threat of deportation...

Pfc. Soriano, who was born in the United States, his father, a Mexican national who entered the country illegally, continues to face deportation proceedings despite the government's decision to allow Pfc. Soriano's relatives to apply for green cards following his death

Their cases are unusual but hardly unique. An estimated 68,000 active-duty military personnel were born in foreign countries, and 8,000 others enlist every year, a third of them Mexican or Central American. Nearly half of them are not citizens of the United States. Although undocumented immigrants are not legally eligible for service in the U.S. armed forces, there are numerous instances of some who used phony green cards to enlist. No one knows how many soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines have relatives who lack papers, but given that 12 million such people are in the country, it is probably not insubstantial. In some parts of immigrant-rich communities like Los Angeles, large percentages of those who enlist in the military are foreign-born residents of the United States...





______

this blog entry from Migra Matters

http://migramatters.blogspot.com/2007/06/good-immigrantsbad-immigrants.html




Spec. Alex Jimenez and wife Yaderlin Hiraldo

...The fate of the two other missing servicemen – Alex R. Jimenez, a 25-year-old specialist from Lawrence, Massachusetts, and Byron R. Fouty, of Waterford, Michigan, a 19-year-old private who had been in Iraq only a few weeks, - is still unknown.(1)

It's against this backdrop that we now learn that Jimenez's wife, Yaderlin, whom he married in 2004, is facing deportation.

Yaderlin Hiraldo, is a native of the Dominican Republican who first met her husband during his childhood visits to the island, but according to her attorney, Matthew Kolken, the 22 year old had entered the U.S. illegally prior to marrying him. It was when he requested a green card and legal residence status for her, that authorities were first alerted to her situation.

Despite Spec. Jimenez's status as a US citizen and active duty serviceman, the fact the Yaderlin had entered illegally meant that she would now have to return home and wait ten years before reapplying.

"I can't imagine a bigger injustice than that, to be deporting someone's wife who is fighting and possibly dying for our country," said Kolken in an interview with a local TV.

An immigration judge has put a temporary stop to the proceedings since Spec. Jimenez was reported missing. The soldier's wife is now living with family members in Pennsylvania...

Photo of Jimenez from Migra Matters

_____

For complete Washington Post article:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/25/AR2007082501039.html?st=immigration&fn=&sfn=&sa=np&cp=2&hl=false&sb=-1&sd=&ed=&blt=

Photo of Soriano: http://soldiersangels.homestead.com/files/c5co-soldier_d.jpg&imgrefurl=http://soldiersangels.homestead.com/files/2004_02_01_archive.html&h=207&w=140&sz=7&hl=en&start=1&sig2=FT16_uDMMPKmFhf5jP8Ncw&um=1&tbnid=pRt9DzbAvixT-M:&tbnh=105&tbnw=71&ei=-7zSRp2XB4TAgQPvsNyTCA&prev=/images%3Fq%3Darmando%2Bsoriano%26svnum%3D10%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26client%3Dsafari%26rls%3Den%26sa%3DN

Sunday, August 26, 2007

Virginia Grants In-State Tuition to Students With "Temporary Protected Status"

Robert Templin, Northern VA Community College President














The State of Virginia, who generally is so unhospitable to immigrants, granted in-state tuition to Ernesto Galeas of Fairfax County. He is in the U.S. on "Temporary Protected Status." Ernesto had tried to enroll multiple times but was told he would have to pay out of state tuition.

While this decision does not provide in-tuition for Virginia's undocumented college students, it is at least a step in right direction for immigrant rights.

-----
Immigrant students get tuition, aid break

By JUAN ANTONIO LIZAMA
Media General News Service
Potomac News
Friday, August 24, 2007

Virginia immigrant students with temporary protected status are cheering a decision that allows them to establish in-state residence and qualify for lower tuition rates and state financial aid.

"I'm happy, and I have a feeling of satisfaction," said Ernesto Galeas of Burke in Fairfax County, a Salvadoran immigrant who will attend Northern Virginia Community College as an in-state student. He will save about $1,700 this semester, he said.

What is temporary protected status, anyway?

Protected status is given to foreign nationals residing in the United States whose homeland conditions are recognized by the U.S. government as being temporarily unsafe or overly dangerous for them to return.

What was the problem?

Until now, students such as Galeas living in Virginia were considered out-of-state because their immigration status was interpreted as being temporary without the intent to stay in the country.

Protected-status students had to pay out-of-state tuition, which is double or triple what in-state students are charged. That priced many students out of a chance to go to college, some advocates say.

What changed?

In July, the attorney general's office notified the State Council of Higher Education for Virginia that its immigration counsel had advised the council that students with protected status can establish Virginia residence.

What's the reaction in the immigrant community?

"That is good news," said Luis Parada, an attorney with the Washington law firm of LeBoeuf, Lamb, Greene & MacRae who has successfully helped some protected-status students appeal for an in-state classification at Northern Virginia Community College.

"I have to give credit to the attorney general's office and [the state council] for conducting an in-depth legal analysis of the situation," Parada said.

How many people are affected?

That's almost impossible to say. Immigrants with protected status do not have to notify the Department of Homeland Security that they are enrolled in college, so the government doesn't have data on how many students the policy change affects. Nationwide, about 318,000 people of all ages have temporary protected status.

So, do protected-status students automatically qualify for in-state tuition and fees?

No, according to Kathleen Kincheloe, spokeswoman for the state council. They have to prove they live in Virginia just as any other student does, she said.

The state council will provide the guidelines, but colleges will have the ultimate decision whether to classify protected-status students as in-state residents.

What happened in Galeas' case?

Galeas came to Fairfax County in 2000 from El Salvador. The federal government granted him protected status a year later.

"One of the basic needs to grow and improve yourself is education," he said.

Galeas, 28, works as Laborers' International Union of North America representative in Local Union 11. He applied to Northern Virginia Community College in the spring to pursue a political science degree, but he was classified as an out-of-state student.

In his appeal, he presented four years of income-tax filings, among other documents, as evidence of Virginia residence. Because of the new ruling, the college reclassified him as an in-state student in July.

What's the view from the top?

Robert G. Templin Jr., president of Northern Virginia Community College, said the change was long overdue.

He said the college last year received applications from about 100 protected-status students, but most could not enroll because they couldn't afford out-of-state tuition.

"SCHEV and the attorney general recognized that these young people are legally in the country, some for a decade or more, have attended school while their families pay taxes, but were denied in-state tuition, and now with this ruling they will pay in-state tuition," Templin said.

Juan Antonio Lizama is a staff writer for Media General's Richmond Times-Dispatch.

http://www.potomacnews.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=WPN/MGArticle/WPN_BasicArticle&c=MGArticle&cid=1173352490991&path=

_____

Temporary Immigrants Granted In-State Tuition
NVCC Student's Challenge Prompts State Ruling
By Karin Brulliard
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, August 26, 2007; Page C11


Ernesto Galeas, a Salvadoran immigrant, has lived in Virginia for seven years and paid taxes to the state for five. So he was stunned this spring when Northern Virginia Community College denied him in-state tuition and slapped him with a $2,400 bill -- about three times as high as he expected.

The reason, Galeas was told: Immigrants with temporary protected status, which provides a permit to live and work in the United States, are ineligible for the tuition break even if they meet every other requirement.
Galeas fought the decision and got the college and the state's top lawyers to change their minds. As of last month, all Virginia college students with the permit, called TPS, are eligible for the tuition break, officials said.

"This marked a precedent for future students," Galeas said...

Although many states deny in-state tuition to illegal immigrants and those whose visas do not grant long-term stays, such as tourists or foreign students, they often grant it to temporary immigrant workers who meet all other requirements. But most states, including Maryland, do not mention TPS in their guidelines, said Luis Parada, a District-based lawyer who took Galeas's case free of charge.

Virginia's guidelines did not address TPS, said Lee Andes, assistant director for financial aid at the State Council for Higher Education of Virginia. But the Virginia attorney general's office previously interpreted TPS holders as ineligible because their immigration status did not reflect an "intent to remain" in the state, Andes said.

...the change has no implications for illegal immigrants. But it will make a huge difference for TPS holders, he said.

"Denying a student the opportunity to go to college is one of the most unfair and counterproductive things we as a society can do, especially in what should have been a clear-cut case like students with TPS," Parada said. "For a lot of the students, having to pay three times the amount of tuition is the difference between being able to attend college or not."

Galeas said he is among those students. He immigrated illegally in 2000 and was granted TPS the next year...

For complete article: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/25/AR2007082501138.html

Photo: Robert Templin, Northern VA Community College President. http://www.nvcc.edu/president/

Saturday, August 25, 2007

5 to 10 BILLION a Year is Paid in Taxes by Undocumented Immigrants

Just a Reminder

Tamar Jacoby who is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute stated in her op-ed piece in the LA Times that:


"most immigrants with fake papers pay taxes -- $5 billion to $10 billion a year in Social Security taxes"

Just to let you know, the Manhattan Institute is not some place full of left wing intellectuals. Its known to be a conservative institution.


Sometimes you have to repeat something over and over again before people actually hear you.

The Social Security No-Match Letter and the Disaster it Brings










How critical can an average citizen be of a U.S. Senator? Is there any protocol for this? The current situation with the SSA no-match letters is a disaster about to hit America. Our Senators created this ramp onto the void. If you watched the senate hearing you might have been disgusted to hear the insulting language of a number of our senators. One of them was Jeff Sessions, Republican from Alabama. He represented the Old South very well, down to his Jim Crow attitudes towards Mexicans. Maybe he thinks Alabama will do fine without its immigrants. Obviously he doesn't have a clue to what will happen in California.

How can I politely say that this man that he has helped destroy the lives of thousands of people with his encouragement of an indiscriminate "enforce immigration law" policy. Sessions, with his adolescent way of speaking, looked like an older Tom Sawyer with a suit on and his hands in his pockets, looked bashful and innocent while he spoke extremely harsh words towards undocumented immigrants. When he was speaking on the senate floor he seemed to be playing the role of one of the kids in the old tv show "Our Gang." Innocence can be a mask for cynicism.

I'm glad I'm not driving through Alabama anytime soon. If I do I'll be sure to take my passport. I might get stopped while driving Mexican.

_____
California without a Mexican

Workplace enforcement without immigration reform will cripple the economy -- and it will be Joe Public's fault.
By Tamar Jacoby
August 25, 2007
Los Angeles Times

The 2004 film "A Day Without a Mexican" was a political satire: an exaggerated fantasy about what would happen in California if all the immigrant workers suddenly disappeared. But now it seems that life may imitate art. Federal immigration authorities are readying a new enforcement tool that could indeed, if applied effectively, all but cripple the California economy.

A new fence? A massive influx of Border Patrol agents? A fleet of airborne drones? No. The new weapon is a simple two-page letter that will go out next month to companies whose employees' names and Social Security numbers do not match those on record at the Social Security Administration.

What makes these letters so potent? The SSA has been sending similar notices for years, but in the past, as long as a company had asked to see a worker's papers and filled out the proper forms, it was off the hook. Now the government is demanding that unauthorized employees be fired and threatening legal action if they aren't. This is expected to trigger widespread layoffs -- self-policing by millions of small and medium-sized businesses in California and other states.

The new measure is popular with the public -- a recent Rasmussen poll found eight in 10 Americans support it -- and understandably so. Voters want to get control of immigration. They're particularly keen to punish employers who hire illegal immigrants. And after years of lax enforcement, they're pleasantly surprised to see the authorities getting tough.

The only problem: Much as we need better enforcement, on the border and in the workplace, that's only half the answer. And without the other half -- better, more realistic immigration laws -- it will wreak havoc.

We've already had a preview of the likely consequences, and not just at the movies. For several years now, tougher border enforcement, plus competition from higher-paying hospitality and construction jobs, have deprived farmers in California and other states of the foreign workers they need to plant and harvest their crops.

The crisis peaks every year in August and September, and the photos start showing up in the newspapers: piles of rotting pears, strawberry plants choked by weeds, unpicked cucumbers grown to monstrous sizes and melons oozing in the fields.

Not even the least skilled, least educated Americans want to work in agriculture these days. More than 70% of U.S. farmworkers are estimated to be illegal immigrants. And if the SSA's no-match letters work -- if employers act on them as expected -- that could drive fruit and vegetable farming out of the United States, putting California's $30-billion-a-year industry at risk.

Agriculture would be just the beginning. According to economists, every farm job sustains three or four others -- at food processing plants, agricultural supply firms, companies that build trucks and other farm machinery -- many of them jobs held by native-born workers. And no-match letters won't go just to farmers. Hotels, restaurants, construction firms, landscaping contractors and healthcare services will get them too.

Those industries can't leave the United States. But they can slow -- slow dramatically -- and downsize. And imagine California "without a Mexican" a year or two from now: crumbling roads, understaffed hospitals, unbuilt classrooms and more.

This economic crunch could have a silver lining -- it might grab the public's attention and generate an outcry for better laws. Millions of Americans who think we don't need immigrant workers might wise up. Politicians who opposed immigration reform this year or last might have a change of heart. And Congress might overhaul the system in 2009, if not before, combining enhanced enforcement with legal ways for U.S. employers to hire foreign workers. That's the other half of the combination we need. And if a no-match crackdown goads us in that direction, the short-term economic pain might be worth it.

But what if, instead of choking the economy, the no-match blitz only drives more of it underground? Some companies will fire their illegal workers and downsize or move. Others will fire and then rehire them -- more deviously or completely off the books. Shady labor contractors will proliferate. Identity theft will skyrocket. Employers who have tried to play by the rules -- asking to see workers' papers, filling out the required forms -- will suffer, while those who deliberately flout the law will thrive and multiply.

The unintended consequences: more underground hiring, more sub-market wages, more mistreatment of immigrants, less tax revenue (most immigrants with fake papers pay taxes -- $5 billion to $10 billion a year in Social Security taxes) and a less regulated, more dangerous workplace for everyone.

Whose fault will this be? Not the feds -- it's their job to enforce immigration law, a job they've neglected for far too long. Some of the blame will lie with Congress, which could have changed the law, making it possible for employers to legally hire the workers they need. But in the end, the mess will be of our own making -- we the skeptical public who signaled to policymakers in May and June that we didn't trust them to rewrite the immigration code.

We told them to enforce existing law without changes, and that's what we're about to get. The question is what we'll do when that doesn't work and whether we can learn from our mistake.

Tamar Jacoby is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute.

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-jacoby25aug25,0,1578659.story?coll=la-home-commentary

Cartoon of Senator Jeff Sessions from the National Review: http://www.nationalreview.com/nrd/images/20060619/pic_osullivan.gif

Immigrant Workers Strike in New York City



30 Immigrants On Bikes Deliver A Labor Revolt
N.Y. Workers Gain Allies in Protest of Wages, Conditions
By Anthony Faiola
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, August 25, 2007; Page A01


NEW YORK -- The deliverymen of Saigon Grill labored for years at the bottom of Manhattan's food chain. Biking swiftly down the avenues in biting cold and searing heat, they schlepped up high-rises and walk-ups with bags of steaming noodles and shrimp fried rice.

Then they surprised their bosses -- and others in this seen-it-all town -- by serving up something unexpected: a revolt.

The 30 men -- all immigrants, including undocumented workers frustrated with the poor conditions and low wages that are often a fact of life in America's underground economy -- banded together in an effort to unionize. They demanded an end to what they say were salaries less than half the minimum wage, and to penalties that included $20 fines for late deliveries and $50 for shutting the restaurant's glass doors with a bang.

So far, hundreds of deliverymen, waiters, cooks and busboys from across New York have joined their picket lines in shows of solidarity. Angry deliverymen have slapped at least five other restaurants here with similar lawsuits. Immigrants laboring in other types of restaurant jobs have filed several more, targeting small takeout operations and upscale establishments such as Devi, the critically acclaimed Manhattan eatery.

"We have been going under the assumption that because we have no papers, we were powerless -- but we were wrong," Ke, a 35-year-old Chinese immigrant and former Saigon Grill deliveryman, said through an interpreter during a protest last week at the restaurant's fashionable Union Square branch. As with others here, Ke requested that his surname be withheld because he is undocumented. "We have discovered that we have the power to act."...

For complete article:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/24/AR2007082402123.html?hpid=topnews

Photo: Delivery man on a bicycle http://www1.istockphoto.com/file_thumbview_approve/700495/2/istockphoto_700495_old_delivery_man.jpg

Friday, August 24, 2007

A Open Letter to Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee

To the Honorable
Congresswoman Jackson Lee;

We are aware and thankful of your position on immigrant rights and remember your supportive presence during the pro-immigration gathering March 25, 2006 and during the Congressional Hearing on immigration in Houston on August 16, 2006. Some of us were present on May 18, 2007 in Washington when you asked the DREAM ACT students if they found importance in being patriotic Americans.

You have been with us all along. Please go the last round; consider becoming a co-sponsor of the DREAM ACT and encourage your colleagues who have not yet made a committment to support the passage of the DREAM ACT

Respectfully,


DREAM ACT TEXAS







photo: United We DREAM student coalition http://www.pcun.org/images/dream%20act%20photo.jpg

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Do a Little Thinking

My father used to say that I should "do a little thinking" when he wanted me to figure something out for myself. This comes to mind as I see a gooey article from the Arizona Republic that tells us John MCain loves Mexican food and Michael Bloomberg thinks Latinos are nice people.

The following is something I wrote in response to reading about how Latinos also want the American Dream. Of course we do. Its unfortunate that many work so hard and can't get there...

-----Of the anti-immigrant crowd, the Minute Men are the loudest and seemingly least rational. Then there are the nice people who just love Mexican food but think undocumented students shouldn't go to college with in-state tuition because "they don't pay taxes."

The Tax issue has been stated over and over again, clarified, corrected, insisted upon, yet the nation still wants to believe that undocumented immigrants don't pay taxes. As for medical care, at a Congressional Hearing in 2006 I was present when the Harris County Judge stated that the pressure on the county's medical system was NOT from immigrants,but from all the U.S. citizens that are not insured.

The information is out there folks. Unfortunately the entertainer/tv journalist Lou Dobbs yells all the wrong statistics in our face day after day. Maybe people believe him because he speaks so loud. Although you would have to be locked in a cave not to know that a number of well respected organizations have called him on his inflamatory accusations about immigrants bringing tuberculosis and other diseases - He has been proven wrong. Yet he refuses to apologize and continues on his tirade.

