Showing posts with label illegal immigration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label illegal immigration. Show all posts

Thursday, July 17, 2014

'Train of Death' hit: U.S. PR campaign backfires

Gee, whoda thunk that the ostensibly anti-immigration song "Train of Death" would be a big hit in Central America, whose illegal immigrants risk their lives to to reach the U.S.?

Then again, some Americans like "outlaw country" so I guess it's not that different.

So on the bad side it's yet another Big Guvmint boondoggle; on the bright side, the U.S. taxpayers are bringing quality, Spanish-language infotainment to at least 20 countries!  De nadagente!


By Patrick Barkham
July 16, 2014 | Guardian

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

5 hysterical myths about U.S. 'border crisis'

Lately I've had the possibility -- nay, the privilege -- to listen to a lot of AM talk radio, and lemme tell you, it's all "border crisis" all the time.

Naturally, since Obama is the Anti-Christ, a cypto-Muslim/Marxist and America-hater, not to mention he's trying to seed America with future America-hating Democratic voters, there are a lot of conspiracy theories surrounding the unfortunate surge of thousands of South American children at our southern border.  

If you're interested in facts, can manage to catch your breath and count to 10, then please read this fact check, courtesy of The Guardian.


By Megan Carpentier, Kayla Epstein, Lauren Gambino, Nadja Popovich and Matt Sullivan
July 15, 2014 | Guardian

Monday, February 10, 2014

Obama is a 'tyrant' for issuing fewer executive orders than Reagan and Bush

Sooner or later, most conservative chain-email garbage finds its way down to the talk radio-FOX cesspool. Latest case and point:Obama's executive orders.

FOX's resident legal expert Andrew Napolitano, who still goes by the title "Judge," called Obama's executive orders "tyranny." And good ole' Rush Limbaugh riffed on this on his show today.  

Rush calls folks who disagree with him "low information voters." Well, a simple Google search reveals that, lo and behold, conservative hero Ronald Reagan issued 381 executive orders, Dubya issued 291, whereas Obama has issued 168 as of January 20, 2014.

Rush deifies Reagan, yet calls Obama's use of executive orders "an impeachable offense." Now that's not stupid and partisan at all, no siree. Because Obama is a Democrat, and different rules apply to Democrats. See?

Even more outrageously, Republicans' hypocrisy has come up in the context of immigration reform. Speaker John Boehner says the Republicans can't make a deal with President Obama and the Democrats because they can't trust him to enforce a new immigration law, even though Obama has broken all records for the number of illegal immigrants deported, earning him the nickname "deporter-in-chief," as even FOX News Latino (not to be confused with FOX News Anglo, aka FOX News) couldn't help but note. Yet again, there is a different set of rules for Democrats.  Go figure.

Thursday, February 14, 2013

A well-run government has the leisure to debate zombies

No, this is not from The Onion, and yes, you are reading the headline below right.

OK, granted, it's another question why Canada's elected leaders don't have anything better to do than debate hypothetical illegal zombie migration. Then again, they're not wasting their time debating whether to pay for the bills they voted for, to "sequester" their budgets, or to disapprove of Cabinet ministers' nominations because those nominees agree with the Prime Minister who nominated them. 

So on the whole I still give Canada's parliament the edge.


By Taylor Berman
February 13, 2013 | Gawker

Saturday, September 1, 2012

Romney: The 'Fawlty Towers' candidate

Can you imagine the furor on the Right if President Obama failed to mention our troops in harms way in his national convention speech?  

Wrote conservative commentator William Kristol about Romney's acceptance speech at the GOP convention:

Leave aside the question of the political wisdom of Romney's silence, and the opportunities it opens up for President Obama next week. What about the civic propriety of a presidential nominee failing even to mention, in his acceptance speech, a war we're fighting and our young men and women who are fighting it?

We can call Romney the "Fawlty Towers" candidate.  Motto: "Don't mention the war!"  Romney also failed to mention illegal immigration or his policy stance.  Does he really think he can sneak his way into the White House without taking a stand on these issues that Americans care about?

Monday, August 20, 2012

Zogby: U.S. is a work in progress - NO WAY, JOSE!

Apparently, prominent pollster James Zogby is a fellow card-carrying member of the Blame America First crowd.  He wrote:  

America is, we are told, the exceptional nation: the greatest democracy, the greatest producer of wealth, the model nation that is envied by the world, a people destined to lead the world. In the language of those on the right, America becomes an idol, infused by the Creator with blessings and qualities so self-evident, that to question this article of faith is akin to heresy.   

I wonder why we are so insecure that we need to engage in endless self-praise. And I can't help but wonder what the rest of the world thinks of all this in the face of policies and behaviors that make such a wildly different statement.

He actually cares what the rest of the world thinks about us!...  That's a dead giveaway he feels guilty about American power and secretly despises its providential responsibility to lead the world, just like all liberals do.

