Sunday, August 8, 2010

Arizona: a portrait in cowardice

A friend of mine likes to say, “When the pie gets smaller, the first thing to leave are the table manners.”

Enter Arizona’s SB 1070.

To no one’s great surprise, U.S. District Judge Susan Bolton essentially gutted  SB1070 by declaring the most radical parts of the Arizona law as unconstitutional. Bolton had plenty of good reason to knock down the law, specifically the fourth, 10th and 14th Amendments to the United States Constitution.

Not that the constitution ever mattered to those who support SB1070. This has never been about the law, or immigration for that matter. This has always been about elections — specifically the race for Arizona governor and what party will control the legislature (and for those who like to point out that a majority of people here and nation-wide support the bill, I say this: a majority of Germans thought Hitler was a great guy, too).

I few weeks back the Arizona Capitol Times ran an article outlining how SB1070 finally passed. Yes, finally passed. As the Capitol Times article noted, this same law was introduced three time prior to 2010, and in each of its previous incantations the bill never made it to a committee vote in the Arizona legislature. The Capitol Times article documents the politics that lead to SB1070 not only getting out of committee, but actually passing. Lobbyists for groups that had vehemently oppose it in the past — including the Arizona Chamber of Commerce, Arizona Professional Police Officers Association and many more — stepped out of the way this time under threat from Russell Pierce, the state senator who introduced the divisive bill. Pierce threatened to accuse them of pandering to undocumented immigrants . . . and, well, they just couldn’t have that, could they?

It was, to put it mildly, a statewide capitulation to cowardice.

An article in Geopolitical Weekly did a decent job of showing why, in the end, the bill will reach well beyond the Arizona-Mexico border, now matter how courts rule in the end. It’s a very well done piece.  Key passages come under the title “A Temporary Resolution,” in which the author explains the historical relationship between Arizona and Mexico. It boils down to this: Arizona seeks cheap labor, and Mexico provides it. It was supposed to be a short-term solution to some of the animus that arose following the Mexican-American war. Unfortunately the resolution stopped being temporary long ago. That Mexico provides Arizona with cheap labor is as true today as is was when this area was first settled as part of the United States. The irony in all of this is that the very people who wrote and passed SB 1070 were the same group of people who less than a decade ago asked the Border Patrol to ease up on enforcement so that their friends in the business community could have access to cheap labor. Cheap labor, more than anything else, is why our current border conditions exist as they do.

While the author is right about some people — mainly conservatives — being concerned about a cultural shift, those people are late to the party. Mexican culture plays a huge role in Southwest culture, from Texas to California. Like every other culture that’s moved here, it has been Americanized.  But the reason people immigrate from Mexico is no different from the reason our relatives did: for a shot at a better life, not to recreate the turmoil and economic depravation from which they came.

One of the key issues not addressed in the article, and rarely addressed at anytime, is that the Mexican economy is wholly controlled by a literal handful of very wealthy families, and they aren’t letting go. In order to maintain control of the country — not to mention the better part of its wealth — they have sold out the rest of their fellow Mexicans, and have prevented innumerable policies and programs from becoming law in Mexico (including important public education, health and environmental initiatives). These laws would have strengthened Mexico's economy, provided literally thousands of jobs and kept people from immigrating to the U.S. Unfortunately, those in control of the Mexican economy are not so much worried about the health of Mexico as they are the health of their bank accounts.

Let there be no doubt that there is an immigration problem, and that it is an international problem that will require the work of both nations to solve. But before that can happen, major changes have to take place on both sides of the border. In Mexico, the government must begin to answer to its people instead of a handful of families, and on our side the issue must be wrestled away from the xenophobes who would rather scare people so that they can get elected than come up with actual solutions.

One more side note — the irony not lost on many of us is that the republicans have picked up this issue and are running with it for a third consecutive election cycle. In Arizona the issue comes up every couple of years. Here it is a smokescreen to distract attention from the disastrous republican policies that have ruined Arizona’s economy and social institutions, from health care for indigent children to education. Nationally, republicans controlled congress for a decade, and the legislative and executive branches for six years and did nothing about immigration. Every time my republican friends complain about this issue (or choice issues with women) I remind them that when republicans had the chance to do something, they passed.

And they passed because they are craven.

Watch out — you might be next

I originally posted what's below in April and needed to repost after some editing issues.


"They came first for the Communists, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Communist.

Then they came for the Jews, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew.

Then they came for the trade unionists, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade unionist.

Then they came for me and by that time no one was left to speak up.”


On Saturday I attended the Bar Mitzvah of a friend’s son. Sitting in the Temple with my friend’s family and members of the congregation observing the Shabbat, I couldn’t help but wonder how they felt about the passage of the misnamed immigration-enforcement bill by our Arizona legislature. I wondered if they had made any connection between the actions of our misguided, and gallactically stupid, lawmakers and the  group of brown shirts that passed similar laws in Germany as part of the Nazi take over. As it turned out, it didn’t take long for the rabbi to make the connection at all. Although his remarks on the subject were succinct, they were nevertheless powerful, as he reminded everyone in attendance that there was not a very big leap between legislation passed under the guise of providing protection for citizens and the murder of more than six million Jews.

The law does not target Jews. Instead, it targets Hispanics. That the law is racist in its roots is not even in dispute. If he though he could have gotten away with it the law’s author — Russell Pierce (R-Nazi) — would have immigrants sew a bright M (for Mexican!) on their clothes to more easily identify them. Do you doubt that? Well, does anyone seriously believe that any of the millions of Canadians who visit and stay in Arizona every winter will be pulled over, questioned and have a police officer demand their papers? Or how about the millions of white Europeans who visit (or, at least who used to) the Grand Canyon? Didn’t think so.

It is not an overreaction or hyperbole to suggest that Arizona’s immigration-enforcement law is Nazi-like. The law allows any law enforcement officer to demand citizenship papers from anyone they suspect is an immigrant, at any time. There is zero requirement for reasonable suspicion or probable cause — fundamental rights guaranteed to everyone, including visitors to our country, in the Fourth Amendment. The language of the Fourth Amendment cannot be clearer: The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

Gov. Jan Brewer signed the bill into law knowing that every provision of it stood in violation of the U.S. Constitution, and that it did little to protect Arizonans or alleviate any of the concerns in Arizona caused by Central American drug cartels (cartels, by the way, that do most their work south of the border, and use U.S. citizens to deliver and sell their product north of the border). Of course Brewer — who, like the majority of Arizona’s cowardly legislature, is badly in need of a spine — was never looking to protect Arizonans in the first place. What she, and the republican majority wanted to protect was themselves. More specifically, their re-election chances in November. It just might work. Unfortunately their re-election is likely to come at great expense to the state and citizens they’re supposed to serve.

What Brewer and company lack in fortitude they make up for in ignorance. Among the many damages caused by Arizona’s term limits law is the lack of institutional knowledge in the halls of the legislature. No one in Arizona’s legislature . . . check that.  No one in Arizona’s republican majority at the legislature seems to remember what happened to our state the last time it went the way of the racists. That was back in the late 1980s when then-Gov. Evan Mecham (R-Ku Klux Klan) rescinded a holiday honoring Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.. As a result, Arizona lost billions  because of canceled events (including a Super Bowl), a drop in tourism and billions more because, generally, for the most part, people don’t want to do business with people who appear to be racists, or who take racially motivated political acts. Turns out racism isn’t just bad for business, it just plain bad business.

In Arizona, we’re about to find out — again — just how bad it can get.