It is understandable that many people in the U.S. are angry and feeling that they are losing out on the American Dream. There is also so much pressure from above- our presidential administration is the closest we've seen to fascism (that is no secret) - we are being watched, listened to, analyzed as me move through our daily routines. Our emails to Mom are probably being read too. While there is some movement to criticize the President, he continues to sound like he is out of touch with reality (Iran is politically stable at this time???) - and no one is stopping him. The new majority in Congress, our beloved Democrats have melted under the heat - and have led us to be watched even more intensely- among other problems. Is there no one out there to help us?

If you remember when you were about ten years old and there was a bully in the playground. He/she would hit other kids and call them names, especially those that were smaller or younger. You probably thought that the bully was just taking it out on the weaklings... I propose that we consider ourselves as that bully, all of us who are citizens - of all ethnic groups and races. Even those who are wanting compassionate immigration reform. If we stand by and see the Minute Men, Mitt Romney and the radio evangelists/newscasters verbally beat undocumented immigrants to a pulp - then we are responsible if we don't do anything.

Read up on the statistics. You'll find that someone without papers is paying for your grandmother's social security -- they are paying in and will never be able to use the benefits...

Read about the crime rate - yes, the young man who murdered the three in New Jersey was an immigrant. Otherwise - the crime rate among immigrants is miniscule compared to U.S. citizens. In our neighborhood, which is mainly immigrant, everyone shudders when the 20 something white guy rides by on his bike day after day at all hours. We wonder, does he work, or go to school, is he scouting out my house, does he sell drugs? He hangs out with guys known to be drug dealers- all U.S. citizens. In the meantime my other neighbors who mostly can't speak English (although they would love to learn if they could) get up at 5 am everyday and are gone before my husband takes our dogs for a walk at 6 am. They are burned by the sun, their muscles ache from the heavy work they perform, yet you don't see them just hanging around. They have the best American work ethic I have ever seen. I can't say much for the guy on the bicycle.

also posted on bornintheUSA2008.blogspot.com

Miss. Immigrants Rights Alliance 888-204-3355

MIRA!
MISSISSIPPI IMMIGRANTS
RIGHTS ALLIANCE
P.O. Box 1104
Jackson, MS 39215-1104

Central Office:
612 N. State Street Suite B
Jackson, Mississippi 39202

Office 601-968-5182
Toll Free: 888-204-3355
Fax: 601-968-5183

http://www.yourmira.org/

Sheriff tells Guest Workers the Company "Owns Them"



Kidnapping?


The workers, from Veracruz, MX came to work for Southwest Shipyards in Channelview, Texas - just east of Houston. They paid between $1,500 and $2,000 to come to the U.S. on HB2 temporary visas. The company did not pay what they originally offered in addition to deducting much of their pay for room and board. They left Channelview and traveled to Mississipi, where they were told by the Pascagoula, Miss. Sheriff that Southwest Shipyards "owned them."

It has become common knowledge on the Gulf Coast that many immigrant workers (especially those in New Orleans) have been mistreated, not paid for their work, and even not given food by companies who recruited them.

-----
Workers Say Miss. Police Kidnapped Them
By HOLBROOK MOHR, Associated Press Writer
San Francisco Chronicle
Thursday, August 23, 2007

(08-23) 04:25 PDT Jackson, Miss. (AP) --
Thirty Mexican nationals with visas to work in the U.S. claim police in Pascagoula kidnapped and threatened them with arrest or deportation if they did not return to an employer.
The workers, backed by the Mississippi Immigrants Rights Alliance, the American Civil Liberties Union and other advocacy groups, said Wednesday that Pascagoula Police Capt. George Tillman threatened to send them to jail if they didn't return to work for a recruitment company.

The workers plan to file a lawsuit accusing Tillman of "kidnapping, kidnapping with intent to enslave, false imprisonment, human trafficking, and violations of the workers' civil and constitutional rights," they said in a news release.
Enrique Garcia, 41, one of the workers, said Tillman told the workers the company "owned" them..

For complete article:
http://nuevomundo.revues.org/

Photo: Braceros registering in El Paso, ca. late 1940s. http://www.farmworkers.org/bracero5/contrata.GIF

Romney & Giuliani Must Not Know About Plyler vs. Doe




Ronald Brownstein:
'Sanctuary' as battleground
Romney and Giuliani spar over what roles cities should have in enforcing immigration laws.
August 22, 2007

Let's say the 7-year-old daughter of illegal immigrants working in a big American city wakes up this morning with a high fever and a rash.

Is it in that city's interest for the little girl to receive treatment at a local public clinic or hospital? Or is that community better off if the child's parents try to treat her at home because they fear a doctor will ask about their immigration status -- and report them to the federal government if they can't prove they are here legally?

Before you answer, recall that in the 1982 Plyler vs. Doe decision, the Supreme Court ruled that children of illegal immigrants have a constitutional right to public education. That means whether or not that child is examined to determine if her illness is contagious, she will soon be back in a classroom of other 7-year-olds -- many, in all likelihood, American citizens.

In most places, for most people, this would not be a hard call. Leaving aside any question of compassion toward the girl, the community's public health is clearly served if she is treated before she infects anyone else.

Likewise, most people would agree that communities are safer if illegal immigrants who have been the victims of crime, or possess evidence that can help solve a crime, can talk to police officers without fear of being quizzed about their status. Or if illegal immigrants enroll their children in school (as the Supreme Court allowed), rather than keep them at home for fear admissions officials will investigate the parents' status.

These are the judgments that have prompted Los Angeles, New York and dozens of other major cities to adopt policies that in varying ways discourage municipal workers from assessing the immigration status of people using local services and sharing such information with federal immigration officials...

For complete article:

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-brownstein22aug22,1,4055448.column

Photo: http://www.foreignborn.com/images/subsect_photos/medical.jpg

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Undocumented Immigrants Pay Social Security














Undocumented Immigrants Paid Almost $50 billion in federal taxes from 1996 to 2003

The money they contribute stays in the system and is paying our current social security benefits. The statement below is from the New York Times and the Internal Revenue Service.

_____

National Immigration Legal Center


Undocumented immigrants contribute to the tax rolls and the Social Security Trust Fund. The U.S. Social Security Administration has estimated that undocumented immigrants contribute approximately $8.5 billion in Social Security and Medicare funds each year.[1] The U.S. Internal Revenue Service has determined that undocumented immigrants paid almost $50 billion in federal taxes from 1996 to 2003.[2]

1. Eduardo Porter, “Illegal Immigrants Are Bolstering Social Security with Billions,” New York Times, Apr. 5, 2005, www.immigrationforum.org/DesktopDefault.aspx?tabid=724.

2. Statement of The Honorable Mark W. Everson, Commissioner, Internal Revenue Service, Testimony Before the House
Committee on Ways and Means, July 26, 2006, http://waysandmeans.house.gov/hearings.asp?formmode=view&id=5171.


Photo: Social Security Poster from the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library http://www.utexas.edu/features/archive/2004/graphics/election_social2.jpg

Information regarding Social Security from National Immigration Legal Center : http://72.14.253.104/search?q=cache:X4vDG9_S-4gJ:www.nilc.org/immspbs/research/research003.htm+%22social+security%22&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=32&gl=us

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

The Economics of the Dream Act


We recently received a comment that stated "taxpayers to pay through the nose to educate, provide health care, and welfare benefits"

Below is information from a number of federal agencies and other reliable sources that will contradict the statement of the taxpayer having to fund services for undocumented immigrants. DREAM Act students would help the economy and produce income that covers the taxes needed for social services. Please see footnotes at the bottom of this post.


_____

DREAM Act Economic Impact Fact Sheet

The DREAM Act will Provide Needed Workers, Increase U.S. Competitiveness and Alleviate the Military Recruitment Crisis

The DREAM Act would help alleviate a labor shortage in the United States.
==> Experts estimate that America will need 5%, or 15.6 million, more workers by 2015 to maintain the current ratio of workers to the total population.

==> The DREAM Act would reduce the cost of recruiting foreign professionals, as processing times for visas range from one to three years, not including the time spent for acculturation and learning the language.

The DREAM Act will increase global competitiveness by utilizing skilled US trained professionals already in this country instead of competing for skilled workers with other countries

==> President Bush has called for training 70,000 math and science teachers to improve US competitiveness. The DREAM Act will help the US to be more globally competitive by resulting in an increase of graduates in the math and science sectors.

==> H-1Bs are visas with a limited yearly quota of 65,000 that are provided to highly skilled foreign nationals. Many US companies recruit engineers, computer programmers and other professionals from around the globe because of the lack of professionals in these fields in the US. For example, Silicon Valley companies are among the main supporters of H-1B visa reform (higher quotas). Due to the lack of available H-1Bs, companies say they are experiencing a reverse brain drain as skilled workers flock to the booming economies of China and India. Data suggests that companies that engage in offshoring work to India submitted H-1B visa applications in heavy volume. ii

The DREAM Act would increase the tax base for state, federal, and local governments.

==> According to the US Department of Commerce, a high school graduate earns $1.2 million in a 40-year span compared to $2.1 million for a person with a Bachelor’s degree. A person with a master’s degree has an average earning of $2.5 million in a 40-year span. iii

==> Therefore, a single person with a bachelor’s degree who earns an average $60,000 of taxable income will contribute $11,564 to taxes and welfare annually; in a 40-year span he/she will have contributed $462,560. iv

The DREAM Act will improve national security by alleviating the recruitment shortages to the armed forces.

==> In April 2005 the Army Reserve and the National Guard failed to meet their recruitment quota. Only 51 percent of Inactive Ready Reserve troops reported for duty.

==> The army expects to reverse the recruiting shortfall by lowering standards (which will increase training costs), and by adding more recruiters and spending more money on advertising. The army is also offering larger bonuses (up to $90,000, in one lump sum) to get existing troops to re-enlist. These methods will increase personnel costs as much as ten percent.v

==> As of 2006, 30,000 foreign-born individuals are currently serving in the armed forces. Every year, 7,200 of the 180,000 new recruits are non-citizens. Immigrants account for 20 percent of recipients of the Congressional Medal of Honor. vi



i. “A stiff learning curve,” Asia Times February 14, 2006.

ii. Prithiv Patel, Infosys, Wipro and TCS under investigation for misuse of H1B visas, India Daily, May 15, 2007.

iii. Economics and Statistics Administration, Census Bureau. (2002) Available: http://www.census.gov/prod/2002pubs/ p23-210.pdf

iv. 2006 Tax Table. Available at http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/i1040tt.pdf

v. www.strategypage.com, April 2005.

vi. American Immigration Law Foundation. (2006) Defending America: Immigrants Fight for Our Nation. Available at http://www.ailf.org/pubed/defendingamerica.shtml


Thanks to United Leadership Initiative (ULIC) and Julieta G. for sending this information

Photo: book cover "Americans Who Tell the Truth" http://www.americanswhotellthetruth.org/images/americans_book_cover.jpg

March 25 Coalition Information

http://www.march25coalition.org/

march25coalition@action-mail.org

William Torres
323 228 2753

Javier Rodriguez
323 702 6397

National Rally on Sept. 12 for Arellano





Immigration activist deported to Mexico
Elvira Arellano, detained in L.A., is seen as an icon of migrant rights by some and as a symbol of lawlessness by others.
By Teresa Watanabe
Los Angeles Times
August 21, 2007

U.S. immigration officials announced Monday that Elvira Arellano, an illegal immigrant who symbolized inhumane treatment of migrants to some and brazen lawlessness to others, has been deported to her native Mexico, as immigrant-rights groups vowed to respond with massive protests.

Arellano, a 32-year-old single mother, was "a criminal fugitive alien who spent a year seeking to elude federal capture" by taking refuge in a Chicago church, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials said.

The agency said that tracking down and deporting immigration fugitives was one of its "top enforcement priorities" and that 220,000 illegal immigrants had been deported between last October and July, among the highest numbers ever for a 10-month period.

Federal immigration officials said they chose to arrest Arellano because she had defied not only immigration law but also federal criminal law....

...many immigrant-rights groups view Arellano as a symbol of courage in defying U.S. deportation orders that separated her from her 8-year-old son, Saul, a U.S. citizen. Southern California labor, religious and immigrant-rights groups are organizing vigils, political lobbying to give Arellano legal status to return and a march on Saturday through downtown Los Angeles to protest the actions.

Activists are also planning a national rally and boycott on behalf of Arellano in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 12, said Carlos Montes of the March 25 Coalition, which organized the massive immigration march through Los Angeles last year.

"She's encouraging and inspiring people by her courage in service of a mission to draw attention to the suffering of immigrant families," said the Rev. Alexia Salvatierra, director of Clergy and Laity United for Economic Justice of California, who is helping coordinate a national movement to offer sanctuary to illegal immigrants.

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-deport21aug21,1,5591266.story

Photo: International Bridge at Tijuana www.bridgeandtunnelclub.com/.../ 08border.jpg

The Candidate Who Vetoed In-State Tuition in Massachussetts

















Mitt Romney vetoed an in-state tuition bill for undocumented students. He authorized state troopers to act as immigration officers. He is now saying if he were President he would cut off federal funding to cities that he says "ignore federal immigration laws." I hope the American voters will acknowledge this vicious and angry position. Is he the kind of person we want as President?
_____
New Romney ad targets illegal migrants
By PHILIP ELLIOTT
Associated Press Writer
Miami Herald
August 21, 2007

CONCORD, N.H. --
Presidential hopeful Mitt Romney criticizes "sanctuary cities" for illegal immigrants - and by implication Republican rival Rudy Giuliani - in a new radio ad.

...In so-called sanctuary cities, government employees are not required to report illegal immigrants to federal authorities. Some, such as San Francisco, have declared themselves sanctuaries or refugees. Others, like New York, have never adopted the name.

New York's policy, begun by Democratic Mayor Ed Koch in 1988, is intended to make illegal immigrants feel that they can report crimes, send their children to school or seek medical treatment without fear of being reported. An estimated half-million illegal immigrants live in New York, and only a fraction are deported each year.

Romney has pledged to cut federal funds from cities that adopt what he calls sanctuary policies and ignore federal immigration laws. The ads also say that as governor Romney ordered state police to enforce existing immigration laws, opposed driver's licenses for illegal immigrants and insisted children be taught English.

Last week, Giuliani began running a radio ad that highlights his support for building a fence along the U.S.-Mexican border. He says that as mayor he unsuccessfully tried to get federal help to deport illegal immigrants convicted of crimes. He also tells voters that as president he would require new immigrants to learn English, deport criminal suspects and enact tougher visa standards.

http://www.miamiherald.com/692/story/210269.html

Photo: Mitt Romney http://www.hollywoodtoday.net/wp-content/uploads/2007/04/mitt-romney.jpg

Monday, August 20, 2007

Chicago Tribune Story on Arellano - She is Already in Mexico

Activist arrested in L.A.
Deported to Tijuana, pastor says

By Antonio Olivo | Tribune staff reporter
5:29 AM CDT, August 20, 2007

LOS ANGELES - Federal authorities Sunday arrested Elvira Arellano on a downtown city street, ending a yearlong standoff that intensified recently after the illegal Mexican immigrant began what was to be a nationwide campaign to push for new immigration reforms.

Hours later, her pastor said she had been deported to Mexico, the Associated Press reported.

...As Arellano, her 8-year-old son Saul and others headed in a sport-utility vehicle along Main Street toward another leg of their trip in Northern California, several unmarked cars swarmed the vehicle, ordering her to get out as they grabbed the driver and handcuffed him, said Chicago activist Emma Lozano, who was with Arellano.

Before surrendering, Arellano asked for time alone to console her crying son, telling him: "Calm down. Don't have any fear. They can't hurt me," Lozano said. The entire incident lasted about two minutes, she said. The driver was released.

Arellano was taken in handcuffs to a nearby federal detention center, from which she was to be routed to Tijuana, according to Mexican officials.

U.S. authorities on Sunday night did not detail the next steps in the legal process or reveal her location.

But early this morning, the Associated Press reported that Arellano was deported several hours after her arrest. The AP quoted the Rev. Walter Coleman, pastor of Adalberto United Methodist Church in Chicago, where Arellano had taken refuge.

"She has been deported. She is free and in Tijuana," said Coleman, who said he spoke to her on the phone. "She is in good spirits. She is ready to continue the struggle against the separation of families from the other side of the border."

Lozano and others earlier vowed they would fight to keep her from being deported.

"We have several lawyers already working on it," Lozano said, her eyes red as a group of Arellano supporters sat in stunned silence inside the Our Lady Queen of Angels Catholic Church at "La Placita," the historic center of Mexican Los Angeles.

...In recent months, arrests of fugitives such as Arellano have been occurring at a pace of some 675 per week.

..Last week, Arellano announced she would try to mobilize efforts for more lenient reforms by leaving the Adalberto United Methodist Church for the first time since arriving there last August and traveling to Washington for an 8-hour prayer and fast vigil scheduled for Sept. 12.

Fearing arrest, she kept secret the group's plans of first going to other cities in an attempt to build national momentum leading toward the vigil. After leaving Chicago on Thursday, she arrived in Los Angeles Saturday morning for the first stop in that campaign, which coincided with a local immigration march.

Arellano spent most of her day Sunday urging audiences of several hundred parishioners inside four separate churches to lobby House Majority Leader Nancy Pelosi and other congressional members from California to take up immigration reform immediately after returning from summer recess. Between stops, she donned a pair of sunglasses and slipped into the back of her group's electric blue sport-utility vehicle with her son.

"It's important that we are unified so that we can bring out the message that we're all struggling together," Arellano said at the Angelica Lutheran Church, inside Los Angeles' Pico-Union neighborhood, a port of entry for Central American immigrants. "The hate you are seeing build around the country has no boundaries."

...Immigrant activists in Chicago, Los Angeles and other cities saw Arellano's arrest as inevitable.

"Everyone knew it was probably a question of when, not if," said Joshua Hoyt, executive director of the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights. "It just makes me feel really sad because she knows she's looking at time in prison."

Jacobita Alonso, a lay leader at the church who stayed with Arellano on the second-floor apartment during the last year, felt compelled to action.

"We cannot sit here only grieving. All we can do is organize our people. We want her to know she is not alone," she said Sunday.

Amid heavy rainfall Sunday night, about three dozen people sang, prayed and read passages from the Bible during a vigil Sunday night outside the Chicago headquarters of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement downtown to show their disapproval of her arrest. They sang, prayed, read from the Bible.

"It's a sad day," said Ald. Ricardo Munoz (22nd.) "We need comprehensive immigration reform that keeps families together. A young boy, a U.S. citizen, lost his mother to a broken system. Elvira has put a face to this struggle. There are 12 million illegal immigrants that head to work every morning, not knowing if they'll come home at the end of the day."

Late Sunday, her son, Saul, was under the care of Coleman and Emma Lozano's husband...

