Date: Sat, 4 Apr 2009 13:05:00 -0700
To:
dba...@igc.orgFrom:
dba...@igc.orgSubject: why immigrant workrs will fill the streets this may day
WHY IMMIGRANT WORKERS WILL FILL THE STREETS
THIS MAY DAY
By David Bacon
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
http://www.truthout.org/032709A
OAKLAND, CA (4/4/09) --
In a little less than a month, hundreds of thousands, perhaps even
millions, of people will fill the streets in city after city, town
after town, across the US. This year May Day marches of immigrant
workers will make an important demand on the Obama administration: End
the draconian enforcement policies of the Bush administration.
Establish a new immigration policy based on human rights and
recognition of the crucial economic and social contributions of
immigrants to US society.
This year's marches will continue
the recovery in the US of the celebration of May Day, the day that
celebrates worldwide the contributions of working people. That
recovery started on May 1, 2006, when over a million people filled the
streets of Los Angeles, with hundreds of thousands more in Chicago,
New York and cities and towns throughout the United States. Again on
May Day in 2007 and 2008, immigrants and their supporters demonstrated
and marched, from coast to coast.
One sign found in almost every march
said it all: "We are Workers, not Criminals!" The sign
stated an obvious truth. Millions of people have come to the United
States to work, not to break its laws. Some have come with visas, and
others without them. But they are all contributors to the society
they've found here.
The protests are a result of
years of organizing, the legacy of Bert Corona, immigrant rights
pioneer and founder of many national Latino organizations. He trained
thousands of immigrant activists, taught the value of political
independence, and believed that immigrants themselves must conduct a
struggle for their rights. Most of the leaders of the radical wing of
today's immigrant rights movement were his students.
In part, the May Day protests
respond to a wave of draconian measures that have criminalized
immigration status and work itself for undocumented people. In
1986, the Immigration Reform and Control Act made it a crime, for the
first time in US history, to hire people without papers. Defenders
argued that if people could not legally work they would leave. Life
was not so simple.
Undocumented people are part of the
communities they live in. They cannot simply go, nor should they. They
seek the same goals of equality and opportunity that working people in
the US have historically fought for. In addition, for most
immigrants there are no jobs to return to in the countries from which
they've come. After Congress passed The North American Free
Trade Agreement, six million displaced Mexicans came to the US as a
result of the massive displacement the treaty caused. Free trade
and free market policies have similarly displaced millions more in
poor countries around the world.
Instead of recognizing
this reality, the US government has attempted to make holding a job a
criminal act. Some states and local communities, seeing a green light
from the Department of Homeland Security, have passed measures that go
even further. Mississippi passed a bill making it a felony for
an undocumented worker to hold a job, with jail time of 1-10 years,
fines of up to $10,000, and no bail for anyone arrested. Employers get
immunity.
Last summer, Homeland Security Secretary Michael
Chertoff proposed a rule requiring employers to fire any worker who
couldn't correct a mismatch between the Social Security number given
to their employer and the SSA database. The regulation assumes those
workers have no valid immigration visa, and therefore no valid Social
Security number.
With 12 million people living in the US
without legal immigration status, the regulation would have led to
massive firings, bringing many industries and businesses to a halt.
Citizens and legal visa holders would have been swept up as well,
since the Social Security database is often inaccurate. While the
courts enjoined this particular regulation, the idea of using Social
Security numbers to identify and fire millions of workers is still
very much alive in Washington, DC.
Under Chertoff, the Bureau of Immigration and Customs
Enforcement conducted sweeping workplace raids, arresting and
deporting thousands of workers. Many were charged with an additional
crime - identity theft - because they used a Social Security number
belonging to someone else to get a job. Yet workers using those
numbers actually deposit money into Social Security funds, and will
never collect benefits their contributions paid for. The new
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano says the big raids need
to be reexamined, but she continues to support measures to drive
undocumented workers from their jobs, and to keep employers from
hiring them.
During her term as
governor, the Arizona legislature passed a law requiring employers to
verify the immigration status of every worker through a federal
database called E-Verify, even more full of errors than Social
Security. They must fire workers whose names get flagged. This is now
becoming the model for Federal enforcement.
Many of these
punitive measures surfaced in proposals for "comprehensive
immigration reform" that were debated in Congress in 2006 and
2007. The comprehensive bills combined criminalization of work for the
undocumented with huge guest worker programs. While those proposals
failed in Congress, the Bush administration implemented some of their
most draconian provisions by administrative action. Many fear
that new proposals for immigration reform being formulated by Congress
and the administration will continue these efforts to criminalize
work.
In reality, the labor of 12 million
undocumented workers is indispensable to the economy, just as is the
labor of 26 million people with visas, and the many millions of
workers who were born in the U.S. The wealth created by
undocumented workers is never called illegal. No one dreams of
taking that wealth from the employers who profited from it. Yet the
people who produce this wealth are called exactly that -
illegal.
All workers need
jobs and a way to support their families, not just some. And in
a country with schools behind the rest of the industrialized world,
with bridges that fall into rivers and people living in tent cities
for lack of housing, there is clearly no shortage of work to be done.
If the trillion dollars showered on banks were used instead to put
people to work, there would be plenty of jobs and a better quality of
life for everyone.
Nativo Lopez, president of the
Mexican American Political Association and the Hermandad Mexicana
Latinoamericana, says, "Washington legislators and lobbyists fear
a new civil rights movement in the streets, because it rejects their
compromises and makes demands that go beyond what they have defined as
'politically possible.'"
The price of trying to push people out of the US
who've come here for survival is increased vulnerability for
undocumented workers, which ultimately results in cheaper labor and
fewer rights for everyone. Under Bush, that was the government's goal
-- cheap labor for large employers, enforced by deportations, firings
and guest worker programs. This is what millions of people want
to change. And the Obama administration was elected because it
promised "change we can believe in."
In past May Day marches many
participants have put forward an alternative set of demands, which
includes tying legalization for 12 million undocumented people in the
US with jobs programs for communities with high unemployment.
All workers need the right to organize to raise wages and gain
workplace rights, including the 12 million people for whom work is a
crime. More green cards, especially visas based on family
reunification, would enable people to cross the border legally,
instead of dying in the desert. Ending guest worker programs
would help stop the use of our immigration system as a supply of cheap
labor for employers. And on the border, communities want human
rights, not more guns, walls, soldiers and prisons for
immigrants.
This May Day, immigrants will again send
this powerful message. Their marches have already rescued from
obscurity our own holiday, which began in the struggle for the
eight-hour day in Chicago over a century ago. Today they are
giving May Day a new meaning, putting forward ideas that will not only
benefit immigrant communities, but all working families.
Just out from Beacon Press:
Illegal People -- How Globalization Creates Migration and
Criminalizes Immigrants
See also the photodocumentary on indigenous migration to the
US
Communities Without Borders (Cornell University/ILR Press,
2006)
See also The Children of NAFTA, Labor Wars on the U.S./Mexico
Border (University of California, 2004)
--
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David Bacon, Photographs and Stories
http://dbacon.igc.org
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