Nevertheless, Zogby maintains that "America does have a good story to tell," which consists of U.S. liberals and progressives fighting and winning all the good fights: ending segregation; defending civil rights; establishing gender equality; the peace movement; consumer and environmental protections, etc.

"The American story is not one about a country that was born great. It is the story of a country that is struggling to become better," concludes Zogby.  Well, that just can't be squared with our Founding Myths.  If we were always great -- if indeed we were at our greatest at the time of our Founding Fathers -- then there is no getting better, only decline as we abandon their first principles.  Therefore, even though I still Blame America First, I must reject Zogby's hypothesis. 


Love it or leave it! ... Unless you hate America's gays, atheists, Muslims, minorities, labor unions, public education, Hollywood, intellectuals, NOW, the ACLU, the IRS... then you can stay.


By James Zogby
August 18, 2012 | Huffington Post

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Monday, June 20, 2011

Dan Rather: Guest visas at U.S. workers' expense

More people need to know about this, as we try to devise policies to lower current 9 percent U.S. unemployment:

"According to U.S. Department of Labor, a guest worker visa known as H-1B for 'specialty occupations' especially tech workers -- may be issued 'even when a qualified U.S. worker wants the job.' In fact, the bulletin notes, 'A U.S. worker can be displaced from the job in favor of the foreign worker.'"

"The federal government doesn't have any official counts of the guest worker population. Estimates put the current number of H-1B visa holders alone somewhere between 600,000 and 1,000,000. In recent years, U.S. corporations have been using an ever-proliferating array of temporary visas to import foreign labor -- including visitor visas, which as we reported in a recent Dan Rather Reports, are not supposed to be used for any purpose involving gainful employment."


By Dan Rather
June 17, 2011 | Huffington Post

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Farmers: E-Verify will destroy farm labor supply

Get ready for $5 heads of lettuce, America!


By Alicia A. Caldwell
June 6, 2011 | Huffington Post

The agriculture industry fears a disaster is on the horizon if the one bit of new immigration policy that Congress seems to agree on becomes law.

A plan to require all American businesses to run their employees through E-Verify, a program that confirms each is legally entitled to work in the U.S., could wreak havoc on an industry where 80 percent of the field workers are illegal immigrants. So could the increased paperwork audits already under way by the Obama administration.

"We are headed toward a train wreck," said Rep. Zoe Lofgren, a California Democrat whose district includes agriculture-rich areas. "The stepped up (workplace) enforcement has brought this to a head."

Lofgren said farmers are worried that their work force is about to disappear. They say they want to hire legal workers and U.S. citizens, but that it's nearly impossible, given the relatively low wages and back-breaking work.

Wages can range from minimum wage to more than $20 an hour. But workers often are paid by the piece; the faster they work, they more they make. A steady income lasts only as long as the planting and harvesting seasons, which can be measured in weeks.

"Few citizens express interest, in large part because this is hard, tough work," Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsak said this past week. "Our broken immigration system offers little hope for producers to do the right thing."

Arturo S. Rodriguez, president of United Farm Workers, said migrant farm workers are exposed to blistering heat with little or no shade and few water breaks. It's skilled work, he said, requiring produce pickers to be exact and quick. While the best mushroom pickers can earn about $35,000 to $40,000 a year for piece work, there's little chance for a good living and American workers don't seem interested in farm jobs.

"It is extremely difficult, hard, dangerous work," Rodriguez said.

Last year Rodriguez's group started the "Take Our Jobs" campaign to entice American workers to take the fields. He said of about 86,000 inquiries the group got about the offer, only 11 workers took jobs.

"That really was thought up by farm workers trying to figure out what is it we needed to do to show that we are not trying to take away anyone's job," Rodriguez said.

Vilsak and the American Farm Bureau Federation president, Bob Stallman, said in a recent conference call with reporters that the best and likely only hope to stave off an economic catastrophe for American farmers and consumers is comprehensive overhaul of immigration policy. Vilsak said the industry is worth about $5 billion to $9 billion a year.

"We need to address the agriculture labor supply," Stallman said. "This situation will affect the future of America's farmers and ranchers."

Manuel Cunha, president of Nisei Farmers League, a group representing growers in central California, said farmers don't have the wherewithal to verify a worker's status when their labor force is often hired on the spot and in a hurry to pick ripe crops. Forcing them to verify a worker's legal status, he said, would prove disastrous.

"If we were to use E-Verify now, we'd shut down, either that or farmers would go to prison," said Cunha, a Fresno-based citrus farmer. "We've admitted many workers are not legal and if you have to get rid of everybody, where do I go to get my labor? Nowhere. We have to have a work force that we can put in the system."

Shawn Coburn, a politically active farmer who grows thousands of acres of almonds on the west side Fresno County, said he favors tighter borders, a guest worker program and a path to citizenship for those already in the U.S., or at the very least their children. But, like Cunha, he believes a mandatory E-Verify plan would be nothing but trouble for the industry.