For complete article:

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-elvira_web.1aug20,1,5166191.story?coll=chi_tab01_layout

Chicago Advocacy Group - Pueblo Sin Fronteras








Centro Sin Fronteras:
2300 S. Blue Island
Chicago, IL 60623
Main: (773)523-8261
Fax: (773)523-8109
Main@somosunpueblo.com
http://www.somosunpueblo.com/

Photo from Pueblo Sin Fronteras web page, http://www.somosunpueblo.com/Unify_and_Focus.html

Details on Arellano Arrest






















Activist arrested at L.A. church...

By Sonia Nazario and David Pierson, Los Angeles Times Staff Writers
August 20, 2007


Elvira Arellano, an illegal immigrant from Mexico who became a symbol in the nation's immigration wars after she took sanctuary in a Chicago church last year, was arrested Sunday by federal immigration agents outside Our Lady Queen of Angels Church in Los Angeles.

Arellano, 32, a single mother, moved into a Chicago church a year ago to prevent being separated from her 8-year-old U.S.-born son.

She was arrested Sunday afternoon as she was leaving the downtown Los Angeles church also known as La Placita with her son and a supporter.

Supporters said the car in which Arellano was riding was surrounded by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, who took her into custody.

The agency did not say where she was being held but did confirm that Arellano would be deported to Mexico.

...Arellano came to Los Angeles on Friday to speak at four area churches over the weekend. She was pressing for immigration reform that would provide a path to citizenship for the estimated 12 million people in the U.S. illegally.

Immigration sweeps have mounted since congressional measures to legalize the country's undocumented immigrants were defeated this summer.

Federal immigration authorities confirmed Arellano had been taken into custody Sunday afternoon without incident and was being processed to be deported to Mexico.

"Arresting and removing criminal aliens is one of ICE's top enforcement priorities, and the agency will continue to pursue these cases vigorously," ICE said in a statement.

At a hastily organized press conference outside the Metropolitan Detention Center downtown, members of the Chicago church where Arellano had stayed denounced the federal government and called on supporters to march to Washington, D.C., to protest immigration laws.

"Everyone should be angry," said Emma Lozano, a member of the Chicago church.


Standing next to Lozano was Arellano's son, Saul Arellano, wearing baggy jeans and looking bewildered by all the attention.

The boy and his mother were leaving the L.A. church by car, heading to another church, when about 15 ICE agents in vans encircled the group, according to Arellano's supporters.

Lozano said Elvira Arellano told her frightened son to be calm and asked the agents to allow her a moment alone with him before they took her away.

Arellano was part of a fledgling movement of churches in New York, Chicago, San Diego and Los Angeles that had recently offered sanctuary to illegal immigrants.

But her cause was not widely embraced by immigrant rights activists, some of whom believed the idea of religious organizations willfully flouting the law to shelter an illegal immigrant with final deportation orders was too confrontational and feared that her tactics would only fuel anti-immigrant forces in the U.S.

Many Americans feel torn about cases such as Arellano's, said Grace Dyrness, who is studying the sanctuary movement at the Center for Religion and Civic Culture at USC.

"People are struggling: Where do I land? Do I side with the law, without compassion? Or with compassion, and then I don't have regard for our laws?" she said.

"People wonder: what is the law and what does my heart say and how do we bring those two together?" Dyrness said.

Dyrness said 12 congregations in Los Angeles County -- churches and synagogues -- have in the last year declared themselves sanctuaries for undocumented immigrants at risk of being deported.

Six immigrants are taking sanctuary in these churches, including La Placita and Immanuel Presbyterian Church in Los Angeles and St. Luke's Episcopal Church in Long Beach.

Arellano's arrest, Dyrness predicted, would put a damper on undocumented immigrants seeking sanctuary in churches, because they would fear becoming targets of federal immigration authorities.

But she also predicted the arrest would mobilize churches to come to their aid.

Arellano had been quite public about her opposition to the immigration sweeps, as well as her position as a woman who had flouted a deportation order.

The Chicago-based political organization Pueblo Sin Fronteras, which that has been supporting her activism, issued a press release with her itinerary of speeches at four Los Angeles churches over the last weekend.

But Colman, of Adalberto United Methodist in Chicago said Arellano had not sought to be arrested, despite the risk she took in moving from one church to the next.

"We always knew it was a possibility that she would be arrested," said Colman, after the press conference. "She was hopeful the country would have the wisdom and the humanity to let her state her case."

sonia.nazario@latimes.com

david.pierson@latimes.com

For complete story

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-elvira20aug20,1,1921237.story

Photo: Elvira Arellano and her son. http://nationalfastforimmigrantjustice.com/ThemeFiles/38775-35828/images/elvira_a_bl6y.jpg

Sunday, August 19, 2007

Elvira Arellano Arrested One Day After Leaving Sanctuary



There is not really much to say about this situation. Her companions don't know what agency arrested her and didn't know where she was taken.

_____

Illegal immigrant arrested after leaving church
Mother who defied deportation, took up sanctuary was in L.A. for rally

LOS ANGELES - An illegal immigrant who sought sanctuary in a Chicago church for a year to avoid deportation and separation from her 8-year-old American son was arrested Sunday, the church’s pastor said.

Elvira Arellano was arrested before 3 p.m. outside Our Lady Queen of Angels church on L.A.’s historic Olvera Street where she had been speaking to reporters, said the Rev. Walter Coleman, pastor of Adalberto United Methodist Church in Chicago where she sought sanctuary.

Coleman said he was with Arellano when she was detained, but declined to provide other details.“We’re trying to determine her situation right now,” he said.

It was unclear what law enforcement agency had taken Arellano into custody.

A call to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement was not immediately returned.

The 32-year-old Arellano arrived in Los Angeles on Saturday, leaving her sanctuary for the first time in a year to campaign for immigration reform....

‘I decided to stay and fight’
Arellano has become a symbol of the struggles of illegal immigrant parents and a source of controversy. She had said Saturday she was not afraid of being taken into custody by immigration agents.

“From the time I took sanctuary the possibility has existed that they arrest me in the place and time they want,” she said in Spanish. “I only have two choices. I either go to my country, Mexico, or stay and keep fighting. I decided to stay and fight.”

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20284646/

photo: http://img.epochtimes.com/i6/611170715281164.jpg

We Need an Andrew Carnegie to Fund Scholarships and Promote the DREAM Act



A DREAM Act student from Tampa recieved a $30,000 private scholarship to attend Florida Gulf Coast University. If only foundations or private individuals would consider helping undocumented college students. Instead of planting trees with their name on a plaque, wealthy individuals could help a student go to school. Each scholarship is building a future for the students and the nation.

Another way people of wealth can help is by using their influence to promote the DREAM Act and in-state tuition for undocumented students. As the Tampa Tribune mentioned - 40 states do not have in-state tuition for undocumented students. One is Massachussetts, because it was vetoed by Mitt Romney.

Just as people with wealth influence (and help) political campaigns or the passing of a bill in Congress... they could do the same for the DREAM Act.

_____
Undocumented Students Keep DREAM Act Hopes Alive
By JESSICA HOPPER The Tampa Tribune
Published: Aug 19, 2007


TAMPA - At 14, Dulce proudly told her parents she wanted to go to college.

Her parents' response shocked her. They said going to college would be difficult because she was an undocumented immigrant.

"I was broken completely in half. I refused to believe it," said Dulce, now 20.

Unlike many undocumented teenagers, Dulce's college story has a happy ending. She received her associate's degree in May from Hillsborough Community College. She recently received a $30,000 private scholarship that will cover tuition, books, and room and board at Florida Gulf Coast University this fall.

Undocumented students can attend public schools under a 1982 Supreme Court ruling. But undocumented college-age students are not eligible for federal aid and most forms of state aid. Forty states, including Florida, do not allow in-state tuition for undocumented students. Undocumented teens also cannot work legally to save money for college.

Dulce and other immigrant students hope proposed legislation, the DREAM Act, will make college more accessible to undocumented children...

For complete article:
http://www.tbo.com/news/metro/MGB58IBXI5F.html

photograph: Andrew Carnegie in 1914
http://www.clpgh.org/locations/pennsylvania/carnegie/images/mrac.jpg

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Recruitment and Death in War












Many Latino high school and college students tell me that they are constantly receiving phone calls from military recruiters. There are many reports of low recruitment rates, most probably associated with the unpopularity of the Iraq war. The lower the numbers the more aggressive the recruiters.

As for undocumented students, it often seems like a reasonable idea to enlist, since the DREAM Act has been stalled. Although official news is that if you are not documented, you can't enlist, most people say otherwise. Things may change if the DREAM Act is actually attached to a military bill - many more students will pursue this option. Sometimes I wonder if the raids and increased enforcement efforts are also meant to scare young people into enlisting...


___


Recruiting For Iraq War Undercut in Puerto Rico
By Paul Lewis
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, August 18, 2007; Page A01


SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico -- The political activists, brown envelopes tucked under their arms, staked out the high school gates just after sunrise. When students emerged from the graffiti-scorched streets of the Rio Piedra neighborhood here and began streaming toward their school, the pro-independence advocates ripped open the envelopes and began handing the teens fliers emblazoned with the slogan: "Our youth should not go to war..."

Under the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, all schools receiving U.S. federal funding must provide their students' names, addresses and phone numbers to the military unless the child or parents sign an opt-out form. Puerto Rico received $1.88 billion in U.S. education funds this year. For five years, PIP has issued opt-out forms to about 120,000 students in Puerto Rico and encouraged them to sign -- and independista activists expect this year to mark their most successful effort yet...

Leaders from the island's two major political parties say that their PIP opponents are exploiting young people to advance their separatist grievances. And Pentagon officials accuse the activists of "manipulating" impressionable young people...
Sonia Santiago, founder of the local group Mothers Against War, said her volunteers visit schools to "unmask" the way in which recruiters promise "villas y castillas" (villas and castles) that they cannot deliver. One persuasive tactic, she added, is to ask children how their mothers would feel if they were injured or killed in war....

The Pentagon lists 37 service members from the island as killed in action in the two conflicts, but local antiwar groups say the number exceeds 80, including suicides and soldiers recruited from the U.S. mainland....

For complete article:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/17/AR2007081702175.html?hpid=topnews

Friday, August 17, 2007

Emergency Call: "We are Necessary" Labor Stop September 3-9

























A group not affiliated with any other advocacy organization is organizing a "labor stop" and a "buying stop." For more information:

call: 602-462-5050
email: reformamigratoria@hotmail.com


-----


CAMPAIGN FOR SMART BUYERS AND
“LABOR STOP”


This plan is not the property of any organization or individual. The purpose of this plan is for you to add your own demands and elaborate your own actions to take within your grassroots. The importance to notify us what area you will cover is to minimize efforts and make sure we cover all areas throughout the state and nation. We ask that the main message be the same: “Today we are not working, Today we are not purchasing, WE ARE NECESSARY”.

Goal: To accelerate an immigration reform for this year.


PUBLICITY AND PROMOTION CAMPAIGN

FLYER
➢ Promote distribution of flyers with the information and participation on the “smart buyers” and “Labor stop” campaign
➢ Attract businesses to aid with flyer distribution and printing expenses, this businesses may pay printing expenses directly to the Printing Agency.
➢ Establish a list of participants distributing flyers and the areas covered. The distribution must not be repetitive. The volunteers must report their areas of distribution to minimize efforts and cover as much as possible.

INFORMATION FORUMS
Extend our promotion to the rest of the communities in the state and nation if possible.
➢ Locate leaders in those communities and activate them on this purpose.

Labor stop
➢ Leaders are hended throughout the “labor stop” week
➢ The volunteers must locate a mall near their home to cover during the “labor stop” week.
➢ Each team must be a maximum of 30 volunteers with signs and banners with the main message “ Today we don’t work, Today we don’t purchase, We are Necessary” (this should be in Spanish)
➢ There should be one team per mall road access.
➢ The team leaders must coordinate who and when each team will be present throughout the week.

All of this information must be passed on to the command center where the board of directors will be in charge.
The board of directors must assign a team that will be in charge of the command center and schedule for the week.



SUPPORT AND FOOD FOR THE VOLUNTEERS DURING THE “LABOR STOP WEEK”

➢ We need volunteers to elaborate and distribute food and help to the teams while protests take place.
➢ This volunteers should solicit donations to get what’s needed for food. The “lunch wagons” are the ideal assistance in this matter.
➢ If we get sponsors and get special discounts we can do it.



This is a preliminary plan for those who want to participate, please let us know as soon as possible , you may call at 602-462-5050 or send your email at reformamigratoria@hotmail.com to offer new ideas and how to make it better.

The Real Romney: Vetoing In-State Tuition to Undocumented Students is a Non-Issue?

http://massresistance.org/docs/marriage/romney/health_ins/Romney_health_bill.jpg


For the past week Romney and Giuliani have been trying hard to solidify their position with the Minute Men types. While the Washington Post says they are re-inventing themselves, I believe the Post is wrong. The article says that Romney was a "non-factor" on immigration, that he rarely said anything on the subject. Yet he "...As governor, Romney vetoed a bill that would have allowed illegal immigrants to receive in-state tuition at Massachusetts colleges and reached an agreement with federal officials to allow state troopers to enforce federal immigration laws." If vetoing in-state tuition for undocumented students is a non-factor, then reality is being turned upside down.

In addition, he enabled Massechussetts state troopers to act as immigration officials - meaning any undocumented person could get deported if stopped for a traffic ticket - since the officers were authorized to check residency status.

Having driven through three states that have implemented this policy with a van load of undocumented students on our way to Washington, D.C.- I assure anyone reading this that Romney IS/WAS a factor in the immigration debate. This experience left our group full of apprehension. When we were stopped at a road block in Virginia I thought to myself, its all over-the officers are going to take the kids. Thank goodness the officer only smiled at me and quickly returned my driver's license. Its logical that the officer might have wondered about the passengers in the van...maybe he didn't totally agree with Romney. I'm thankful if he didn't - as are the nine students.

Romney's decision to make state troopers immigration agents made life much more difficult and dangerous for undocumented immigrants. His veto of the in-state tuition law says he only wants (what he believes) the right people to obtain a college education. Sounds like he isn't such a compassionate or empathic guy. Do we need another one like this to be President?

*Romney also voted to bar undocumented immigrants from obtaining drivers licenses.

______



Romney, Giuliani Escalate Their Immigration Fight
By Michael D. Shear and Dan Balz
Washington Post Staff Writers
Friday, August 17, 2007; Page A02

The two leading Republican presidential candidates have turned the GOP primary campaign into a nasty, week-long debate about illegal immigration, accusing each other of supporting efforts to give undocumented residents sanctuary from federal immigration laws.

At campaign stops, in radio ads and with increasingly hostile statements by supporters, former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney and former New York mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani are talking about little else as they position themselves on an issue critical to conservatives in their party.

...Giuliani's former deputy mayor, Randy Mastro, went further in an interview. "We have a word here in New York for what Mitt Romney is doing," Mastro said. "It's called chutzpah."

Romney aides responded with an online column by Rep. Lamar Smith (R-Tex.), who called the immigration policies in New York "troubling" and blamed them for the growth of the nation's population of illegal immigrants....

...As governor, Romney vetoed a bill that would have allowed illegal immigrants to receive in-state tuition at Massachusetts colleges and reached an agreement with federal officials to allow state troopers to enforce federal immigration laws.
But Romney's tough rhetoric about sanctuary cities is new, said Shuya Ohno, a spokesman for the Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition. Ohno said Romney was "kind of a non-factor" in most debates about illegal immigration in the state.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/16/AR2007081602266.html

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Juan Estrada-Espinoza in Federal Immigration Jail Since May 2005

http://newsinitiative.org/media/2/image/krome-detainees.jpg


Juan Estrada-Espinoza arrived here when he was 12. At age 18 he was able to get his green card. At twenty he met a 16 year old girl who became his girlfriend and had his child. Now that he is 26 and she is 22. Yet he is being charged with having sex with a minor. The headlines describe him as a sex offender, even though later they explain that the couple lived together for three years. He has been in federal immigration jail since May 2005, after being charged with the crime. He pleaded guilty and is now facing deportation.

How many other Estrada-Espinozas are there? His length of incarceration is extremely unfair, considering the circumstances and that he had no criminal record. Where are the advocates for him?

The couple broke up when he was incarcerated.

_____
Legal immigrant faces deportation for having sex with 16-year-old
Bob Egelko, Chronicle Staff Writer
San Francisco Chronicle
Thursday, August 16, 2007


(08-16) 17:36 PDT SAN FRANCISCO -- A legal immigrant in Northern California who was 20 when he began a sexual relationship with a 16-year-old girl faces deportation to Mexico under a ruling today that was described as unjust by a majority of the federal appeals court panel that issued it....

Estrada's lawyer, Saad Ahmad, said he would ask the full court to order a new hearing before a larger panel and was confident the ruling would be overturned.

"This is a responsible man who never committed any crime in his life'' other than this one, Ahmad said. "Our argument will be, look at the underlying facts (to determine whether there was abuse). Look at their ages, look at any evidence of coercion, look at their mental competence.''

He said Estrada, 26, who lived in Jackson (Amador County) with his girlfriend and their son when he was prosecuted in 2004, has been in a federal immigration jail in Arizona since May 2005, under a law that requires convicted felons to be kept in custody after a deportation order.

Estrada entered the United States in 1992 at age 12 and became a legal permanent resident six years later. He said his girlfriend and her friends told him she was 18 when they met in June 2001, and he did not learn her true age until six months later. The court said she was either 15 or 16 when they met, but Ahmad said the case record showed that she was 16.

...They started living together at his parents' home, then found a place of their own, where Estrada supported her and their newborn son by working as many as 60 hours a week at grocery stores, Ahmad said. He said the couple broke up after Estrada was prosecuted, and the child lives with Estrada's parents.

For complete article:

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/08/16/BAG81RK6K17.DTL

Immigrant Rights Organizations in LA and Nationwide

From KPFK FM, Los Angeles


Immigrant Rights Organizations

This is a list of Community Organizations where you can get information about immigrant rights, and information about the current ICE raids.

Esta es una lista de organizaciones comunitarias que le puedan brindar información sobre sus derechos como inmigrante en este país, así como las redadas de ICE en su área y lo que Usted puede hacer para protegerse y su familia.

