Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Made in the USA

Imagine a serene coastal town. Imagine life in said town being relatively calm for centuries, avoiding the ravages of war, disease, famine, and weather disasters. People and society are both complex and concrete, being passed from generation to generation. Now imagine a ship filled with disease carrying, woman violating, violent people landing on the coast near this town and claiming the land for their far-away nation. I give you America's first immigrants.

Some may wonder why I tell the tale of these intrepid men of adventure. Well, it seems our good friends in Arizona have decided that our nation's history of immigration does not matter and all immigrants should be treated as criminals. In one of the greatest pieces of racial profiling ever committed by government, the state legislature has given Arizona authorities the right to detain anyone "suspected of being an illegal immigrant". That's right. Suspected. Not convicted of a crime. Not having their immigration status checked at a workplace or when arrested for a crime. Nope. Just by looking the part, United States citizens will now have to prove to skeptical law enforcement that they belong in this nation.

We have gone a long way from taking other nation's sick, poor, and oppressed. I guess the generosity of America cannot extend to everybody. Let alone Constitutional rights. Asking American citizens to prove who they are based on outward appearance is a grave step toward a police state. How are police officers not supposed to racially profile against Latino people when they are told that anyone of them could be here illegally. Forget where you stand on the immigration front. It should not matter whether you support deportation or paths to citizenship. The heart of the matter is that an entire state legislature has now told an entire race of people that they will be subject to search and seizure for looking the way that they do. They do not have to commit a crime or violate state law in any way. Police now have the authority to detain whoever they determine to have "suspect" immigration status. "I am sorry that you are a fourth generation American, Mrs. Sanchez, but you look an awful like the people that come through here. We have no other alternative. But, if you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear." There is nothing to fear, except the extreme violation of Constitutional protection, racial profiling, and unwarranted confrontations with law enforcement...

When will we wake up? When will we finally realize what we are allowing people to do? There should have been protests outside that capitol building loud enough to keep the officials from hearing themselves think. There should have been people yelling and screaming outside to keep this insane law from happening. Where were the TEA Party Protesters then? Where were the people that claimed the violation of Constitutional rights when the health care bill passed? Where was Sara Palin? Glenn Beck? Michelle Bachmann? Where were the people on this issue? It is time that someone stand up for those that are being disenfranchised by our politicians. It is time that we yell and scream when something so bluntly racist and rights-destroying becomes law. It is time that all of those who have ranted and raved about losing rights to health care to not conveniently lose their voices when people are losing their basic rights to privacy and protection from unlawful searches and seizures. It is time. But the question, as always, remains: Will they step up?

No comments:

Post a Comment