Escalating
Attacks on Immigrants & New Resistance
Homeland Security Head Chertoff: Crackdown is
“Gonna Get Ugly”
PHOENIX (By Travis
Morales, Hispanic News) September 11, 2007
— He means arresting a Mexican mother,
ripping her child from her, and deporting her to
Mexico—splitting up her family. Like
millions of other Mexicans, Elvira Arellano was forced to come to the
United States
to survive but was quickly captured and deported for the first time. Forced to
return to the
U.S., she worked
cleaning O'Hare International Airport, super-exploited like millions of other
Mexicans. In a post-September 11 “anti-terror” raid, she was arrested and
convicted of using a fake Social Security number in order to work, like so many
others who have decided not to starve. Convicted and demonized, she refused to
be deported once again, taking refuge in a
Chicago church with her
U.S. citizen
8-year-old son and advocating for immigrant rights for a year before being
arrested and deported.
The Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)
web site bragged, “ICE deports high-profile criminal fugitive alien to
Mexico. Woman who sought refuge in
Chicago church arrested during weekend trip to
L.A.” What the
fuck do they mean “criminal fugitive alien”? Who pillaged and ruined the economy
of
Mexico, making life impossible for
her and millions more? Who super-exploited her and millions more like modern-day
slaves? Who acts like modern-day slave catchers? Who are the real criminals?
“Gonna get ugly” means armed ICE agents storming
through garment sweatshops and life-numbing meat packing slaughterhouses to
arrest and deport immigrants. Only a generation or two ago, the grandsons of
African-American slaves were super-exploited on the killing floors of
slaughterhouses but then their wages got too high and their attitude too
rebellious, so they were replaced with immigrants. First they super-exploit
immigrants in these hellholes—under conditions that are close to those in
factories 100 years ago in this country. Then they demonize them in the media,
and send in the immigration police to round them up. It means random sweeps of
whole communities, grabbing up and packing off everyone “without papers.” “Gonna
get ugly” means local ordinances and state laws making it illegal to rent an
apartment or house to anyone who is undocumented or to hire them to work or to
provide them with social services or let them post bail.
Important New Resistance
The system’s “gonna get ugly” attacks on
immigrants have meant ICE agents sweeping into neighborhoods, kicking down
doors, dragging people out in the middle of the night to be deported, leaving
crying children behind. But on September 6, when ICE agents in South Los Angeles
swept into a neighborhood, trying to force their way into apartments and
arresting at least two people, residents of the neighborhood made a sign that
said “ICE OUT!” and stood on the street. Some took pictures of what the ICE
agents were doing and collected badge numbers. The ICE agents harassed these
people. First, they were told to hand over their camera. Then ICE agents asked
for their identifications and wrote down their information. Then the agents told
them that they were not allowed to be on the street. “But we stood our ground,”
said Cristina, a resident of the neighborhood. “Finally, they backed down. We
had hidden our camera, and they finally admitted that we had the right to take
pictures and to be on the street with our protest signs. They couldn’t stop us.”
There are important shoots of resistance
breaking out in response to all this that need to be supported and spread. As I
write this, a work stoppage and economic boycott is in progress in
Phoenix,
Arizona, lasting from September 3 through
September 9. An organizer with La Coordinadora 3 de Septiembre told me that
estimates are that 20,000 to 40,000 people have left work for the week to
protest the Bush decision to require companies to fire employees whose names do
not match their Social Security number. Their leaflet asks, “What would YOU do
if… Your child came home, found you had been taken, and your location unknown?”
People are demanding in part, “To have a real immigration reform that does not
simply reduce us to the level of a modern slave (guest worker).”
On September 2, an estimated crowd of 5,000 to
10,000, overwhelmingly immigrants, marched through the streets of
Woodbridge,
Virginia,
which has a population of about 32,000, located about 30 miles from
Washington,
DC. They were protesting the passage of
anti-immigrant legislation by the Prince William County Board of Supervisors.