CHIRLA
Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles
http://www.chirla.org
Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles
2533 W. Third Street, Suite 101
Los Angeles, CA 90057
Telephone - 213.353.1333
Fax - 213.353.1344
Toll-free - 1.888.6-CHIRLA [1.888.624.4752]
E-mail - info@chirla.org

Information DVD about CHIRLA / DVD informativo de CHIRLA:
http://www.chirla.org/knowyourrights

CARECEN
Central American Resource Center
http://www.carecen-la.org
Founded in 1983 by a group of Salvadoran refugees whose mission was to secure legal status for the thousands of Central Americans fleeing the torture and brutality of civil war. During the 80’s and 90’s, over 52% of the one million plus Salvadorans and 59% of Guatemalans fleeing these atrocities came to Los Angeles. The transition from refugee to permanent resident in the United States challenged CARECEN to expand its capacity to meet the community’s need for social and economic empowerment. Our new community center is specifically designed to meet these challenges, serviing as a hub for educational and cultural enrichment, immigration & legal services and proactive programs created to foster citizenship & civic participation.

MALDEF
http://www.maldef.org
Founded in 1968 in San Antonio, Texas, the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF) is the leading nonprofit Latino litigation, advocacy and educational outreach institution in the United States. MALDEF's mission is to foster sound public policies, laws and programs to safeguard the civil rights of the 45 million Latinos living in the United States and to empower the Latino community to fully participate in our society.

MAPA
http://www.mapa.org


Immigrant Solidarity Network / Labor Union Focus

ENLACE
www.enlaceintl.org

The Farm Labor Organizing Committee, AFL-CIO (FLOC) is a union representing people who do some of the most important work in America – migrant farmworkers who pick the food we eat. Though these men, women, and too often children, feed our nation they typically work for poverty wages, in fields laced with pesticides, under a broiling sun. At day's end, they return to housing that can only be described as degrading to the human spirit.

National Network for Immigrant and Refugee Rights
http://www.nnirr.org
The National Network for Immigrant and Refugee Rights (NNIRR) is composed of local coalitions and immigrant, community, religious, civil rights and labor organizations and activists and works to promote a just immigration and refugee policy in the U.S. and to defend and expand the rights of all immigrants and refugees regardless of immigration status.

PCUN (Northwest Treeplanters and Farmworkers United)
Oregon's union of farmworkers, nursery and reforestation workers, Oregon's largest Latino organization. Our most fundamental goal is to empower farmworkers to understand and take action against systematic exploitation and all of its effects. 80 farmworkers and treeplanters founded PCUN in April, 1985 and since then, we have registered more than 4,500 members. 98% are Mexican or Central American immigrants; about half reside permanently in Oregon.
United Farm Workers of America, AFL-CIO
http://www.ufw.org

http://www.kpfk.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3098&Itemid=87

From Sinaloa and Chihuahua to the Mines in Utah











http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.greeneyesproductions.com/cgi-bin/networknews/Pictures/TopStory.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.wngz.com/radio/news/pgNews.asp%3Fp%3D1&h=175&w=175&sz=7&hl=en&start=44&sig2=uW6ldE6KNTLWoQXuvLUiVA&um=1&tbnid=D_UlntOucXuLvM:&tbnh=100&tbnw=100&ei=oVjERuOdK4fIgAPchZHpCg&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dutah%2Bminers%26start%3D40%26ndsp%3D20%26svnum%3D10%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26client%3Dsafari%26rls%3Den%26sa%3DN

Photo: Rescuers work to reach trapped miners in photograph provided by UtahAmerica Energy Inc. WNDZ News.



Two of the workers trapped in the Utah mine disaster are from Sinaloa and one is from Chihuahua. Its interesting that immigration hasn't been brought up that much in regards to this event. This is a clear example of the dangers inherent in many immigrant's jobs.


_____
Relatives in Mexico can only pray for miners
For two generations, men from Sinaloa have gone to dig in Utah. The pay is great, but the price may be too high.
By Cecilia Sánchez and Héctor Tobar
Los Angeles Times
August 16, 2007

Labor recruiters from Utah first came to the rural hamlets that surround this town in the western state of Sinaloa two generations ago, with promises of dollars to be made digging deep into the earth.

Onesimo Payan Carrillo, a retired miner, remembers them as "really tall, really blond men" who persuaded him and many others to leave their cornfields for U.S. coal mines.

The bond between this corner of Sinaloa and Utah has remained alive ever since, with sons and grandsons following in the footsteps of those first miners, including two young men who were trapped following the Aug. 6 collapse of the Crandall Canyon Mine near Huntington, Utah.

Two Sinaloa natives, Jose Luis Hernandez and Juan Carlos Payan, are among the six miners missing. A third missing miner is from the neighboring Mexican state of Chihuahua.

...Payan, 23, was born in Zapotillo, a village of 800 people outside Mocorito. His family home, a humble building of brick and corrugated tin, has been shuttered for years as he and his brothers sought their fortunes in Utah.

"As a young man, I worked in the mines too," said Payan Carrillo, 70, who is Juan Carlos' uncle. "What you make here isn't enough to live. It's a great tragedy that all this is happening."

Zapotillo is a village with unpaved and unnamed roads, surrounded by corn and tomato fields withering under an unrelenting sun. Farmers in the region often make as little as $20 per week.

In Utah's coal mines, immigrant workers earn more than that for just an hour's work. As elsewhere in Mexico, the pull of such wages has caused Zapotillo to slowly empty. The village is populated mostly by women, children and the elderly.

"They leave looking for better fortune, in search of the green bills," said Payan Carrillo, a dark-skinned man of weathered features. "But it's very risky work. People don't think about the risk."

For days, Mexicans have been riveted by the story of the three compatriots trapped in the U.S. mine.

Zapotillo is too small to have a church. But every Sunday the faithful have been gathering at the village's small chapel to pray. And during the week they have been lighting candles at the Payan Carrillo residence.

"I can't even imagine the suffering of my nephew," said Hortencia Payan, 56, Juan Carlos' aunt. "I just hope God helps those poor young men and that soon they are rescued from that mine."

Antonio Cruz, 66, has three sons working in the Utah mine.

"It's a constant worry for me," he said. "I told them, 'Better to stay here and eat beans,' but they didn't listen."

For complete article

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-mexminers16aug16,0,6206725.story?page=2&coll=la-home-center

Lobby for the DREAM ACT

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Four Ways to Help Pass the DREAM Act


http://nclr.org/section//dream_act_support/

1. Thank Senators Richard Durbin (D-IL) and Chuck Hagel (R-NE) for introducing the DREAM Act. You can send them an email by clicking here.

2. Urge your senators to cosponsor the DREAM Act, S. 774. You can send an email to your senator by clicking here. Also, please contact their offices directly by dialing the U.S. Capitol switchboard number: (202)224-3121.

3. Call your representative and urge him/her to cosponsor the American Dream Act, H.R. 1275. For more information, click here.


from Donajih's page

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Bloomberg Sees Immigrants as Benefits to Their Community





















http://www.savetibet.org/images/images/HHDLMauraMoynihanAndNYCMayorBloombergWithKeyToCity.jpg

Photo of Maura Moynihan, the Dalai Lama, and Michael Bloomberg
Let's hope Bloomberg thinks like the Dalai Lama



The Associated Press published an article on Romney and Giuliani regarding their position on immigration. The real story is at the end of the piece: Bloomberg's comment about the positive side of immigration.

Giuliani confuses with his strong anti-immigration position, since he even told the NY Times in 1994 that if people worked hard they would be wanted in New York City, regardless of immigration status. Politics does change things however. Now it looks like he forgot what he said.

Political campaigns in our country consist of entertainers, who speak the lines that they believe will bring votes. It doesn't matter if the lines are not truthful. Will American voters be aware of the entertainment factor in the campaigns?

Bloomberg has a totally different approach. I'm not saying he's the perfect guy, but these days he sounds like one of the few that is willing to say what he believes in public. Lets hope he stays on track if he pursues higher office. Thank goodness New York is a "sanctuary city." I wish there were more.

_____
Romney and Giuliani spar over immigration
Both now talking tougher on illegal immigrants than they've each acted in the past.
From Associated Press
Los Angeles Times
11:35 AM PDT, August 15, 2007

WASHINGTON -- Mitt Romney accuses former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani of making his city a haven for illegal immigrants. Giuliani denies it, insisting he cracked down on lawlessness of every kind.

It's the first real clash between two leading Republican candidates who are vulnerable on immigration, a volatile issue that infuriates Republican conservatives who hold sway over primary elections.

At issue are so-called sanctuary cities, places where city employees are not required to report illegal immigrants to federal authorities. Some, such as San Francisco, have declared themselves sanctuaries or refuges. Others, like New York, have never adopted the "sanctuary" moniker.

New York's policy, issued by Democratic Mayor Ed Koch in 1988, is intended to make illegal immigrants feel that they can report crimes, send their children to school or seek medical treatment without fear of being reported.

An estimated half-million illegal and undocumented immigrants live in New York, and only a fraction are deported each year.

"What's the best thing to do about that?" Giuliani asked in 1996. "Put them in a situation in which they keep children out of school? Put them in a situation in which they don't go to hospitals? Or put them in a situation in which they don't report crimes to the police?"

...As mayor, Giuliani often spoke positively about illegal immigrants: "If you come here, and you work hard, and you happen to be in an undocumented status, you're one of the people who we want in this city," he told The New York Times in 1994.

...Bloomberg, who may run for president himself, waded into the dispute this week. Asked Monday about the idea of New York as a sanctuary for illegal immigrants, he said, "Let 'em come."

"I can't think of any laboratory that shows better why you need a stream of immigrants than New York City," he added. "I don't know what to tell anybody. If they don't believe that immigrants add a heck of a lot more than they cost, they just aren't looking at the numbers..."

For complete article:

http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/la-na-apgopimmig16aug16,1,4943064.story

Elvira Arellano to Leave Sanctuary

http://media.npr.org/blog/aug/18/Arellano.jpg


Immigration Activist to Leave Sanctuary
By SOPHIA TAREEN
The Associated Press
Washington Post
Wednesday, August 15, 2007; 2:59 AM


CHICAGO -- A woman who has come to personify the struggles of illegal immigrant parents says that for the first time in a year she will venture beyond the walls of the church that has protected her from deportation.

Elvira Arellano took refuge inside Aldalberto United Methodist Church on Aug. 15, 2006, and has lived there on the second floor with her 8-year-old son Saul, who is a U.S. citizen.

She hasn't left the church for fear of being sent back to Mexico and separated from her son.

She was to announce Wednesday that she plans a Sept. 12 trip to Washington to lobby Congress for immigration reform, according to the Rev. Walter Coleman, pastor of the church and longtime Chicago political activist.

It's not clear how she'll get there, but she likely won't be flying, Coleman told The Associated Press Tuesday. He and others worry Arellano will be arrested, but she plans to go anyway.

"I will go with my Bible and my son and I will read to him from the Holy Scriptures as I do every day," Arellano said in a statement sent Tuesday to The AP. "If this government would separate me from my son, let them do it in front of the men and women who have the responsibility to fix this broken law and uphold the principles of human dignity."

Monday, August 13, 2007

Reporting Harassment in the 8th District of Cook County, Chicago

Below is information from the web page of Robert Maldonado, Cook County (Chicago) Commissioner, 8th District. Numerous examples of harassment are noted in his district against undocumented Latinos and U.S. citizens.

Maldonado announces:

"Please contact my office if you feel that you have been mistreated by the Stroger Hospital Police or if you are a witness to mistreatment by the police force.

As Commissioner, I take seriously my responsibility to ensure a welcoming enviroment where people feel safe, secure and confident that they will recieve the best treatment we can offer."

Cook County Office
118 North Clark Street, Rm. 567,
Chicago, IL 60602
Phone: 312-603-6386
Fax: 312-603-9531


District Office
2615 West Division Street
Chicago, IL 60622
Phone: 773-395-0143
Fax: 773-395-0146


Commissioner Maldonado's
e-mail address: roberto.maldonado@yahoo.com
http://www.robertomaldonado.com/show_page.php?id=93

Social Security Administration Errors Will Affect 17.8 Million Records

http://www.sciencecartoonsplus.com/forsale/scimags/sc36.gif Detail from "Today's Chemist"



A national disaster is approaching that will affect 17.8 million people. It is being provoked by the Department of Homeland Security - in its attempt to stop undocumented immigrants. James Jones, former Ambassador to Mexico just spoke on C-Span that this would be a good thing because the employers would face stiff penalties and would stop hiring undocumented workers. Perhaps, but there are many complications. There are three problems:

1. Its a humanitarian issue; what will happen to the millions who lose their jobs? They are already settled in the U.S., have famlies; have children who are American citizens; have purchased homes.

2. How will agricultural growers and other businesses replace their lost workers?

3. What about the 4.1% error rate in Social Security records? How many U.S. citizens and documented immigrants will be aversely affected by this?

A previously NY Times article likened it to a hurricane. Watch it come ashore in a few days...


_____
Editorial
The No-Match Non-Solution
New York Times
Published: August 13, 2007

Who kept telling the country that immigration reform through enforcement alone was doomed to fail? President Bush, for one. “All elements of this problem must be addressed together,” he warned, “or none of them will be solved.” So what can be said about Mr. Bush’s latest stab at a policy, which fixates almost entirely on barricading the border, rooting out illegal workers and punishing their employers?

Maybe he forgot.

...Hard-liners are cheering. Employers across our immigrant-dependent economy are bracing for hardship and chaos. But not all of those 1.4 million workers are lawbreakers. A report last December by the Social Security Administration’s inspector general found that the database is plagued with a 4.1 percent error rate: data entry mistakes, misspellings and name changes involving about 17.8 million records. Those are the records on which no-match letters are based, making them a dangerously unreliable indicator of someone’s immigration status or authorization to work.

It is impossible to know how many workers will be unjustly driven from their jobs by the no-match crackdown and stepped-up workplace raids. In a climate of bureaucratic confusion and fear, workers with no-match problems could be summarily fired by employers who don’t want to bother resolving them. The presumption of guilt will be an invitation to discriminate against native-born Latino and Asian workers, too...

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/13/opinion/13mon2.html?_r=1&oref=slogin

Sunday, August 12, 2007

Social Security No-Match Rule -- More info

More from NILC:

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has announced that it has finalized its rule entitled "Safe Harbor Procedures for Employers Who Receive a No-Match Letter."

What we know

The rule is expected to be published in the Federal Register on Monday August 13, 2007, and will become effective thirty days after the publication. The rule sets forth the steps employers should take if they want to avail themselves of the "safe harbor procedures" upon receipt of a no-match letter from the Social Security Administration (SSA) or DHS.

SSA will begin sending this year's no-match letters to approximately 140,000 employers this fall. These letters will correspond to approximately 8 million workers. Although we haven't seen the final letter from SSA, we are informed that it will still contain the strong language warning employers against taking any adverse action against workers. It will also reference the DHS insert, which SSA will send along with the no-match letter. DHS has a Fact Sheet, posted on its website.

Within 30 days of a No-Match Letter:

An employer should promptly check its records to ensure that the discrepancy or "no-match" is not a result from a typographical or clerical error.

If there is an error, the employer should correct the information with the appropriate agency and should verify the corrected data with the relevant agency (SSA or DHS) .

If the discrepancy cannot be resolved, the employer should "promptly" request the employee to confirm the name and social security account number in the employer's records.

If the worker corrects the information, the employer must take the proper steps to notify the appropriate agency and to verify the corrected data with the relevant agency (SSA or DHS).

If the worker states the information is correct, the reasonable employer would advise the employee to visit the relevant agency to correct the information.

DHS considers that a no-match has been resolved only when the employer verifies with DHS or SSA that the information corresponds with the proper agency's records. For example, if a worker provides a new Social Security number (SSN), the employer would have to verify with SSA that it is a valid SSN.


DHS Fact Sheet: http://www.nilc.org/immsemplymnt/SSA_Related_Info/DHS_Final_Rule/SSA_No-Match_Fact_Sheet.pdf

Sample SS No-Match Letter: http://www.nilc.org/immsemplymnt/SSA_Related_Info/DHS_Final_Rule/SSA_Insert_Letter.pdf

Advice regarding the Social Security No-Match Letters

National Immigration Law Center has released information regarding the recent DHS initiative. Included are some recommendations for immigration advocates.

It is important that advocates:

Educate workers about the final DHS rule on no-match letters.

Explain the different types of errors that can commonly result in a discrepancy.

Educate workers about their labor and civil rights such as the right to be free from discrimination, their right to be free of retaliation for exercising their rights as workers, their right to remain silent, etc.

Remind workers to request a copy of the no-match letter in the event that their employer advises them of a discrepancy with his or her SSN to ensure that the employer is indeed responding to a notice from SSA or DHS.

Be prepared for employer abuse and misuse of the DHS rule and the SSA no-match letters. It will be very important for workers to document who the employer has notified of a discrepancy: how many days each person is getting to correct the information? Are certain workers being singled out based on race, national origin, language skills, or for exercising their labor rights?

If represented by a union - the worker should notify their Union representative immediately as they may have additional rights under their union contract.

If the workers are not part of a union, get the local workers' center or other immigrant rights organization in the area involved.

Find out if there is anything else going on at the worksite - i.e. organizing campaign, litigation, etc? to see if the employer is retaliating against workers.

Conduct a thorough investigation of the working conditions and consider filing legal claims for those employment/labor violations.

for more information: www.nilc.org

for current report from DHS:

http://www.nilc.org/immsemplymnt/SSA_Related_Info/DHS_Final_Rule/Safe-Harbor_Procedures_for_Employers_Who_Receive_No-Match_Letter.pdf

Immigration Enforcement: Secuestro-Kidnapping American Style

























Photo: Left - Zorro/Diego de la Vega - http://www.the-reel-mccoy.com/movies/2005/images/Zorro_1.jpg

Photo: Right - Comandante Ricardo Montero - http://us.i1.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/i/e1/ent/zorro/montero225x300.jpg



In "Zorro," the recent telenovela, the mean Comandante of colonial Los Angeles gathers the local population and threatens to kill a person each hour unless Zorro shows up. The protagonist Don Diego de la Vega, in disguise as Zorro, arrives (of course) and thank goodness, no one dies.

The Comandante, named Ricardo Montero, is seen as a brutal individual, who orders torture, locks up people for years without charge, including a pregnant woman in a dungeon for months and later orders her infant son killed. Towards the end of the series, his soldiers start saying that he has gone insane.

This Telemundo series culminates with Montero falling into a river while fighting Zorro. The Comandante is quickly eaten by pirranhas. Later, his lover finds a piece of his hand at the edge of the river... (I apologize for the gruesome nature of this story).

