This is an email that I received today from our Border Spokesman, former Congressman, and recent candidate for Senate, Beto O'Rourke:
The President came to El Paso this
week. He promised a wall and repeated his lies about the dangers that
immigrants pose. With El Paso as the backdrop, he claimed that this city of
immigrants was dangerous before a border fence was built here in 2008.
Beyond refuting his comments about
border communities like ours (El
Paso was one of the safest communities in the United States before the fence was built here), about walls saving
lives (in fact, walls push desperate families to cross in ever more hostile
terrain, ensuring greater suffering and death), and about immigrants
(who commit
crimes at a lower rate than those Americans born here), it’s worth
thinking about how we got to this place. How it came to be that 11 million
undocumented immigrants call America home, how we came to militarize our
border, how we arrived at such a disconnect between our ideals, our values,
the reality of our lives — and the policies and political rhetoric that
govern immigration and border security.
El Paso Times, 2003
I’ve come to the conclusion that the
challenges we face are largely of our own design — a function of the
unintended consequences of immigration policy and the rhetoric we’ve used to
describe immigrants and the border. At almost every step of modern immigration
policy and immigration politics, we have exacerbated underlying problems and
made things worse. Sometimes with the best of intentions, sometimes with the
most cynical exploitation of nativism and fear. Much of the history of
immigration policy (and the source for the graphs that I’m using) is
powerfully summarized in a report entitled “Unintended
Consequences of U.S. Immigration Policy: Explaining the Post-1965 Surge from
Latin America” by Douglas S Massey and Karen A. Pren.
In 1965, the U.S. ended the bracero
farmworker program in part because of the substandard wages and conditions in
which these Mexican workers labored. And yet, after decades of employing this
labor, with our economy dependent on the laborers and the laborers dependent
on access to the U.S. job market, the system of low-cost Mexican labor didn’t
go away. Many of the same Mexican nationals returned to the U.S., returned to
the same back-breaking jobs, only now they were undocumented. Ironically,
despite the intent of the 1965 law ending the program, they enjoyed fewer
protections and wage guarantees in the shadows as they continued to play a
fundamental role in our economy.
As this same population converted from
being documented to undocumented a wave of scary metaphors was employed to
gin up anxiety and paranoia and political will to employ ever more repressive
policies to deter their entry. It was good for politicians and newspapers,
terrible for immigrants and immigration policy. Thus began the “Latino
threat” narrative. As Massey and Pren write:
“The
most common negative framing depicted immigration as a “crisis” for the
nation. Initially marine metaphors were used to dramatize the crisis, with
Latino immigration being labeled a “rising tide” or a “tidal wave” that was
poised to “inundate” the United States and “drown” its culture while
“flooding” American society with unwanted foreigners (Santa Ana 2002). Over
time, marine metaphors increasingly gave way to martial imagery, with illegal
immigration being depicted as an “invasion” in which “outgunned” Border
Patrol agents sought to “hold the line” in a vain attempt to “defend” the
border against “attacks” from “alien invaders” who launched “banzai charges”
to overwhelm American defenses (Nevins 2001; Chavez 2008).”
The fear stoked by politicians produced
the intended paranoia and political constituency demanding ever tougher
immigration measures. The result of this was not to stop undocumented
immigration. Instead it caused the number of undocumented immigrants in the
United States to grow.
Here’s why: as we made it harder for
people to cross into the United States, we made it less likely that once here
they would attempt to go back to their home country. Fearing an increasingly
militarized border, circular patterns of migration became linear, with
immigrants choosing to remain in the U.S., many of them ultimately joined by
family members from their home country.
This government-created condition
continued to feed on itself:
The
“sustained, accelerating accumulation of anti-immigrant legislation and
enforcement operations produced a massive increase in border apprehensions
after the late 1970s, when the underlying flow of migrants had actually
leveled off. For any given number of undocumented entry attempts, more
restrictive legislation and more stringent enforcement operations generate
more apprehensions, which politicians and bureaucrats can then use to inflame
public opinion, which leads to more conservatism and voter demands for even
stricter laws and more enforcement operations, which generates more
apprehensions, thus bringing the process full circle. In short, the rise of
illegal migration, its framing as a threat to the nation, and the resulting
conservative reaction set off a self-feeding chain reaction of enforcement
that generated more apprehensions even though the flow of undocumented
migrants had stabilized in the late 1970s and actually dropped during the
late 1980s and early 1990s.”