Organizers are calling for a work stoppage on October 9. On June 4, in
Houston, two activists chained themselves to the front
gates of the privately run Corrections Corporation of
America
immigration detention center to demand freedom for all the detainees and
blockade the entrance.
Early this year, the New Sanctuary Movement,
composed of Jews, Muslims, Sikhs, Christians, and other faiths, was formed.
Their goal is to protect immigrant families from unjust deportation by providing
sanctuary in their houses of worship. Earlier this year, in both Chicago and the
San Francisco Bay Area, people protested and rallied to oppose ICE raids in
their communities.
All of these are important developments. This
movement of resistance must spread rapidly and broadly among immigrants and
non-immigrants alike. Think about what a difference it made in
L.A. when, in the midst of
these raids, people on the spot mobilized to protect people. Imagine the impact
if the movement of churches, mosques, and synagogues spreads. If in border
communities, people politically challenge the brutal treatment of immigrants.
And if all this is contributing to a broader spirit of defiance throughout
society to the whole broader repressive agenda.
What Kind of World Do You Want to
Live In?
Life has always been hell for immigrants. Until
recently, the undocumented lived with the constant threat of deportation because
of any unexpected encounter with the authorities. But, by and large, once here,
they were allowed to be super-exploited, face discrimination and police
brutality, but stay. Now something much more sinister is being hammered into
place. Open season has been declared. Rules, for example, that in many places
supposedly separated the normal police from the Migra are being changed to make
every cop into an ICE agent. Anything goes. People who “work hard” and “play by
the rules” can be snatched up at any time, their world and that of their
families devastated.
On August 10, Bush announced a whole series of
measures to be implemented by executive order. Many of these were contained in
the so-called “comprehensive immigration reform” bill that failed in the Senate
in June. They were not passed in Congress, so essentially by decree, Bush is
ordering the enforcement of these regulations. The measures include 8,000 more
Border Patrol agents, more walls, more detention camps, more raids, a campaign
to go after workers whose names do not match their Social Security numbers, the
importation of more “guest workers” to toil in slave-like conditions, and moves
to require everyone applying for a job to have their identity run through a
national government database.
Look at the kind of society that is emerging if
we don’t STOP this: In Minnesota during the Swift raids, workers and advocates
in the Swift meatpacking plant reported that individuals were first divided into
groups by the color of their skin and that only non-white workers were
questioned. In raids across the country, agents have arrested people based on
their racial or ethnic appearance, accent, or limited English skills. People are
presumed to be “illegal” with no rights based on how they look, the color of
their skin, and the language that they speak.
And for those who still harbor the illusion that
the Democrats will fight for immigrant rights, listen to the words of House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi upon hearing Bush’s announcement: "Securing our border
remains a top priority for the New Direction Congress."
All of this is no good. It is very, very bad
for the people
Throughout the spring of 2006, millions of
immigrants and their allies poured into the streets all across the country, from
the largest cities to numerous small southern and mid-western farming
communities. This was a historic mobilization to defeat the draconian
anti-immigrant Sensenbrenner bill (H.R. 4437) that would have made felons of the
estimated 12–20 million undocumented immigrants in this country and anyone who
aided them in any kind of way. People filled the streets to demand legalization
and for immigrants to be treated like human beings. City after city saw the
largest protest demonstrations in their history.
In the face of this escalating onslaught, there
is great importance to promoting, supporting, and spreading new resistance.
After being deported, Elvira Arellano called for a national day of action on
September 12. This call has been taken up by activists in such places as Los
Angeles, Chicago, Madison, Wisconsin, and New York who are organizing press
conferences and protests that day to announce an October 12 National Day of
Action for Workers Rights Against No Match (Letters), Raids and Deportations.
If you
refuse to live in a world where human beings are categorized as “legal” or
“illegal” based on the color of their skin, the language that they speak, and
where they were born, with life and death implications, then you have the
responsibility to resist. If you refuse to live in a world where millions are
condemned to be super-exploited modern-day slaves, then you must act.