The telenovela interested me from the beginning, probably because I watched Zorro as a child in the 1950s and 1960s. The timeline is about 1790. Zorro's Los Angeles is part of Spain. A violent, insane military commander terrorizes the people. Zorro/Diego de la Vega, who is actually the son of a Spanish nobleman/general and an indigenous woman, comes to the rescue. After having trained in Spain - in art, literature, law, and swordfighting, he combines this knowledge with his indigenous background (he actually lived with the tribe until he was ten) and becomes Zorro.

After many trials and tribulations, Zorro/Diego brings peace to Los Angeles and marries his true love (who is also of mixed blood - 1/2 Spanish, 1/2 Gypsy).

Now that the series has been over for several weeks, I am thinking that in many ways Zorro the farce - is Zorro the true. Bringing the story to the present...

2007 - Los Angeles (i.e. the U.S.) has been taken over by the violent insane Comandante. People are tortured and imprisoned for years without charge. Ultimately, to get his way, the comandante decides to kill one person every hour - in the town square, so that all can see.

Such is the new "Enforcement Only" inititiative proposed by the Bush Administration. The Comandante has ordered people to be rounded up, imprisoned or banished - in order to get his way- so Congress will pass an immigration bill. Who says telenovelas are fantastic stories? Seems like reality to me.

_____
Editorial
Enforcement Only
All that's left of immigration reform
Sunday, August 12, 2007; Page B06
Washington Post

SITUATIONS SOMETIMES need to get worse before they get better. That's the best that can be said about the Bush administration's crackdown on illegal immigration, announced Friday...President Bush has decided to launch an enforcement-heavy initiative that will probably be as ineffectual as it is painful.

...The most disruptive of 26 provisions is likely to be the one that puts teeth into "no match" violations. "No match" occurs when the Social Security number provided by a worker fails to match a number in the Social Security Administration database. Until now, employers were alerted when an employee triggered a "no match," but there were no consequences. A new regulation gives employers about three months to either dismiss the worker or verify his legal status. No one should be surprised when this approach yields thousands, if not millions, of "no matches" that force employers to cycle furiously through workers, at a cost of time and money...

For complete article:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/11/AR2007081101055.html

Disclosure: I have to apologize for posting this twice - it is also on bornintheUSA2008.blogspot.com

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Plyler vs Doe & the History of the DREAM Act

http://www.utexas.edu/law/news/img/justice_wmwn.jpg.


Judge William Wayne Justice. He was criticized for making Texas a "prison state" - but he took a stand for undocumented children.





A very informative article from the Texas Observer. It provides some background history of the DREAM ACT and its precursor Plyler vs. Doe. Really worth reading.

-----

July 13, 2007 — Features

A Lesson in Equal Protection
The Texas cases that opened the schoolhouse door to undocumented immigrant children
The Texas Observer
by Barbara Belejack

Early in the morning one long ago September, Laura Alvarez wa awakened, bundled up, and piled into the family station wago with her brothers and sisters. Her father hadn’t driven far whe he was stopped by the Tyler police

Humberto Alvarez was a jack-of-all-trades who knew a little about plumbing, carpentry, and electricity, and figured that was enough to support a growing family. He had left Mexico City and crossed the border in 1974, ending up in Tyler, the self-proclaimed “Rose City of America” 99 miles southeast of Dallas. Wife Jackeline and the children followed two years later.

Compared with the noise and chaos of the Colonia Rio Blanco, a working class neighborhood in the Mexican capital where even the parks were gray and concrete, Tyler was another world: deceptively tranquil and generously green. Laura and her siblings began learning English and enrolled in public school. But in the summer of 1977, as the new term rolled around, they were told they could no longer go. They stayed home—first one day and then another and another, until that morning when they all woke up early, packed into the station wagon, and drove off.

Still half asleep, Laura tried to listen as her father explained to the police where the family was headed. Suddenly they were moving again, driving the brick streets of downtown preceded by a police escort. It was still dark when they got to the courthouse; 10-year-old Laura fell back to sleep. Several days later she returned to school.

...After the state of Texas decided it would no longer pay to educate undocumented children, the Tyler Independent School District started charging $1,000 a year in tuition for students like Laura. The children of Humberto Alvarez, who worked at a local meatpacking plant, could no longer go to school. Along with three other families, Humberto and Jackeline filed suit in federal court against Superintendent James Plyler and the local school board. On that September morning, U.S. District Judge William Wayne Justice held a hearing on their case. He would ultimately rule that the Texas statute and local policy were unconstitutional. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit affirmed his decision, and the case, along with a similar one from Houston, eventually went to the U.S. Supreme Court. On June 15, 1982, the court ruled 5-4 that the Texas law effectively barred undocumented children from attending public schools, a violation of the Equal Protection clause of the 14th Amendment.

The sleepy girl in the station wagon, known as L. Loe in court papers, was a protagonist in a quintessential Texas story that has profoundly affected families and school districts throughout the country for the past 25 years.

Because of Plyler v. Doe, hundreds of thousands of children have gone to school who otherwise would not have, says Justice, adding that Plyler is the case he’d like most to be remembered for after nearly four decades on the federal bench.

... Thirty years ago, attorney Larry Daves recalls, “The atmosphere was very similar to what we have now. There was a hysteria about undocumented workers. Now practicing in southern Colorado, Daves spent much of the ’70s and ’80 doing civil rights and labor law in East Texas. There was more than enough work—particularly for someone not averse to occasionally being paid in kind. In the summer of 1977, a Catholic lay worker contacted Daves at his Tyler office, desperate for someone to represent a group of children who were being told they could no longer go to school.

Until 1975, Texas required school districts to admit students without regard to their immigration status. But in the waning hours of the 1975 legislative session, the Texas Education Code was amended to prohibit spending state funds on students who were not U.S. citizens or legally admitted to the country. The amendment, which also authorized school districts to exclude undocumented students, passed by voice vote, with no debate and no legislative history—no numbers, no studies of how many students would be affected or the amendment’s financial impact. To some it was prejudice, pure and simple. Others saw it as one more step in a complex dance involving school finance reform and the state’s efforts to obtain federal funding for overcrowded schools, especially along the border. Years later, when questioned by attorneys, a majority of legislators would say that they had no idea what they were voting for.

At first, Tyler school officials ignored the law. “I guess I was soft-hearted and concerned about the kids, not wanting to penalize them for something the parents had done,” Superintendent Plyler testified. But fearing that the district would become “a haven” for families moving in to get an education, on July 21, 1977, the board of trustees began requiring parents to pay $1,000 tuition for each undocumented child. “We weren’t rich enough that we could enroll youngsters that the state would not reimburse for everyday attendance,” Plyler later explained. At the time, fewer than 60 students, out of a total enrollment of 16,000, were undocumented.
...

Before the hearing, Daves reminded his clients that they were doing something terribly important. There were no guarantees. The law had already been unsuccessfully challenged in state district court; they were going in at their own peril. The families knew that, and had prepared for the possibility that they would be deported that day. They did not know that the U.S. Justice Department had already decided it was more interested in having the case heard then sending the INS to round up a few families in Tyler. In fact, as long as former President Jimmy Carter was in office, attorneys from the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division filed briefs and appeared in court on the side of the immigrant families.

After the hearing, Justice issued a preliminary injunction directing Tyler schools to admit all children living in the district, regardless of their immigration status. He also ordered the Texas Education Agency to release state funds to the Tyler school district for each undocumented child. A two-day trial was held in December, and on September 14, 1978, Justice issued his final ruling. “Already disadvantaged as a result of poverty, lack of English-speaking ability, and undeniable social prejudices,” he wrote, “these children, without an education will become permanently locked in the lowest socioeconomic class.”

Justice chided the state for using the children to deal, in a backhanded way, with longstanding problems caused by a school finance system based on property taxes. No one disputed that school districts were overburdened and that there were many poor, Spanish-speaking, immigrant students, particularly along the border, he wrote. But testimony indicated that most of them were legal immigrant children. “Bent on cutting educational costs and unable constitutionally to exclude all such ‘problem’ children, the state has attempted to shave off a little around the edges, barring the undocumented alien children,” he wrote. “The expedience of this state’s policy may have been influenced by two actualities: children of illegal aliens had never been explicitly afforded any judicial protection, and little political uproar was likely to be raised in their behalf.”

Justice had entered new territory in applying the equal protection clause of the Constitution. Part of the Reconstruction-era legislation passed by Congress after the Civil War, the 14th Amendment was designed to officially do away with slavery and caste-based laws. It confers citizenship on those born in the United States and provides that, “No State shall make or enforce any laws which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.”

There was no INS, no Border Patrol, no restrictions on immigration when the amendment passed. The Supreme Court later ruled that the due process clause applied to illegal immigrants. But when Justice issued his opinion in Plyler, no high court decision had addressed whether the equal protection clause also applied. The case was immediately appealed to the Fifth Circuit.

...Texas Assistant Attorney General Susan Dasher, working with what she would later describe as “a horrible statute to have to defend,” countered with school officials from Dallas and Houston, who decried the lack of bilingual teachers. Brownsville school Superintendent Raul Besteiro described his district’s rush to build portable classrooms for increasing numbers of legal immigrant students. Taking the nautical metaphor so often used in the context of immigration (inevitably described in terms of a “flood” or a “wave”) to the extreme, state education official Robert Tipton compared the total population of students “to the people on an ocean liner.” Imagine we are in a storm, he said, and the liner has gone down. “I am in charge of the lifeboat, and lifeboat holds 40 people,” Tipton said. “And there are already 50 people on the lifeboat. ... Do I allow some of those people out there in the water to drown so that I can save these 50 that I already have in the boat?”

The trial lasted nearly six weeks. On July 21, 1980, Seals issued an 87-page opinion that began with a tribute to the public school—“the most important institution in this country” and, like Justice before, concluded that Section 21.031 of the Texas Education Code was unconstitutional. Absent sufficient justification, he concluded, “the Constitution does not permit the states to deny access to education to a discrete group of children within its border.” He ordered the state to stop enforcing the law, and all local school districts to admit students without regard to their immigration status. “Texas v. Children,” was the headline the next day in the opinion page of the Dallas Times-Herald, while the rival Morning News declared, “Illegal Aliens Win Case.”
...
Replying to a congratulatory letter from Yarborough, Seals wrote: “These children still have a long way to go.” With an eye toward the upcoming presidential election, he added, “I hate to think what will happen to my decision if Governor Reagan wins the election and appoints four new justices to the Supreme Court. I do not think those children would have much of a chance.”

In his first year, President Reagan appointed just one new justice—Sandra Day O’Connor, the Arizona Republican who became the fir t woman on the court On the morning of December 1, 1981, the gallery was packed as O’Connor participate in oral argument in one of h r first major cases. She sat at the far end of the judicial panel, surrounded by stacks of books. From his vantage point at the counselor's table, attorney Isaias Torres was almost close enough to touch he

The court had combined the Plyler and In re: Alien Children Litigation cases. Schey and Roos divided their argument time, while Richard Arnett, a Texas assistant attorney general, and John Hardy, the Tyler school attorney, divided theirs. Arnett began with a geography lesson: Texas sat “right on top of the hub” of Mexico’s population and was the most vulnerable to an influx in population from Mexico. The Texas Education Code had been amended to protect the Mexican American population along the border, he said. As Torres listened to O’Connor pepper Arnett with questions, he began to think that she just might vote on the side of the children.

Then-Justice William Rehnquist occasionally looked off-kilter, slurring his words as he asked hypotheticals about the law of domicile and Louisianans moving to Texas for an education. Justice Thurgood Marshall, who led the 20-year battle that culminated in Brown v. Board of Education before becoming the first black justice, seemed ready to pounce. He asked Hardy, could Texas deny fire protection to illegal aliens?

“Deny them fire protection?” Hardy responded.

“Yes, sir. F-I-R-E. Could Texas pass a law and say they cannot be protected?”

Hardy didn’t think so. “Why not?” Marshall shot back. “Somebody’s house is more important than his child?”

Much of oral argument revolved around the minutiae of immigration—What was a green card and how did you get one? What was a work permit?—as well as questions about the law of domicile in Texas. What about a Virginian who moved to Texas, intending to stay less than a year? What about a professor from Mexico who moved to Texas to teach? At one point, an exasperated Marshall asked Roos when somebody was going to start arguing the 14th Amendment and equal protection.

If oral argument was lively, the court’s private deliberations proved even livelier. In a series of articles published last January in Slate, author Jim Newton provided insight into how lively. For decades, Justice William Brennan compiled a series of case memos, chatty and informal summaries of the mood and the meat of weekly deliberations. The memos are archived in the Library of Congress; many had never been made available to the public. A selection of Brennan’s case memo for Plyler v. Doe was posted online:

...
“It is difficult to understand precisely what the State hopes to achieve by promoting the creation and perpetuation of a subclass of illiterates within our boundaries, surely adding to the problems and costs of unemployment, welfare, and crime,” Brennan wrote. “It is thus clear that whatever savings might be achieved by denying these children an education, they are wholly insubstantial in light of the costs involved to these children, the State, and the Nation.”

In his dissenting opinion, which O’Connor, Justice Byron White, and Rehnquist joined, Burger scolded the majority for spinning a “theory custom-tailored” to fit the facts. “I would agree without hesitation that it is senseless for an enlightened society to deprive any children—including illegal aliens—of an elementary education,” he wrote. But the “Constitution does not constitute us as ‘Platonic Guardian.’”

The New York Times editorialized that “the 5-4 vote was too close and the legal rule too narrow to make the case one of liberty’s landmarks, yet any other result would have been a national disgrace. It was intolerable that a state so wealthy and so willing to wink at undocumented workers should evade the duty—and ignore the need—to educate all of its children.”

The day the opinion was issued, a little-known Department of Justice lawyer co-wrote a memo chastising the U.S. solicitor general for not filing a brief taking Texas’ side. Had such a brief been filed, future Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts suggested, Powell might have voted differently.

...The children of Plyler are now approaching middle age—“fixin’ to be 40,” as Alvarez described herself last spring. A surprising number—including all her six siblings—remained in the Tyler area, working and raising families. Two years ago, Alvarez married Juan Reyna, a high school classmate who had also migrated to Tyler illegally from Mexico as a child. They’re now the parents of a baby boy, Juan Jr. Juan Sr. is a musician whose band plays at Mexican dances throughout East Texas and sometimes travels as far as Kansas.

...Since then, the right of undocumented children to a free public elementary and secondary education has been settled law, despite the best efforts of critics. School officials may not ask students for Social Security numbers or otherwise question them—or their parents—in ways that have a “chilling effect” and discourage school attendance. Although the statistics are murky, an estimated 65,000 undocumented students graduate every year from U.S. high schools.

Still unresolved is the fate of those students after they graduate.

Several high court justices posed that very question to former MALDEF attorney Roos back in 1981. Would Texas have to open the doors to state colleges to undocumented immigrants? Should it admit undocumented students to its graduate or medical schools at in-state tuition? Roos tried to respond with opaque answers. From the beginning, his strategy had been to define the case as narrowly as possible, to assuage the fears of those who saw Plyler as the beginning of a host of rights for undocumented immigrants. Finally, he conceded, “You would be dealing with people above the age of majority.” The “innocent factor” would not be the same.

By 2001, a steady trickle of stories about undocumented immigrant valedictorians unable to attend college began appearing in the media. That year Texas—the first state to try to exclude undocumented students from its public schools—became the first to offer them in-state tuition at its colleges and universities, provided they attended a Texas high school for three years and earned a diploma or obtained a GED. Since 2001, there have been bipartisan efforts in Congress to pass the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors Act, which would offer a path to legalization to students who grow up in the United States and attend college or join the military. The most recent version of the DREAM Act died last month, along with the vast stew of proposals that went into the Senate immigration bill.

Immigration itself, of course, is never “settled,” despite the rhetoric of those who speak about “solving immigration,” as if they were discussing a quadratic equation rather than the complex set of forces that cause people to migrate. In increasing numbers, state legislatures and city councils throughout the country have attempted to get into the immigration business. Some proclaim themselves sanctuary cities; others attempt to adopt schemes, such as the one approved last May by voters in Farmers Branch, Texas, that would require landlords to verify the immigration status of their tenants—a variation of what Texas tried to ask principals to do more than 30 years ago and a roundabout method of doing away with Plyler v. Doe. If you make them miserable, the theory has it, they will just go away...

Former Observer editor Barbara Belejack is a 2007 Racial Justice Fellow of the Institute for Justice and Journalism at the Annenberg School of Communication, University of Southern California, which provided funding for this article. To listen to the oral argument of Plyler v. Doe before the U.S. Supreme Court, read the transcript or the decision in the case, see http://www.oyez.org/cases.

For complete article:

http://www.texasobserver.org/article.php?aid=2548

Old Stories, New Stories about Mexican Immigrants






http://www.cah.utexas.edu/ssspot/lesson_plans/images/10_files/image015.gif



Below is an Immigration Lawyer's letter to the Texas Observer. Plyler vs. Doe is a case in which the Supreme Court ruled that non-citizen children were eligible for public school education.

_____

August 10, 2007
THE NEXT GENERATION
The Texas Observer
by Ann Allott

I believe Plyler vs. Doe is the most important case ever issued in the history of the U.S. Supreme Court. (“A Lesson in Equal Protection,” July 13) Among other things, it recognized there was a shadow community in the U.S. and asked Congress to address that issue. No surprise, Congress is still deliberating the matter and cannot get up enough courage to vote for the Dream Act.

Reading your article, I remembered my own upbringing in the ’50s in rural Colorado. I attended public school as an Irish-German Catholic, daughter of a lawyer and nurse. I sat next to Esperanza for 8 years. She was from Mexico. Her house was near the river and had no plumbing or running water. One day she came to school with a big sore on her face. A rat had bitten her. She quit school at the end of her 8th year and went to work as a laborer in the canning factory.

Today, she is a Carmelite nun. During my high school years, the English teacher married the Mexican butcher who worked for the Safeway grocery store. She was fired.

Recently, I represented a “Mexican” who had been deported 3 times. He was in jail and wrote me to ask if I would represent him. His mother was born in Texas in 1921. She clearly was a U.S. citizen but she never attended school. “Mexican” women were not supposed to go to school then. I was able to prove her physical presence in the U.S. and my client was released from detention because he was “not an alien” -- he too was a U.S. citizen but never knew it.

Mexicans (Hispanics) have been the object of our prejudice for a long time. It is so difficult for Americans to see how prejudiced we are. We hated South Africa for not educating its blacks, but we do the same here. We send billions of dollars to Africa to save their children, while “illegals” receive no aid here. Now “illegals” are the scapegoat of the middle class.

