For
Immediate Release
October 8, 2013
Statement from Moratorium On Deportations Campaign in
response to the current mobilizations in support of the so-called “immigration reform.”
The
Immigration Reform Movement is a Scam: How our Communities are Manipulated to
promote Anti-Immigrant Legislation
On October 5, Mayor Rahm Emanuel paraded with major NGO's like Illinois Coalition
for Immigrant and Refugee Rights (ICIRR) to promote Comprehensive Immigration
Reform. On October 12, ICIRR and several other major NGO's are mobilizing a
March for Immigration Reform with Dignity and Respect. Sounds nice, doesn't it?
But these two actions are part of a much broader campaign of manipulation,
falsely promising that Immigration Reform legislation will "keep families
together", "legalize 11 Million people" "make our
immigration system more just" and "stop deportations". It is a
scam.
Living in Chicago has taught us a few hard lessons about "Reform". We
have learned that "Housing Reform" means closing public housing,
displacing thousands of poor people in the interests of greedy developers.
"Education Reform" means closing the schools in poor, immigrant and
Black communities in order to open up the market for privatized schools.
"Health Care Reform" means closing mental health clinics serving poor
people to make way for gentrification projects, funneling those left without care
into the prison system. And "Immigrant Detention Reform" means
opening up more detention centers and detaining more people including children,
in newly built "family-friendly" prisons. "Reform" is what
the domestic war looks like, a war waged against immigrants, the poor, the
unemployed, women and others who can be made socially vulnerable and
disposable. "Reform" is the nice-sounding way to package racism in a
"post-racial" America. Rahm Emanuel is the perfect spokesperson
for Reform.
The Immigration Reform movement is the newest example of oppression, violence
and exploitation sold to us as a "step in the right direction". The
Immigration Reform Movement is built around Bill S744 which passed in the
Senate -- an anti-immigrant bill which is now almost identically copied by
House Democrats in their recent proposal. This Bill's major provisions are:
- make all immigration policy
dependent on border militarization: over $46 billion will be funneled to
military contractors, creating the most militarized space in US history and
reinforcing xenophobic hysteria around immigration as a "national security
threat"
- increase the criminalization of
immigrants and push more and more people into detention, all to benefit private
prison companies
- create a new version of the
Bracero program that keeps immigrant workers exploitable, all to the benefit of
large corporations and agribusiness;
- create a false "path to
citizenship", by inventing a new "probation" status for
immigrants. This status will penalize people who fall below the poverty line,
who cannot prove continuous employment, who are targetted by police, who become
injured or disabled or otherwise unable to work -- in other words, the vast
majority of immigrants without status will be pushed into deportation
- increase surveillance and
enforcement so that it becomes MUCH easier to find and deport people,
increasing the efficiency of the deportation machine and Obama's historic
record as Deporter in Chief
- destroy "family
unification" as a principle for visa programs (which will make it much
harder for poor immigrants to petition on behalf of family members such as
siblings) and replace it with a "merit system" benefiting only a
select few wealthy, professional and highly educated immigrants;
- extend the violence against
indigenous communities living along the border, and further violate the
sovereignty of Indigenous Nations by militarizing their lands
The Immigration Reform Movement is a giant PR campaign, a way to make false
promises to immigrants, while pushing legislation benefiting corporate
interests that need cheap labor, disposable people and a steady supply of
prisoners. These bills will do the opposite of what promoters would have us
believe: they would increase deportations and detentions, push people into a
permanent underclass making them more exploitable, and use immigrants as an
excuse to increase domestic militarization and surveillance programs that will
affect everyone. But the Reform movement is not just pushed by
politicians from both parties and by right-wing think tanks: major Immigrant
Rights NGO's like ICIRR stand to benefit financially and politically from
Immigration Reform, and a key player in selling us anti-immigrant legislation
as a good thing. Across the country immigrant rights NGO's have been hard at
work falsely advertising reform, deliberately misleading the public about the
provisions of the bills. On October 12, ICIRR is once again calling people into
the streets to support "Reform with Dignity and Justice". This is
incredibly cynical -- there is no dignity in being exploited, no respect
in being duped to cheer for your own oppression. The Immigration Reform
Movement is anti-immigrant, anti-poor, anti-women and anti-family -- all the
while manipulating our communities in order to secure the immigrant vote.
More cynically, the Reform movement seeks to pacify us, to neutralize and crush
grass-roots social movements. Politicians have learned that immigrant social
movements are defiant and dangerous to the status quo, but the immigrant vote
is a useful prize. Immigrant communities are being used as pawns in a political
spectacle that seeks to convert the energy and power of social movements into
political capital for politicians and the NGO's who do their dirty work.
"It is the best we can get" they say, "it is better than
nothing", and "a step forward". Those of us who refer to the
actual provisions of the legislation are accused of being divisive and
unreasonable. Not once but twice, ICIRR have called the police on undocumented
activists who tried to speak out against anti-immigrant policies. This has
revealed to us the extent to which these organizations will collaborate with
police, Homeland Security and politicians to control migrant justice activists
and crush grassroots movements.
We denounce organizations like ICIRR
that promote anti-immigrant legislation in order to promote their own financial
and political ambitions. We remain committed to building grassroots social
movements that can push back not only against the lunatic right wing, not only
against the private prison contractors and corporations who profit from the
lives and bodies of immigrants and the poor, but also -- and more importantly
-- against the opportunist corporate NGO's that are rising in power by selling
us out. We can take some lessons from the social movements in Mexico: when
faced with "reforms" it is not time to wave flags and cheer, it is
time for resistance, time for barricades, occupations and strikes.
In
Solidarity,
Moratorium On Deportations Campaign,
No Name Collective,
Undocumented Resilient and Organized
(URO)