This would only get worse.
El Paso Herald Post 1981 — source Patrick Timmons
After terror attacks in the 1990s and
in 2001, the Mexican immigrant was a ready scapegoat for politicians, and the
intensity and brutality of enforcement and deterrence measures increased. In
the face of terrorism that originated in Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia, the
United States chose to conflate the war on terror with immigration from
Mexico and Latin America.
With the passage of the Patriot Act in
2001 the number of deportations skyrocketed, with nearly 400,000 sent back to
their country of origin in 2009 alone. Not one of the 9/11 terrorists entered
through Mexico — and yet Mexicans bore the brunt of this country’s immigration
response to the terror attacks. Last year, the State Department’s Bureau of
Counterterrorism found that “there are no known international terrorist
organizations operating in Mexico, no evidence that any terrorist group has
targeted U.S. citizens in Mexican territory, and no credible information that
any member of a terrorist group has traveled through Mexico to gain access to
the United States.” This year’s report found much the same: “there was no
credible evidence indicating that international terrorist groups have
established bases in Mexico, worked with Mexican drug cartels, or sent
operatives via Mexico into the United States.”
In addition, walls and
fences authorized by the Secure Fence Act of 2006 pushed migration flows to
ever more treacherous stretches of the U.S.-Mexico border. More
than 4,500 human beings died crossing the border from 2006 to 2017. Far
too many of them children.
In recent years, as
Mexican migration slowed and then reversed (more Mexican nationals going
south to Mexico than coming north to the United States), and as total
undocumented immigration reached its lowest levels in modern history, the
country was met with the challenge of tens of thousands of Central American
families fleeing violence and brutality to petition for asylum in our
country.
This too is an
unintended consequence. Our involvement in the civil wars and domestic
politics of Central American countries, in addition to our ability to consume
more illegal drugs than any other country on the planet while leading a
military- and law enforcement-first drug control policy, has helped to
destroy the institutions of civil society necessary for those countries to
function. They can no longer protect their citizens, and their citizens are
coming to us.
And how do we meet
this challenge? The President, using the same racist, inflammatory rhetoric
of years past, seeks to build a wall, to take kids from their parents, to
deploy the United States Army on American soil, to continue mass deportations
and to end the protection for Dreamers. In other words, he seeks in one
administration to repeat all the mistakes of the last half-century. And with
past as prologue, we know exactly how that will end.
Not only will it lead
to thousands of Americans losing their farms and ranches and homes through
eminent domain to build a wall despite the fact that we have the lowest level
of northbound apprehensions in my lifetime; it will lead to greater suffering
and death for immigrants who are pushed to more dangerous points of crossing;
it will fail to meet the legitimate challenge of illegal drugs that are
brought to this country (the vast majority crossed at ports of entry); it
will further erode our humanity and our standing in the world; and it will
not do a single thing to reduce the number of undocumented immigrants and asylum
seekers coming to this country.
But we still have a
choice. In this democracy, if in fact the people are the government, and the
government is the people, we still have a chance to prove it.
We can decide that
we’ll get past the lies and fear, focus on the facts and human lives in our
midst, and do the right thing. The end goal is a stronger, safer, more
successful country. Critical to achieving that goal is having immigration,
security and bilateral policies that match reality and our values.
This week, we welcomed
the President to one of the safest cities in the United States. Safe not
because of walls, and not in spite of the fact that we are a city of
immigrants. Safe because we
are a city of immigrants and because we treat each other with dignity and
respect. A city that has the opportunity to lead on the most important issues
before us, out of experience, out of compassion and out of a fierce
determination to see this country live its ideals and rise to its full
potential.
El Paso — Juárez
We can learn from the
errors of our past, have the courage to do what’s right while we still have
the chance, and ensure that the President doesn’t commit this country to
making mistakes from which we may never recover.
It’s up to us.
Beto
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Alligators 'n Roadkill
Followers
Saturday, February 16, 2019
Some serious thought about our present Border Situation.
Saturday, February 9, 2019
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