What an irony it is that “illegals” just want the opportunity to have the basic living rights of our middle class. And our middle class is so unhappy they want to blame the “illegals” for their inability to accept the new global world.


http://www.texasobserver.org/article.php?aid=2572

Chertoff's Pressure on Congress to Act on Comprehensive Immigration Reform

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2007/05/17/us/17bushimmi190.jpg

The Bush Administration is acting on its own -- (as usual) implementing immigration reform without the help of Congress.. Even Chertoff agrees that this recent move could deeply affect the U.S. economy. The timing of this shows how oblivious the administration is to the country's problemmatic economic situation - which is well described by a NY Times headline "World's Banks Intervene to Calm Volatile Markets."
_____
Immigration rules may hurt economy
Crackdown on employers could cause havoc in agriculture, healthcare and other industries, Chertoff acknowledges.
By Nicole Gaouette, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
August 11, 2007


WASHINGTON -- Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff predicted painful economic fallout from the array of immigration enforcement measures the administration unveiled Friday in an attempt to choke off the jobs "magnet" that draws illegal immigrants.
...The enforcement approach is aimed partly at placating conservative Republicans who are angry about the administration's failure to enforce existing immigration laws and the president's support for a plan that would have allowed illegal immigrants to become citizens.

But it also could create a political climate that might lead to the comprehensive changes the administration has sought, including a guest worker program and some accommodation for the estimated 12 million illegal immigrants in the United States. Chertoff said the provisions, some of which take effect in 30 days, could push corporate America to apply more pressure on Congress to reconsider broad reforms.

"I'm not a lawmaker, but I presume, at some point, somebody's going to take a look and say, 'We've got to find a way to address this problem,' and that's probably going to require some legal changes," he said. But he stressed that "this is not an effort to punish Congress."

Gutierrez framed the issue more starkly: "We do not have the workers our economy needs to keep growing each year. The demographics simply are not on our side. Ultimately, Congress will have to pass comprehensive immigration reform."
...Others expressed skepticism about the Department of Homeland Security's ability to enforce the measures, pointing out that the department cannot even come up with the number of high-skilled visa-holders in the country. "The agency that can't count is now going to go on this enforcement gig," said Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-San Jose), chairwoman of the House immigration subcommittee. "We'll see how they do."

Business groups predicted the effect would be broadly felt.

"It's going to be awful; the harvest is going to be awful," said Laura Foote Reiff, co-chairwoman of the Business Immigration Group, predicting the effect on agriculture, where more than half of the 2.5 million workers are believed to be illegal. "People will feel it when they go grocery shopping, when they read in the newspaper that we're importing our meat from China."
...

for complete article:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-immig11aug11,0,7151802.story?coll=la-home-center

Friday, August 10, 2007

Chertoff Says Time Has Run Out

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2007/05/18/us/18immig-190.jpg

Fire 90% of our construction workers, agricultural workers, restaurant workers, landscapers, hotel industries workers? This appears to be the lastest Bush plan. The statement from DHS mentions the President's directive several times...

In an administration that has no clue about reality, they seem to be looking for more disaster as the hurricane is arriving. Headlines are changing by the hour regarding the current national (and international) financial crisis. Combining this with a mass firing as mandated by DHS for those with false documents.... the U.S. is in for some very big trouble.

One commentator said it will be like a hurricane hit us.

Statement from Service Employees International Union:

Statement of Eliseo Medina, Executive Vice President, SEIU
WASHINGTON, DC—“The Bush Administration revealed its true face with its new punitive, unrealistic immigration enforcement regulations today. Despite universal agreement that our current immigration system is broken, the administration is seeking cheap political points by bolstering tactics that are already flawed and failing.

We must ask why this president, who supports immigrants and workers when it’s politically expedient, would consider using precious federal resources to tear up families, militarize worksites, and hurt local communities. This is not America’s best face; it is a shameful rebuke of the values and principles this country was founded upon.

The proposed new regulations target people who babysit our children, who care for our grandparents, who pick and prepare our food. These proposals will intensify a wave of enforcement strategies that have already failed, leaving family tragedies and human misery in their wake.

President Bush has consistently said that enforcement alone does not work; yet his administration is suggesting strategies that foster discrimination, terrorize communities and promote an increasingly anti-immigrant climate that is fundamentally un-American. Putting millions of taxpayer dollars into a failed system will do nothing to solve our immigration problems. Instead we must work toward fair and practical ways to bring undocumented workers out of the shadows and create legal channels for much needed immigrant workers to come here in the future.”

posted on Immigration Prof Blog
_____

New Plan Steps Up Immigration Enforcement
By William Branigin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, August 10, 2007; 3:40 PM


The federal government today announced a new plan to crack down on illegal immigrants and their employers using existing laws, while also streamlining current guest worker programs.

Under the plan, the government will step up interior enforcement of the nation's immigration laws and strengthen a program aimed at identifying illegal-immigrant workers who use false documents to gain employment. The effort involves bolstering an electronic system to verify eligibility for employment and increasing penalties for employers who deliberately hire illegal workers.

"Obviously there are employers who deliberately violate the law, and we will come down on them like a ton of bricks," Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said at a news conference to announce the new measures...

for complete article:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/10/AR2007081001113.html?hpid=topnews


_____
DHS Michael Certhoff presented new rules regarding immigration in a morning press conference. See http://www.dhs.gov/xnews/releases/pr_1186757867585.shtm

Thursday, August 9, 2007

Undocumented Children Have the Legal Right to Attend Public School

http://www.saywhatesl.com/articles/Assets/DreamAct.jpg

Now that school will be starting - there may be instances where parents of undocumented children may be told INCORRECTLY that their kids cannot attend school.

If you know of a parent who was told by school district officials they could not enroll their child because of his/her immigration status, please read the letter from MALDEF:

http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/immigration/files/north_chicago_school_district.pdf

-----
from Immigration Prof Blog:

Earlier this week, MALDEF’s regional office was contacted by a parent who was told by the district’s office that she should home teach her children because of the parent’s immigration status, despite the fact that the parent was a resident of the school district...

...the U. S. Supreme Court ruled in Plyler v. Doe (1982) that public schools cannot deny admission to a student based on the student’s or parent’s immigration status and that school officials can not ask students or parents questions that may expose their undocumented status.

Unfortunately, we might see Latinos in a number of states to experience similar treatment as the new school year begins because of heightened anti-immigrant tensions over the last few months and the desire of many local governments to enter the national immigration debate.

http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/immigration/2007/08/it-is-almost-ba.html

Chertoff's "Tool Sharpening?"

http://images.jupiterimages.com/common/detail/16/60/23286016.jpg


At a speech in Boston on Wednesday, Michael Certhoff described the plan for intensified immigration enforcement as "tool sharpening."

What is he trying to say? Tool sharpening means making knives or saws more efficient? What else could he sharpen? This comment is ominous and threatening. Do you use sharp tools to gather undocumented people?

Its likely that this intensified enforcement is the presidential administration's response to the defeat of the immigration bill. Bush was hoping for Congressional support. It could be that he is wanting to create havoc so that something will happen. Surely the business community will be behind him.

_____

Gov't to Step Up Immigration Enforcement
By SUZANNE GAMBOA
The Associated Press
Thursday, August 9, 2007; 7:31 PM


-- WASHINGTON _ The Bush administration plans to step up immigration enforcement by raising fines on employers who hire undocumented workers, overhauling temporary worker programs and speeding up deployment of border agents, according to a summary of the plans.

Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff and Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez planned to announce broad immigration changes at a news conference Friday.

Some of the initiatives are similar to proposals contained in recent immigration legislation, although they are not nearly as sweeping as the bill that failed to pass the Senate. Other measures are already under way.

An outline of the announcement, obtained by The Associated Press from a congressional aide, said the administration plans to expand the list of international gangs whose members are automatically denied admission to the U.S., reduce processing times for immigrant background checks and install by the end of the year an exit system so the departure of foreigners from the country can be recorded at airports and seaports.

In addition, employers will face possible criminal sanctions if they don't fire employees unable to clear up problems with their Social Security numbers.

Also, the Homeland Security Department will ask states to voluntarily share their driver's license photos and records with the agency for use in an employment verification system. The sharing is meant to help employers detect fraudulent licenses, according to the summary....

For complete article:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/09/AR2007080901651.html

Fact vs. Fiction in Loudon Cnty VA

http://www.lavozloudoun.org/


A comment recently came in that we did not post because of its vulgar nature. The writer asked why a group in Texas was getting into the business of a California county. Our response: The same question could be asked about this post on Loudon Cnty. VA. -- Its important to take notice of advocacy movements in the U.S. - no matter what region. It gives hope and may influence other localities.--- Houston can do the same, as can Orange County, Chicago, New York, and Miami...

_____
Groups to Fight Crackdown on Immigrants
Activists Organize Against Board's Plans to Cut Off Services to People Without Legal Status
By Sandhya Somashekhar
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, August 9, 2007; Page LZ01

Immigrant advocates and civil liberties activists in Loudoun County are developing plans to fight a proposed county crackdown on illegal immigrants, saying that they hope to dispel widely held misconceptions about the issue...

...Opponents ...say such measures will encourage racial profiling and engender fear among all immigrants, legal or not. The supervisors say their intent is not to scare legal immigrants but to protect county taxpayers from supporting those who are in the country -- and the county -- illegally.

Two of the groups leading the charge against the board's efforts are La Voz of Loudoun, a Hispanic outreach and advocacy nonprofit organization, and the Cascades-based Virginian Muslim Political Action Committee. Both are organizing events in the next few weeks to promote their cause.

La Voz is sponsoring an Aug. 16 panel discussion about undocumented residents and the issues they present for law enforcement and employers. The group's executive director, Laura Valle, said that the meeting will be strictly informational and that participants will not espouse any particular political viewpoint.

But she said she hopes that Loudoun residents attending the event, scheduled for 7 p.m. at Ida Lee Recreation Center in Leesburg, will come away with a better understanding of the complexities surrounding the immigration debate, including the nature of immigration status. She also hopes it will persuade supporters of tougher enforcement policies to "take all of this passion and redirect it back to the federal government, where it belongs..."

for complete article:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/08/AR2007080800125.html

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

Helping Juan Cruz Stay Home

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Immigration Prof Blog posted information on a press conference scheduled for Thursday August 9, 2007 in behalf of Juan and Tanya Cruz. Tanya is a U.S. citizen. Juan is undocumented, but has been in the U.S. since he was 4. They are about to have their first child and Juan is to be deported this week.

Will Juan Cruz get as much help as did Juan Sebastian Gomez? Does a person need to have a near perfect SAT to attract media attention?

_____
Removal of Spouse of a U.S. Citizen

PREGNANT U.S. CITIZEN WIFE TORN APART FROM HUSBAND

Broken immigration laws force young husband to leave the country weeks before his wife gives birth to their child

What: Press Conference
When: Thursday, August 9, 2007 at 12:00 PM
Where: Immigrant Legal Resource Center
1663 Mission Street, Ste. 602
San Francisco, CA 94103

San Francisco, CA – August 7, 2007 – This should be a joyful and exciting time for U.S. citizen Tanya Cruz’ young family. Tanya and her husband, Juan, will be having a baby in less than five weeks. Unfortunately, instead of spending this last month shopping for baby clothes and decorating their baby’s nursery, Tanya and Juan will spend it separated, each in a different country, divided by a broken immigration system that allows families like this one to be torn apart.

...Juan...was brought to the United States from Mexico by his parents when he was four years old. The couple is applying to obtain permission for Juan to immigrate legally as the spouse of a U.S. citizen. However, Juan’s parents had previously filed an application for themselves and Juan based on bad legal advice from an attorney who has since withdrawn from the Bar. When this application failed, Juan and his parents were given until August 13 to voluntarily leave the country. Juan will leave the United States on August 9, exactly one month before his wife’s September 9 due date, in order to have time to drive to Mexico. During his baby’s first months of life, Juan will be in Ciudad Juarez waiting to get an interview at the U.S. Consulate so that he can return to the U.S. The family has been told that the process can take longer than six months.


For complete post:

http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/immigration/2007/08/removal-of-spou.html

Tuesday, August 7, 2007

Orange County ICE Raid Hotline - 714-973-7806

http://imagecache2.allposters.com/images/pic/AIM/a3621~Telephone-Posters.jpg


Monday, August 6, 2007
Hot line will tell of immigration raids
Coalition wants to notify people where and when immigration raids will take place, and create a support system for deportee targets.

SANTA ANA – Responding to a refusal by city leaders to declare the city a sanctuary for illegal immigrants, more than a dozen people gathered outside City Hall on Monday night to denounce recent immigration raids, accusing federal officials of "terrorizing" immigrant communities and breaking up families.

A coalition of local immigrant rights groups, including the Orange County Alliance for Immigrants Rights and the Front Against the Raids, announced a planned program to create a hot line that will notify people where and when immigration raids will take place. The program would also coordinate a support system for the families of deportee targets.
"We want to have a more organized effort to counter these attacks," said Jaime Conteras, a 20-year-old Filipino immigrant who now lives in Santa Ana. "We cannot let people trample on our rights."

Similar to programs being put together in Los Angeles County, organizers said, the hot line – in which volunteers will track details and update callers about ICE raids - will also direct relatives of detainees and deportees to legal assistance, along with information on what to do in case of a raid.

The activists urged people to call the hot line, at 714-973-7806, to report immigration raids, detentions, missing people or any abusive power by ICE or local law enforcement.

for complete article:
http://www.ocregister.com/news/immigration-raids-people-1800111-santa-haley

thanks again to Immigration Prof Blog for noting this

DREAM ACT and the Military

http://www.epic-usa.org/_pics/_photos/soldier-takes-cover-Baghdad-AP-Victor-Caivano.jpg


Immigration Prof Blog published this open letter from Fernandez Suarez de Solar- Founder/Director Guerrero Azteca Project: http://www.guerreroazteca.org/ Mr. Suarez Solar has become an outspoken peace activist since the death of his son in Iraq.

An Open Letter to Latino and Latina students and all leaders of immigrant rights organizations
By Fernando Suárez Del Solar
August 5, 2007

In the wake of the failed immigration reform, passionate discussions have arisen among various organizations both for and against the DREAM Act.

It gives me great joy to see students taking non-violent action to find a solution to the immigration question. Many of them came to the United States as children and have finished their high school education. Now, because they lack legal documents, they face an uncertain future that may deny them the opportunity to attend college or find a decent job. The DREAM Act offers them a light at the end of an otherwise dark and uncertain road.

I see students on fasts, in marches, lobbying elected officials, all in the name of the DREAM Act's passage. But BEWARE. Be very careful. Because our honorable youth with their dreams and wishes to serve their new country are being tricked and manipulated in an immoral and criminal way.

Why do I say this? Simply put, the DREAM Act proposes two years of college as a pathway to permanent residency but it also includes a second option linked to the so-called war on terror-"two years of military service." Our young people may not see that this is a covert draft in which thousands of youth from Latino families will be sent to Iraq or some other war torn nation where they will have to surrender their moral values and become a war criminal or perhaps return home in black bags on their way to a tomb drenched with their parents' tears.

How many of our youth can afford college? How many will be able to take the educational option? Unfortunately very few because the existing system locks out the children of working families with high tuition and inflated admissions criteria. Most will be forced to take the military option to get their green card. But what good is a green card to a dead person? What good is a green card to a young person severely wounded in mind and body?

I ask our undocumented youth to read the following passages regarding the plans of the Pentagon and the Bush administration:

In his testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee on July 10, 2006, Under Secretary of Defense David Chu said: "According to an April 2006 study from the National Immigration Law Center, there are an estimated 50,000 to 65,000 undocumented alien young adults who entered the U.S. at an early age and graduate from high school each year, many of whom are bright, energetic and potentially interested in military service...Provisions of S. 2611, such as the DREAM Act, would provide these young people the opportunity of serving the United States in uniform."

More recently, Lt. Col. Margaret Stock of the U.S. Army Reserve and a faculty member at West Point told a reporter that the DREAM Act could help recruiters meet their goals by providing a "highly qualified cohort of young people" without the unknown personal details that would accompany foreign recruits. "They are already going to come vetted by Homeland Security. They will already have graduated from high school," she said. "They are prime candidates."
(Citations from research by Prof. Jorge Mariscal, UC San Diego)

As you can see, our undocumented youth are being targeted by military recruiters. And equally important is something that few people have mentioned-there is no such thing as a two year military contract. Every enlistment is a total of eight years.
Given these facts, I invite all young people who are filled with hope and dreams and energy to fight for human rights and for a fair pathway to legalization. But they must also demand that the military option of the DREAM Act be replaced by a community service option (as appeared in earlier drafts of the legislation) so that community service or college become the two pathways to permanent residency. Only then will they avoid becoming victimized by a criminal war as my son Jesús Alberto did when he died on March 27, 2003 after stepping on an illegal U.S. cluster bomb. Through education or community service our undocumented youth can contribute to their communities and their future will be filled with peace and justice.

Fernando Suarez del Solar

Musical Titles and Media Bias -Arlen Specter's Proposal on Immigration Reform







On August 6th Arlen Spector publishes an Op-Ed in the Washington Post titled: " A Less Ambitious Approach to Immigration"

The Houston Chronicle published the essay with the title to "Try immigration reform again: Green cards for all"

The Miami Herald changes it further to: "Why Not Issue 12 Million Green Cards?"


There is a great distance between the original title and the one highlighting the issuance of 12 million green cards.... there is lots of provocation too. Are the Chronicle and Herald pandering to the anti-immigration crowd? Its clear that these papers are placing their own opinions onto Specter's title. They are making it sound like the 12 million green cards are a big giveaway...with little consequence and few expectations of immigrants.

The truth is, although Specter should be commended for even trying to address such an explosive subject, a permanent guest worker program without hope of citizenship is bad news for the U.S. (just check out the Turkish immigrant problem in Germany). Specter mentions "attacks" regarding the creation of a group of underclass immigrants, and he is certainly right. This will happen if such a bill becomes law.

I have confidence however in the extreme right and our cooperative media -- the 12 million green cards are enough to get every Minute Man in the country riled up....

Seems like the U.S. won't be happy until undocumented people are placed under indentured servitude. What a shame and embarrassment for a country that is supposed to be a democracy.

.

-----

Check out Senator Arlen Spector's "A Less Ambitious Approach to Immigration"
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/05/AR2007080501058.html

Monday, August 6, 2007

Millenium Kids and Idealism -

Detail from Lincoln's handwritten Gettysburg Address



When my undergraduate students have seemed particularly distracted, self centered, or disrespectful, public school educators I know remind me these are "millenium kids" - used to computers, vivid visual cues, short attention spans, and materialistic overload. These are the children born on the eve of the millenium.

