Posts Tagged ‘undocumented immigrants’

Week of our DREAMS

Sunday, September 19th, 2010

“Undocumented and Unafraid.” This slogan has emerged as the motto for undocumented students and their allies who have taken up the fight to pass the DREAM Act, which will create a path to citizenship for many undocumented youth conditioned upon their earning a college degree.

Undocumented and unafraid of what? Of deportation. Of suddenly being torn from your family and detained in deplorable conditions. Of experiencing racist violence or violence at the hands of law enforcement. Of being forever ousted from the place you call home.

Undocumented and unafraid. When I think about the potential implications of uttering those three words for these young people, I am humbled and motivated to take action. Want to join me?

First, check out the video below:

Then, text DREAM or SUENO to 69866 and visit action.dreamactivist.org/movedream

The Dream Act will be up for vote in the US senate this week. Don’t miss your chance to join thousands of DREAM activists across the country in the “Week of our DREAMs“.

Its Time to Reign in ICE!

Monday, April 5th, 2010

The US Immigration and Customs Enforcement division of the Department of Homeland Security has gone rogue and is now in direct violation of promises made by both Secretary Janet Napolitano and President Obama. Both have made commitments to scale back many of the inhumane immigration enforcement practices, such as night-time raids that tear children away from their families, and instead focus enforcement on people who have violent criminal histories, as well as employers who target undocumented workers for cheap labor.

But, last week the Washington Post leaked an internal ICE memo revealing that the agency operates under a quota system; this year their goal is to deport 400,000 people from the US. Worse still, the memo outlines a plan to increase efforts to deport non-criminal immigrants, that is people who’s only crime is incomplete paperwork or a minor infraction like driving without a license.

Why is this such a big deal? First and foremost, it exposes the dishonesty of ICE Assistant Secretary John Morton, who previously denied ICE’s use of quotas. Second, this approach is a giant waste of resources and funding that could be spent elsewhere. Third, and most egregiously, it targets the most vulnerable members of our communities – undocumented, tax-paying immigrant workers and their families.

Says Julianne Hing of RaceWire:

ICE, by its own admission, is sweeping up hundreds of thousands of people in its dragnet whose only crime is being here in this country without papers. And for this transgression immigrants are being torn from their children and sisters and aunties and parents and grandchildren. This is why the news of the revival of the deportation quotas is so galling to immigration advocates. President Obama has said he wants enforcement to be humane and reasonable, but his administration’s ICE agency has forsaken any commitment to those ideals in the name of widespread and indiscriminate enforcement.

What kind of a country pours countless resources and millions of dollars into an agency that lies about its internal practices and intentionally preys on our most vulnerable brothers and sisters while de-emphasizing the pursuit of violent criminals, all to boost their numbers and give each other a pat on the back?

ICE is proving itself to be little more than an organized, government-funded band of vigilantes bent on destroying families and sullying this country’s already precarious reputation. Between the tea baggers, the Hutaree militia and Texas Governor Rick Perry, this country has enough armed ignorant hate-mongers.

Join the SEIU as they call on President Obama and DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano to reign in rogue officers and keep enforcement focused on preventing violence and protecting our communities.

A Gendered Reflection on Passports

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

Today is a big day for me. I just got my passport in the mail! My renewed passport that finally has my chosen name and gender. Like many Transgender people, I was really nervous that I would be harassed in the process of updating my gendered information and potentially denied all together. Given that the Federal government and most US states do not include gender identity and expression in their anti-discrimination laws and the oppressive nature of many of our national security policies, I feel so fortunate to have obtained a US passport that matches my true identity, hassle and persecution-free.

Holy crap that is not the experience of so very many people. Scores of Trans, Gender Queer and Two-Spirit folks are denied passports and other government documents every year because of bigotry or are unable to meet the requirements because of poverty. And so many of our friends, family and neighbors who were not born in this country but nevertheless live, work and pay taxes here (income tax is not the only way to contribute financially to this country’s well-being) are denied basic civil liberties and human rights because they don’t have access to various government-issued documents like the one I hold in my hand right now.

This is less of a call to action than a call for reflection.  Yes, issuing and controlling government documents is a way for a country to manage its infrastructure and national security. But Visas, Passports, Social Security cards and State IDs are more than security measures; they impact our ability to access basic institutions and opportunities that allow us to survive and thrive.

If we as a nation are to live up to the promise of liberty and justice for all, we must reject the impulse to use security measures intended to preserve freedom as a means of restricting it.