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EZ2

04/26/10 9:29 AM

#478511 RE: PegnVA #478509

Perfect!!!

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StephanieVanbryce

04/26/10 11:02 AM

#478521 RE: PegnVA #478509

Arizona's SB 1070 and its Impact on California



Arizona has gone off the deep end. California's neighbor, and a home for many ex-Californians, has passed and Governor Jan Brewer has signed a radical and extremist bill, SB 1070, that legalizes racial profiling and implements a host of unconstitutional rules that abrogate civil liberties and subject anyone not carrying proper identification to immediate arrest.

The backlash to SB 1070 is already underway. Presente.org is organizing a a boycott of Arizona, which I've joined. I have a lot of family who live in Arizona, but I'm not going to subject myself to a police state to visit them; they can come to California.

The picture above, of Governor Brewer's signing announcement, tells you all you need to know about what is happening here. Despite the fact that people with brown skin lived in Arizona long before anyone with white skin, and despite the fact that Arizona has had a long heritage of Latinos predating US conquest, and despite the fact that Latinos and Native Americans and other non-whites have lived there up to the present, a vocal minority of Arizona's white population has decided that being brown in Arizona is a crime.

Using "illegal immigration" as justification, Republicans led by Russell Pearce are waging a war against a people who are as Arizonan as they are, against a "culture" that is indigenous, not foreign. Here's what Pearce had to say to NPR in 2008:

Invaders, that's what they [undocumented immigrants] are. Invaders on the American sovereignty and it can't be tolerated....
Pearce claims illegal immigrants are responsible for much of Arizona's crime and he admits to feeling uncomfortable with the way society is changing in Arizona. He attributes it partly to Mexicans' and Central Americans' "way of doing business."

"Drive around parts of Phoenix. I get calls all the time and it's not that they're Hispanic, it's because the culture is different. The gangs are bigger. There's more violence, kidnappings are way up," he says. [ http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=88125098 ]

This conflation of "illegal" with "Hispanic" is by no means new, even though there are lots of Irish undocumented immigrants in the US. What Pearce represents is the very same phenomenon we're all too familiar with here in California: white anxiety at the fact that their country was never as white as they believed, and is becoming steadily more diverse. Blaming "illegals" is merely an easier way of couching one's racism.

This is especially true in private conversations. Just as one can very easily find anti-Latino racism expressed in white Orange County households, you can find it even more commonly expressed in white communities in Arizona. This is exacerbated by the fact that a lot of Arizona whites moved there from California in search of a less diverse, more white place to live.

As anyone with any knowledge of California history ought to be aware, Arizona is merely following a trail the Golden State blazed long ago. In the 1850s during the Gold Rush, Anglo Californians harassed, attacked, killed, deported, and took the land of Latinos, whether they were native-born Californios or people who came here to seek wealth in the gold fields.

Over the next 150 years racism persisted, only to be dramatically reinforced when Proposition 187 was passed by 2/3rds of voters at the November 1994 election. Prop 187 was ultimately ruled unconstitutional by the courts, and it led to a shift of Latinos away from the Republican Party and towards Democrats in California that has never been reversed.

Today's Republican Party remains every bit as anti-immigrant and anti-Latino as it was in 1994. The two candidates for the GOP gubernatorial nomination, Meg Whitman and Steve Poizner, have spent weeks airing TV ads trying to outdo each other in immigrant-bashing. Steve Poizner wrote in his new book that "From an intellectual standpoint, I absolutely know not to expect Silicon Valley-type caliber ambition and smarts from East San Jose schoolkids," most of whom are Latinos.

We can expect California Republicans to use Arizona's SB 1070 as a model for similar bills they will almost certainly push this year in the Legislature. California Democrats still hold enough seats to block this, but we have to continuously reinforce to them the fact that Californians opposed these kind of anti-immigrant laws.

It's also a powerful argument for the federal government to get off its ass and finally act on comprehensive immigration reform. Californians Nancy Pelosi, Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer would do well to act quickly, to ensure that no other states follow Arizona's unconscionable and horrific lead.

Oh, and we might want to put up some signs on Interstate 10 in Blythe warning eastbound travelers that they're about to enter a police state.

UPDATE: Sign the act.ly petition to have CalPERS divest itself of investments in Arizona companies and Arizona real estate. Let's make AZ regret this.

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http://www.calitics.com/diary/11569/arizonas-sb-1070-and-its-impact-on-california
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rollingrock

04/26/10 7:53 PM

#478742 RE: PegnVA #478509

I'm well aware of their law. And the law
of the United States. Illeagal immigration is against the law. So what is your issue?