The friends of Juan Sebastian Gomez have shown that millenium kids may just be needing something to hope for (and work for). --- a cause that is worthy. As they make their phone calls, send their emails and boldly confront lawmakers in Washington, they are not just keeping Juan Sebastian from being deported. They are trying to save the society they live in - to keep this country what it was (at least on paper) designed to be -

I am not sure that elementary school children are still expected to memorize the Gettysburg address as they did in the 1960s.

...our fathers brought forth upon this continent, a new nation, conceived in liberty, dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal...

Lincoln did not specify citizens, resident aliens or undocumented people.

_________________________

Juan's friends harness power of idealism
Mon, Aug. 06, 2007
By ANA MENENDEZ
amenendez@MiamiHerald.com

Immigration policy is so complex, so mind-bogglingly difficult that before any action can take place, reams of studies must first be produced, whereupon experts will be retained to weigh in on the details, followed by a complicated association of politicians, lobbyists and blowhards who will turn the entire thing -- which began as a simple human drama -- into an impenetrable, dehumanized tangle of numbers and formulas that everyone will then be forced to call a solution.

Whatever.

A kid's best friend was going to be deported and he refused to accept it. That's the other way.

The week-old saga of Juan Gomez and the school friends who have temporarily halted his deportation is a story of bold youth, new technology and the kind of courage that comes with inexperience.

'We were told, `Don't expect to see your friend again unless you're going to Colombia,' '' Scott Elfenbein, 18, told me Friday afternoon. ``That wasn't a good enough answer to me. It's not what I wanted to hear and I'm too young and naive to think that I can't always get what I want.''

AGENTS FOR CHANGE

The Save Juan campaign illustrates a paradoxical truism of American life: When intellectuals and demagogues talk an issue to the point of sclerosis, the best hope for clarity will come from a child.

A generation ago, kids forced a rethinking of the Vietnam War and the way America viewed race. And for all the talk of today's self-involved, apathetic youth, some of the best changes in Miami in the last years have come out of the unrealistic, untiring efforts of those still in their teens and twenties.

The very young helped force the issue of fair janitor pay at the University of Miami. Idealistic young activists agitated about affordable housing back when the responsible adults in this town were still getting drunk on free open house martinis.

Now a group of teenagers, armed with the technological trappings of their generation, have done what everyone told them was impossible: keep their friend in the United States a little while longer.

A text message from Juan first alerted his friends that immigration police had picked him up. The teenagers could have accepted fate. Instead, they pooled their technological resources and got to work, producing a Facebook page and uploading video.

''I don't think anyone thought to use a social site to start a revolution,'' Scott said. ``My mom still doesn't understand parts of how we did this.''

When the hate began to stream in, Scott maintained his equanimity.

'They tell us, `You're condoning crime,' '' he said. 'My response is, `Did you go to school every day and try to get an education? Did you get a 1400 on your SAT without even trying? Have you always looked to better yourself? If you haven't, then we should be deporting you and not Juan.' ''

POINTING THE RIGHT WAY

The immigration fiasco is undeniably complicated. But complexity is a poor excuse for inaction.

The world needs theoretical thinkers -- landscapes would be impossible to maneuver without the abstraction of maps. But it also needs people who will cut through a mess of obfuscating theory to point the right way.

The children have led, now Congress should follow. Pass the Dream Act that allows students to stay in America. It hurts no one and helps many. If the hate mail starts pouring in and the details begin to overwhelm, legislators can stop, take a deep breath and draw inspiration from Juan Gomez and his teenaged friends.

Seven days from deportation to hope. It was simple.

http://www.miamiherald.com/418/story/194000.html

Sunday, August 5, 2007

The Town With No Identity Fights to Make English Its Official Language

Photo by Paul D'Amato for the NYT


By ALEX KOTLOWITZ
Published: August 5, 2007
New York Times Magazine

When I first met with Judy Sigwalt and her fellow village trustee Paul Humpfer this past April, they were, understandably, feeling assured, if not emboldened. A few weeks earlier, with the endorsement of the two local newspapers, they were elected to their village board on the platform that their town, Carpentersville, Ill., should do everything in its power to discourage illegal immigrants from settling there. They vowed to pass a local ordinance that would penalize landlords that rented to illegal aliens and businesses that hired them. They also pledged to make English the official language of the village, which would mean discontinuing the practice of printing various notices — including building-code violations and the monthly newsletter — in both English and Spanish. The third candidate on their slate also won, giving them a majority on the board. Sigwalt and Humpfer considered their election a mandate. Indeed, many in this village consider them heroes. Their supporters wear buttons that read, “Illegal Means Illegal,” and: “I’m tired. Are you? Ask Me Why!” with a sickly looking bald eagle wrapped in the American flag.

...It’s in places like Carpentersville where we may be witnessing the opening of a deep and profound fissure in the American landscape. Over the past two years, more than 40 local and state governments have passed ordinances and legislation aimed at making life miserable for illegal immigrants in the hope that they’ll have no choice but to return to their countries of origin. Deportation by attrition, some call it. One of the first ordinances was passed in Hazleton, Pa., and was meant to bar illegal immigrants from living and working there. It served as a model for many local officials across the country, including Sigwalt and Humpfer. On July 26, a federal judge struck down Hazleton’s ordinance, but the town’s mayor, Lou Barletta, plans to appeal the decision. “This battle is far from over,” he declared the day of the ruling. States and towns have looked for other ways to crack down on illegal immigrants. Last month, Prince William County in northern Virginia passed a resolution trying to curb illegal immigrants’ access to public services. Waukegan, another Illinois town, has voted to apply for a federal program that would allow its police to begin deportation charges against those who are here illegally.

A week after the Senate failed to pass comprehensive immigration reform, Arizona’s governor, Janet Napolitano, signed into law an act penalizing businesses that knowingly hire undocumented immigrants. “One of the practical effects of this failure” to enact national immigration reform, Napolitano wrote to the Congressional leadership, “is that Arizona, and states across the nation, must now continue to address this escalating problem on their own.” Admittedly, the constitutionality of many of these new laws is still in question, and some of the state bills and local ordinances simply duplicate what’s already in force nationally. But with Congress’s inability to reach an agreement on an immigration bill, the debate will continue among local officials like those in Carpentersville, where the wrangling often seems less about illegal immigration than it does about whether new immigrants are assimilating quickly enough, if at all. In Carpentersville, the rancor has turned neighbor against neighbor. Once you scrape away the acid rhetoric, though, there’s much people actually agree on — but given the ugliness of the taunts and assertions, it’s unlikely that will ever emerge.

Carpentersville is without a center. It has no downtown. It has no clear identity. Forty miles northwest of Chicago, Carpentersville is a bit too far to be a commuter town and not distant enough to be a self-contained village. The town, which sprawls over seven and a half square miles, has grown without much planning, and feels less like a suburb than it does an adventure in navigation. The languid Fox River, which cuts through its midsection, is what orients. East of the river and west of the river have clear connotations....

For complete article:
http://www.nytimes.com/pages/magazine/index.html?8dpc

Amidst the Backlash, Lofgren Negotiates for the DREAM














http://www.viettan.org/IMG/jpg/Zoe_Lofgren-smal.jpg


Republicans hardening stance on immigration
Carolyn Lochhead, Chronicle Washington Bureau
San Francisco Chronicle
Saturday, August 4, 2007

(08-04) 04:00 PDT Washington -- An anti-immigration backlash has taken hold among Republicans in the Capitol, led in some cases by the staunchest supporters - Sens. John McCain and Jon Kyl of Arizona and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina - of the failed Senate bill derided by many as amnesty.

Rep. Zoe Lofgren, a San Jose Democrat, fended off GOP efforts Friday to block what in normal times would be noncontroversial "private bills" to remedy the most compelling individual plights of a handful of illegal immigrants caught in the labyrinth of immigration law....

...Lofgren succeeded in soothing matters in her Judiciary Committee panel on immigration, reaching a truce with Republicans to proceed to the first step on a handful of "private bills" to help three children of illegal immigrants avoid deportation. One, sponsored by Lofgren, would help a graduate of Homestead High School in Cupertino.

Mikael "Mackie" Alvarez was born in the Philippines in 1984, and brought to the United States when he was 6 on a tourist visa by his parents. His parents overstayed their visas and spent years trying to gain legal residence, but were denied and in 2001 were ordered removed from the country.

Alvarez's siblings managed to gain permanent residence after being separated from their parents' case, but Mackie was too young, and he was denied legal residence along with his parents. He went on to attend De Anza College, but was arrested by federal agents. Lofgren said he has been in federal custody since May 2...

...Private bills seldom pass Congress, but they do stay deportation orders as long as they are pending. Some are renewed with each Congress to allow individuals to remain in the United States. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., for example, has introduced nine such bills in this session....

...Democrats hope to attach the Dream Act and another legalization measure aimed at farmworkers, known as Ag Jobs, to other legislation. Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., said she will try this fall to include the farmworker proposal, which would legalize an estimated 1.5 million farmworkers, to a major farm programs bill.

for complete article:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2007/08/04/MNJ7RCGOU1.DTL

thanks to Immigration Prof Blog bringing attention to this article

Soccer and Voting

http://www.everbe.com/Products/Sports/soccer%20ball.jpg

http://pewresearch.org/assets/obdeck/101-1.gif


The 65,000 DREAM ACT students who are potential voters will greatly affect voting outcomes. Consider their vote, plus everyone close to them (think of Juan Sebastian Gomezs's friends) --- and you get a huge voting bloc.

If you don't think soccer is political, read the second article below, by Professor Raul Ramos - about the controversy surrounding the naming of the new professional soccer team in Houston. The name, 1836 was found objectionable by enough people that it was changed to the Dynamoes...

Politicians Take Note:

_____________________


One soccer goal: recruit Democrats
Nevada's state party forms a team, planning to pitch its politics to the growing population of Latino voters.
By Scott Martelle, Times Staff Writer
August 5, 2007

LAS VEGAS — Nevada state Assemblyman Ruben Kihuen, clad in a brand-new royal blue jersey with matching shorts, stepped onto a neighborhood soccer field here Thursday evening and launched a new front in the battle for the political loyalties of this city's rapidly growing Latino community.

Meet Los Democratas.

...[The] goal is to market, and party officials here are hoping Latino soccer fans will forge a connection not only with a soccer team but with a political agenda.

It's a rapidly expanding pool of potential voters. An influx of Latinos over the last 15 years has helped make Las Vegas one of the fastest-growing regions in the country; they account for about 25% of the state's residents. But for two key demographic reasons — age and citizenship status — Latinos account for 12.5% of Nevada's eligible voters, according to a Pew Hispanic Center analysis of the U.S. Census Bureau's 2005 American Community Survey.

Yet that percentage is significant: The state has only 137 more "active" Republican voters than Democratic voters, according to a March tally by the Nevada secretary of state's office. And with Latino voters registered at a rate that lags behind that of the electorate in general, state Democrats hope a soccer team flying the party colors will help the party make inroads — particularly with new citizens and people just reaching voting age...

for complete article:
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-na-soccer5aug05,1,6627547.story
______________________


MULTIPLE MEANINGS
Kicking around Houston 1836
Soccer team sends the wrong message to Latinos
By RAÚL A. RAMOS
Houston Chronicle
January 28, 2006

By naming the team Houston 1836, the newly arrived Major League Soccer franchise has chosen to identify with a year that may divide the city rather than unite it. While the team intends to highlight Houston's founding along the banks of Buffalo Bayou, the year also commemorates the defeat of the Mexican Army by a largely Anglo Texan militia at the Battle of San Jacinto. Whether by ignorance or design, choosing 1836 has the potential to alienate Houstonians of
Mexican origin, a group that is surely a large part of the team's fan base...

...The year 1836 was, no doubt, a significant year in history. As a 19th-century historian, I welcome the attention the team name brings to what I feel is a misunderstood era. But choosing 1836 sends the wrong message at the wrong time. Texans of Mexican decent constantly struggle to identify with a place that was created out of Mexican defeat. Houston stands perched to take its place among the economic enters of the Americas, thanks in great part to its sizable Latino population. This is not the time to exclude us.

This team name comes at a time of increased awareness of how mascots and names can stereotype or offend Americans. Last year, the National Collegiate Athletic Association scrutinized the use of Native Americans in team names such as the Florida State Seminoles and the Carthage College Redmen (now Red Men). Team names such as the Atlanta Braves and Washington Redskins sound anachronistic to modern ears. Not long ago the Washington Bullets changed their name to Wizards for similar reasons. Thus it came as a surprise to me, and many of my students and colleagues, to hear 1836. Some thought it was a joke when I mentioned it. Surely the team must have anticipated this response if they knew anything about Texas history.

Lately I have noticed college students taking a more cynical or media savvy approach to explaining these marketing terms. One student in my class thought the name was a ploy to get attention for the team and that the real name would could later. But all of them saw the contradiction inherent in naming the team 1836 while expecting Latino fans to attend games. Team officials state that 1836 was primarily chosen to represent the city's founding. A team name doesn't have the luxury of explaining itself.

The link to Texas secession from Mexico during the Texas Revolution is inescapable. The team logo compounds the connection by depicting Sam Houston on horseback, leading the charge against Mexican troops. What other conclusion can we draw? While the year represents Texas independence, it also raises the complicated and sometimes shameful history that came along with it. Initially seen as economic boosters, Anglo American immigrants brought slavery and failed to keep contracts made with state officials. For Mexicans, Texas secession started the process of American conquest culminating in the invasion of Mexico in 1846 and the loss of almost half its territory. Few would disagree that Texas independence was an important chapter in the imperial story of American Manifest Destiny.

Houston has undergone many transformations and reinventions since 1836. Digging the Ship Channel, the Galveston hurricane of 1900, discovering oil and sending a man to the moon all took place since then and all changed the face of the city. Naming the team1836 smacks of nostalgia for a time when Mexican people were absent or at least knew their place. Another student in class generously noted that perhaps the team took for granted Latino fans and wanted to increase Anglo interest with this team name. Perhaps soccer is already too identified with Latin America and Europe Perhaps this is retribution for the vocal support the Mexican national team receives when it comes to town.

A more sinister reading suggests the team wants Latino aficionados, but only on their terms. Those terms are leaving your heritage, identity and family at the door. The team has started its relationship with the Latino community off on the wrong foot. Short of changing the name, the team needs to make extra efforts to appear open to Latino Houstonians. Only then, and by removing Sam Houston from the logo, will the team come to symbolize the promise of a global capital.

Ramos is assistant professor, Department of History, University of Houston.

for complete article:

http://72.14.253.104/search?q=cache:fwcVsl9igxQJ:www.tamu.edu/ccbn/dewitt/images/texforum/hou1836chron0106.pdf+%22kicking+around+houston%22+ramos&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=us&client=safari
Thanks to DeWitt Colony webpage, without spending hours digging through old papers at the library, I would not have found this important article, since the Houston Chronicle does not list it in its archives.

Saturday, August 4, 2007

Success ! Juan Sebastian Gomez gets Reprieve

http://apps.asm.wisc.edu/images/pictures/dream_act.jpg

Interesting that the Gomez case has not been noted in the national papers, except for brief mention in the NY Times on Aug. 2nd.

This is a very significant event. Ever since 9-11 it has been near impossible to get any help from the U.S. House for any individual immigrant. Juan's friends are providing the best example for other groups to follow. What else could be done if we organized ourselves in this way?

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Gomez pals learn lobbying lessons in D.C.
The group of teens-turned-lobbyists who went to D.C. to fight the deportation of their high school friend returned to Miami with some lessons in lobbying.

Sat, Aug. 04, 2007
BY NICHOLAS SPANGLER AND LESLEY CLARK
nspangler@MiamiHerald.com

The Killian Senior High students who went to Washington and got the federal government to temporarily halt deportation proceedings against Juan Gomez and his family returned home Friday afternoon, flying into Miami International Airport.

First stop: the airport's press center, where reporters, moms and friends were waiting. Juan, 18, wasn't there, taking the advice of lawyers to keep a low profile.

''This isn't about Juan and Alex [Juan's older brother, 19] anymore,'' said Scott Elfenbein, Juan's best friend. ``It's about fixing a broken system.''

The Killian delegation -- 10 students, most of them friends since middle school heading off for colleges across the country -- spent a week and a half in Washington arguing their case before lawmakers.

A few lessons from Lobbying 101: ''You have to flood the office,'' Elfenbein said. ``Fax, e-mails, phone calls.''

''You can't be shy, you can't be intimidated,'' Joanna Perdomo said.

Be prepared to spend a lot of time waiting in hallways, and don't expect to get more than few hours of sleep a night.

Also, make it easy to understand.

The students prepared packets for all the politicians they visited, each one with an outline of their arguments, a letter from Lincoln Díaz-Balart to President Bush about the Gomez brothers' situation, and a copy of a private immigration bill, sponsored by Díaz-Balart, that would allow them to remain the United States.

45-DAY REPRIEVE

On Wednesday, federal immigration officials released the family from a Broward detention center and granted them a 45-day reprieve from being deported to their native Colombia.

The family now must report back to immigration officials on Sept. 14. That leaves only a small window of time for Congress to take up the matter after it returns from summer recess.

Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., who chairs the House immigration subcommittee, said Friday she and the top Republican on the panel, Rep. Lamar Smith, R-Texas, will talk to federal immigration officials about further delaying deportation proceedings.

''We've agreed we will approach the department to ask for the delay to give the committee some more time,'' Lofgren said Friday as the subcommittee met and agreed to look at three other private bills.

The extra time will allow Congress to take up Díaz-Balart's bill, introduced in the House. The bill would not allow the boys' parents to remain in the country, since they knowingly overstayed their visa.

Díaz-Balart argues that Juan and his brother shouldn't be punished for their parents' mistakes.

The parents arrived in South Florida in the 1990s on a six-month visitor visa when the boys were toddlers. The parents eventually sought legal status, but the request was denied, a decision that was upheld on appeal.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents arrested the Gomezes early in the morning of July 25, handcuffing them in their living room. Juan -- a top student at Killian bound for the Honors College at Miami Dade College, if he's permitted to stay in the country -- had time to make one phone call before he was processed at the Broward Transition Center at Deerfield Beach.

He called Elfenbein, his best friend. Within days, a grass-roots campaign to save the brothers was up on Facebook.com, the social networking site. They urged their classmates to contact local legislators in the hope of staving off the deportation order.

Less than a week later, more than 1,500 teens had joined the virtual assemblage. They caught the attention of several local lawmakers, including Díaz-Balart and Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, both Miami Republicans.

The teens also rallied in support of the DREAM Act -- separate, broad-based legislation that would provide a path to citizenship for the children of undocumented immigrants. At least 65,000 students could benefit from passage, but it has been stuck in Congress for years.

Ten of them headed for the nation's capital: Elfenbein, Perdomo, Eduard Monteagudo, Scott Friedberg, Brian Moraguez, Jacob Hart, Mauricio Perez-Rosas, Katie Snow, Lane Clements and Andrew Dubbin. They raised money locally through friends and parishioners at St. Louis Catholic Church.

During their Washington visit, accompanied by Killian government teacher Eric Krause, the teens met with Díaz-Balart and Ros-Lehtinen -- and did a lot of lobbying.

TOUGH ODDS

The Gomez brothers still face tough odds if they hope to remain in the country.

During the last Congress, 117 private bills were filed on immigrants' behalf in the last Congress. Not a single one passed. Between 1995 and 2006, just 36 bills were approved out of 495 filed. This year, more than 50 are pending; none has been approved.

Republicans on the committee appeared alarmed that private bills are being expanded beyond their traditional cause of helping those with an ''extreme or unusual hardship'' such as being orphaned without attaining legal status.

''I'm concerned about the precedent we might set,'' said Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa.



http://www.miamiherald.com/news/miami_dade/story/192514.html

Friday, August 3, 2007

More on Juan Sebastian Gomez and His Friends

http://nysyouthleadershipcouncil.googlepages.com/brochure1.jpg/brochure1-full;brt:51.jpg


Juan Gomez pals vow to press on
BY LESLEY CLARK AND KATHLEEN MCGRORY
lclark@MiamiHerald.com
August 3, 2007

WASHINGTON --
When Scott Elfenbein learned immigration officials had granted his best friend a reprieve from being deported, he took five minutes to celebrate.

Then it was back to work.

That single-minded determination among a group of Juan Gomez's former classmates accomplished what most everyone had told them would never happen: They forced the federal government to sit up and take notice.

Less than a week after immigration officials seized Gomez, 18, his parents and his brother Alex, 19, the Colombian-born family was walking out of a Broward detention center with 45 days of freedom -- and a second chance for the two young men to stay in the United States.

''These kids are the bill of rights in action,'' Rep. Lincoln Díaz-Balart, R-Miami, said of the teenagers who contacted his office and convinced him to file his first private bill in 15 years in office. ``They're amazing. I'm just happy to be part of their team.''

The effort that has at least temporarily freed Gomez began to gel just minutes after immigration officials seized the family July 25. When Elfenbein got the call from Gomez, his friend was about to be deported to Colombia, the country Gomez left as a toddler.

''We freaked out at first,'' said the seemingly unflappable Elfenbein, the Harvard-bound president of his student body at Miami Killian Senior High School, captain of the lacrosse team and editor of the yearbook. ``No one had a clue about deportation, about immigration law.''

So Elfenbein said they did what they knew. They created a Facebook page to keep friends informed and they began calling the news media, pleading for coverage.

'We told them, `Just give us 20 minutes, it's a really compelling story,' '' he said.

...Cheryl Little, the head of the Florida Immigrant Advocacy Center, called Elfenbein on his cellphone after hearing about the effort. Gomez's mother, Liliana, had approached a FIAC attorney at the detention center, asking for help.

''Impressed is an understatement,'' Little said of her talks with the students. ``They didn't need a lot of coaching. They had a really good sense of what needed to be done.''

Still, Elfenbein said the word out of Washington was discouraging. 'We were told, `Don't expect too much, you guys are doomed,' '' Elfenbein said.

Little told the teenagers they were trying to convince immigration officials to stay the deportation and convince a member of Congress to sponsor a private bill that would allow the Gomez brothers -- but not their parents -- to stay in the United States.

Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Miami, joked to Elfenbein last Friday that he'd be more effective working the issue in Washington.

''And look what happens when you say something to impressionable teens,'' Elfenbein said Thursday, sitting in Ros-Lehtinen's congressional office, eating pizza that her staff delivered to the crew.

Over the weekend, the teens decided to take their case to Washington. They raised money at a party: Grant Miller, of Miami's Community Newspapers, asked Jacob Hart, another friend of Gomez's, to recite the tale. A hat was passed around and the effort netted more than $400. Parishioners at St. Louis Catholic Church also contributed...

''I haven't met the [Gomez] boys, obviously, but they must be terrific to have friends like this all over the place, advocating,'' said Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., who heads the House immigration subcommittee. ``They're passionate but polite and people are listening to them...''

for complete article:

http://www.miamiherald.com/519/story/191216.html

Juan Sebastian Gomez - Up Against Congress' Schedule




Photo by Lauren Victoria Burke, Miami Herald.
Friends of Juan Gomez, led by best friend Scott Elfenbein, right, and Jacob Hart, next to him in shirt and tie, arrive at the Office of House Judiciary Chairman John Conyers, D-Mich.



CONGRESS | JUAN GOMEZ
Gomez case not on Congress' agenda
Juan Gomez, a Colombian-born Miami teen who faces deportation, won't get a hearing before members of Congress until at least September.

BY LESLEY CLARK
lclark@MiamiHerald.com
August 3, 2007

WASHINGTON --
Congress will leave Washington today for its summer recess without taking up the case of Juan Gomez, a Colombian-born Miami teen who faces deportation.

The House immigration subcommittee is scheduled to meet today, but the private bill filed on Gomez's behalf by Rep. Lincoln Díaz-Balart, R-Miami, isn't on the agenda.

The news came as a disappointment to Gomez's former Killian Senior High classmates and friends who had lobbied in Washington on his behalf for three days.

But the teenagers vowed to keep pushing to find a way to keep Gomez in the United States, where he has lived since he was 2 years old.

''We can't be upset. We have to keep working,'' said Joanna Perdomo, 18, a friend of Gomez's and a Coral Reef Senior High graduate.

The teens continued Thursday to plot strategies and plan to return to Miami today. They have already been credited with securing Gomez and his family a 45-day reprieve from deportation.

Gomez's supporters noted that the House subcommittee will still have time to take up his case when Congress returns in early September.

Republicans on the subcommittee have objected to hearing the private bills, but chairwoman Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., said Thursday she hopes to get it scheduled.

''We're trying to work through this in an orderly, bipartisan way,'' she said. ``We have until Sept. 14, and I don't know that there is bipartisan agreement yet, but I think we're going to have substantially more communication and a lot of personal time.''

The students also said they may talk to Florida's two senators, who could grant Gomez a reprieve until at least January 2009 by filing a private bill in the Senate on his behalf.

A spokesman for Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson noted that senators rarely file private bills and that Nelson used the bill filed in the House to push for a delay in deportation proceedings.

Sen. Mel Martinez could not be reached for comment.

The students are also hoping to return to lobby for passage of the stalled Dream Act, a bill that would offer students who grew up in the United States a chance at legal residency.

The Senate sponsor, Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., is trying to attach the bill to a critical defense spending bill that will be taken up in the fall.

http://www.miamiherald.com/news/miami_dade/story/191218.html

The First Dream Act Student? Statement from Juan Sebastian Gomez

Juan Sebastian is second from the left



Video: Save Juan Campaign
http://video.aol.com/video-detail/id/3573754946



On the verge of our 2nd and 3rd birthdays, my bother Alejandro Gomez and I, Juan Sebastian Gomez, were brought to a country which symbolized success and the pursuit of happiness. After 17 years, America is all we know. Both of us are fearful of a future in Colombia. Colombia would be as foreign as China to us. Both of us have lost most of our Spanish speaking skills. My brother and I are American no matter what a piece of paper tells us. Our whole family has worked hard in order to better ourselves in the country we call home. Academically, we have both strived and succeeded with hopes that our accomplishments would outshine our immigration status. All of our hard work will hopefully allow us to continue living and contributing to this wonderful country. Our hopes were in the passage of the Dream Act and becoming the first Dream Children."

http://www.topix.net/content/cbs/2007/07/save-juan-campaign-taking-their-fight-to-congress

Letter to President Bush in Behalf of Juan Sebastian Gomez

Jull 31, 2007 3:23 pm US/Eastern

Letter To President Bush
(CBS4) July 31, 2007


The Honorable George W. Bush
President of the United States of America
The White House
Washington, DC 20515

Dear Mr. President:

We respectfully request that you work with the appropriate agencies to stay the deportation of 18 year old Juan Gomez and his brother, 20 year old Alejandro Gomez, until Congress has an opportunity to consider the American Dream Act, H.R. 1275.

For the past 16 years, Juan and Alex have been residing in the United States, after their parents brought them to the United States from their native country, Colombia. Juan studied hard and has successfully completed an impressive academic portfolio which includes: earning top scores on his SATs, serving in the Science Honor Society, winning his school's math scholarship and graduating with honors from Miami Killian Senior High School with a 3.9 cumulative grade point average. Although Juan lacked certain tools such as a computer, that some may find necessary to excel academically, he had the support and encouragement from his classmates and family. Their family instilled in Juan and Alejandro true American virtues such as hard work, perseverance, and dedication.

Juan and Alex are outstanding members of society. The support from segments of our community, and especially Juan's young classmates from Killian High School, has been extraordinary.


The Gomez family and our South Florida community would greatly appreciate any assistance you may provide in this matter.

Sincerely,


Ileana Ros-Lehtinen
Member of Congress

Lincoln Diaz-Balart
Member of Congress

Mario Diaz-Balart
Member of Congress

(© MMVII, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.)

DREAM ACT Advocacy Works!



Photos from NY Times 8-3-07











Photo 1: Juan Gomez and his family
Photo 2: Gomez's friend visiting with Congressman Diaz-Balart
Juan Sebastain Gomez has plenty of good friends. They gathered together and successfully advocated for a delay in his
deportation...




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Save Juan Campaign Appeals To President Bush
The Dream Act: Help Bring Back Juan Gomez
CBS Miami
by David Sutta
http://cbs4.com/topstories/local_story_210150851.html

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In Increments, Senate Revisits Immigration Bill
Julia Preston
New York Times
August 3, 2007


...The college bill attracted renewed interest this week because of Juan Sebastian Gomez, a student who just graduated with honors from Killian Senior High School in Miami. On July 25, immigration agents in Florida detained Mr. Gomez, 18, his brother and his parents, all illegal immigrants from Colombia, and prepared to deport them. Immigration officials delayed the deportation on Wednesday after a group of Mr. Gomez’s high school friends roused support in South Florida and then flew to Washington to pound on doors.

The friends pointed to Mr. Gomez’s academic record — a near-perfect 3.96 grade-point average — and top scores on 11 Advanced Placement exams. They said he should not be punished for his illegal status because his parents brought him to the United States when he was 2.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/03/washington/03immig.html

thanks to Immigration Prof Blog for pointing out the NY Times article

Boycott CNN -Release Lou Dobbs of His "Tenous Relationship With the Truth"








http://schema-root.org/support_the_truth_110x114.jpg


Now that groups around the country are beginning to organize hoping to bring in a more human rights perspective to the immigration debate, its time to consider the most powerful weapon immigrants and their supporters would have. Its very simple: stop watching CNN - stop checking the CNN webpage online. There are lots of possibilities if this were to become an organized movement. So remember, next time you want to see what is going on in the world, don't click on CNN, try another news source.
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Below is an article regarding Lou Dobbs and his false claim about leprosy:

Published on Wednesday, June 6, 2007 by The Nation
Lou Dobbs and Leprosy
by Katrina Vanden Heuvel


' “...Mr. Dobbs was flat-out wrong,” Leonhardt writes. But facts be damned, Dobbs is sticking by his numbers (”If we reported it, it’s a fact,” Dobbs said.)...'


Last week, New York Times columnist David Leonhardt wrote of Lou Dobbs’ tenuous relationship with the truth – “a somewhat flexible relationship with reality”– and his refusal to own up to an erroneous, fear-inducing report in violation of a basic journalistic creed.

It seems Dobbs wants to stick to a completely false assertion – first aired on his CNN program in 2005 and repeated again this May – that “there had been 7,000 cases of leprosy in this country over the previous three years, far more than in the past.” Dobbs attributed this increase to “unscreened illegal immigrants.”

Leonhardt reported that there have indeed been approximately 7,000 diagnosed cases – but not over the past three years as Dobbs would have viewers believe. Rather, these incidents occurred over a thirty-year period and have “dropped steadily” since a peak of 456 cases in 1983...

...[The] pattern of ignoring the facts and engaging in inflammatory rhetoric not only poisons an important national debate on immigration – as SPLC President Richard Cohen said in a recent web chat– it also places Dobbs in what Eviatar described as “a long line of illustrious, and notorious, Americans who have played pivotal roles in the nation’s periodic outbreaks of nativism….”

for complete article:

http://www.thenation.com/blogs/edcut?pid=202453

Thursday, August 2, 2007

Who Will Stop the Anti-Immigration Hysteria?

http://www.iupui.edu/~floc/statue%20of%20liberty.jpg



Mark Twain wrote an interesting piece titled "The United States of Lyncherdom" in which he explains that people seem to go along with awful things because they are afraid of what the others will think of them- or of what the others will do to them. The immigration crisis of this past year has been inflamed by hysterical media types (such as Lou Dobbs) that seem to continuously seek a symbolic lynching of undocumented immigrants. If more people would take a stand there could actually be some change. But if people continue to cave in to conservative pressure, as has John McCain, then the mob mentality continues.

This piece by Mark Twain is rarely quoted. It was written in 1901 but not published until 1924 in - Europe and Elsewhere by Albert Bigelow Paine. Twain told a friend that if he actually wrote a complete book on lynching "I shouldn't have even half a friend left down there [in the South], after it issued from the press." - Obviously he was also concerned about what people would think...
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The United States of Lyncherdom
by Mark Twain

...perhaps the remedy... comes to this: station a brave man in each affected community to encourage, support, and bring to light the deep disapproval of lynching hidden in the secret places of its heart--for it is there, beyond question. Then those communities will find something better to imitate--of course, being human, they must imitate something. Where shall these brave men be found? That is indeed a difficulty; there are not three hundred of them in the earth. If merely physically brave men would do, then it were easy; they could be furnished by the cargo. When Hobson called for seven volunteers to go with him to what promised to be certain death, four thousand men responded--the whole fleet, in fact. Because all the world would approve. They knew that; but if Hobson's project had been charged with the scoffs and jeers of the friends and associates, whose good opinion and approval the sailors valued, he could not have got his seven...

For the complete essay:

http://etext.virginia.edu/railton/enam482e/lyncherdom.html
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McCain Changes Course on Immigration

Salon.com
By JENNIFER TALHELM Associated Press Writer

August 02,2007 | WASHINGTON -- Republican presidential hopeful John McCain on Thursday backed a scaled-down proposal that imposes strict rules to end illegal immigration but doesn't include a path to citizenship.

The move away from a comprehensive measure is an about-face for the Arizona senator, who had been a leading GOP champion of a bill that included a guest worker program and would have legalized many of the estimated 12 million illegal immigrants living in the U.S. It failed earlier this year....

...McCain's immigration position has been a campaign liability among Republican voters and hurt his efforts to raise money. Other GOP presidential candidates, fellow Arizona Republicans and immigration opponents throughout the country have loudly decried his position.

Observers said McCain's switch was political. "He recognizes his position on the issue is killing him," said Steven Camarota, research director at the Center for Immigration Studies, which favors vigorous immigration enforcement.

...Immigrants' rights advocates jumped to condemn their decision. "It is fairly stunning they have gone from leaders on comprehensive reform legislation to lemmings running over the cliff" with the Republican opponents of the bill, said Angela Kelley, deputy director of the National Immigration Forum.

http://www.salon.com/wire/ap/archive.html?wire=D8QP68K80.html

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

What Happens When You Cross the Border? Does Eugenio Become Eugene?

1922 http://www.search.com/reference/German_American

Does your name have to change when you cross the border? If you are born here to immigrant parents, should you be named Ashley instead of Araceli? Is an undocumented college student more likely to be detained if his name is Ricardo, rather than Richard or Rick?

Manuel Munoz writes with a sense of loss about the pressure for people to anglicize their names as they make their way into U.S. culture. At times it does seem awkward to see a Cameron Sanchez (or Diaz?). But the reality is that Latino families have been able to keep their names much better than other ethnic groups entering the country. That is one reason so many nativist Americans are upset....They are saying that Latinos are staying much the same after they become Americans... they don't change their names often enough, they don't speak English enough, they don't watch Oprah enough.

At one level I tell myself, a nation state would naturally want people to homogenize. This leads to increased patriotism, loyalty and a higher rate of military recruitment (so important these days to our gov't). The question really is: Does everyone in the U.S. need to be same? Do we have to become so homogenized?

It could be that Munoz is expecting something that is unrealistic. Culture and language are extremely fluid. Under any circumstances, there is always change. My grandfather who was born and lived on the Texas border with Mexico in the first half of the twentieth century was Eugenio to his parents, Gene to his employers, and Poppy Jujee to his grandchildren. His son, my mother's brother was Jesus Eugenio, who became Uncle Jim to us. The family (at least in their generation) still spoke Spanish all the time, the next generation spoke a little less Spanish, and the latest generation is having to go a Latin American country to learn Spanish. But that happens when you live in a country where the dominant language is English.

My son, whom I named Gregorio Jose, changed his name to Gregory Joseph when he was 16, now that he is 30 he is working hard at learning Spanish, and spends much of his time in a Spanish speaking Latin American country. There are all sorts of ways this fluidity manifests itself.

Munoz can see this as a travesty. But it can also be seen as the normal way cultural practices and languages circulate and evolve. We are always having to let some things go.

Where I must totally agree with Munoz is in how those who do not change their names are often singled out.... are you more likely to be profiled by an ICE agent if your name is Eugenio instead of Eugene? Will teachers give you a better evaluation if you are named John instead of Juan? Questions worth thinking about.



Leave Your Name at the Border
By MANUEL MUÑOZ
Published: August 1, 2007
New York Times

Dinuba, Calif.

..I count on a collective sense of cultural loss to once again swing the names back to our native language. The Mexican gate agent announced Eugenio Reyes, but I never got a chance to see who appeared. I pictured an older man, cowboy hat in hand, but I made the assumption on his name alone, the clash of privileges I imagined between someone de allá and a Mexican woman with a good job in the United States. Would she speak to him in Spanish? Or would she raise her voice to him as if he were hard of hearing?

But who was I to imagine this man being from anywhere, based on his name alone? At a place of arrivals and departures, it sank into me that the currency of our names is a stroke of luck: because mine was not an easy name, it forced me to consider how language would rule me if I allowed it. Yet I discovered that only by leaving. My stepfather must live in the Valley, a place that does not allow that choice, every day. And Eugenio Reyes — I do not know if he was coming or going.



http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/01/opinion/01munoz.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1