"I don't think it's going to happen, but if it does it would throw the California economy for a loop," Coburn said.

Without a broad overhaul in the works, industry officials have focused on improving the H-2A temporary agricultural workers visa program that's aimed at allowing season workers to come and work on U.S. farms.

The program, however, is costly, time consuming and inefficient, according to Cathleen Enright, vice president of federal government affairs for the Western Growers Association.

"It has never been a great program or easy to work with," Enright said. "It's an unbelievably crushing program."

There isn't enough capacity in the system to process, interview and approve visa applications for the nearly 1 million seasonal workers who take to the fields every season. Farmers are required to pay for a worker's transportation from their home country to the fields, provide housing and other benefits.

Even minor violations of the numerous rules and regulations that govern the H-2A program can lead to hefty fines, Enright said.

"It's too expensive, it's too litigious, it's too bureaucratic," said Lee Wicker, deputy director of the North Carolina Growers Association. "We need a program that farmers can use and have confidence in."

Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., said farmers in his area want to do the right thing and hire legal workers but they are frustrated with the stifling bureaucracy that comes with the visa program.

"It's a labyrinthine visa process, with the slow walking of applications," Gowdy said. "You could not by accident come up with a better plan to ruin the small family farm."

Farmers, he said, "are just at their wits' end."

Using the program to get workers can put farmers at a disadvantage if their competitors decide to take their chances and hire illegal workers, Wicker said.

Lawmakers agree the visa program is problematic, but there's a wide divide on how to make it workable.

In 2009, Rep. Howard Berman, D-Calif., and Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., introduced legislation that would have given temporary resident status to immigrant farm workers and have created a path to legal residency for those workers after five years.

Neither bill, known as the AgJOBS Act, made it out committee. The idea is part of the discussion involving changes to the seasonal workers visa program, but Republicans have pledged to block it because it includes a path to legal status for immigrant workers.

Rep. Dan Lungren, a California Republican from an agriculture industry-heavy district near Sacramento, has said he sees that same "train wreck" Lofgren described, but that the AgJOBS bill isn't the answer.

"We're going to have a crisis in agriculture," Lungren said during a hearing this year on the visa program by the House Judiciary subcommittee on immigration policy and enforcement. "And while it sounds great to say an agreement (on AgJOBS) is going to take care of it, it's not going to pass."

About the only hope for success for any immigration-related legislation, Lungren and others say, is a bill that would make it mandatory for American employers to use the government's E-Verify program to ensure their workers are legal.

GOP Rep. Lamar Smith of Texas, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, has pledged to introduce such legislation. Such a proposal appeared to get a push this past week when the Supreme Court ruled 5-3 in favor of an Arizona law that allows the state to penalize businesses for hiring illegal immigrant workers.

Agriculture officials say there needs to be some exception for farm workers.

"It needs to take into account the unique aspects of agriculture," Vilsak said.

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

India outsourcing outsourced jobs back to Americans

First we outsourced our call-center jobs to India. Now Indian firms are "cross-sourcing" some of those jobs back to Americans.

Sure, they still abuse America's H1-B visa system, bringing in as many as 30,000 indentured servants to the U.S. per year to earn below-minimum wage, but, thanks to demands in India for higher wages, at least some of those low-paying jobs are coming back to America!

Ronil Hira, a public policy professor at the Rochester Institute of Technology, said Indian workers make up more than 90 percent of most outsourcing companies' U.S. head counts. He and other critics argue that many of these workers are not more highly skilled than Americans, they simply work for less. "It's harming American workers," he said. "It's taking away their job opportunities, bringing down their wages and harming their working conditions."

To paraphrase Thomas Friedman, "If you can't beat 'em, join 'em." Score another one for flat-earth globalism!



Friday, April 22, 2011

Starship Troopers prescient: 'Service Guarantees Citizenship!'

We knew this was coming. With 3 wars going on, soon the army will start corralling illegals into boot camps on the U.S.-Mexico border.

"Service Guarantees Citizenship!" WOULD YOU LIKE TO KNOW MORE?



April 21, 2011 | AP

CBSNews — FORT JACKSON, S.C. - Military service has long been one route to U.S. citizenship. Now the Army and Navy, in need of special... Read Article

Friday, July 30, 2010

Obama tougher on immigration enforcement than Dubya

But he still gets no respect from conservatives. It just goes to show they're not rational.

He's attacking the demand side of the problem by doing careful (boring) audits of businesses, which is the solution I've been preaching all along, instead of the Sheriff Joe-type Gestapo tactics that are red meat for anger-addicted FOX News viewers.

"Ultimately, if the demand for undocumented workers falls, the incentive for people to come here illegally will decline as well," Obama said.


By Scott Horsley
July 28, 2010 | All Things Considered, NPR

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Ag. policy + NAFTA increase illegal immigration

This connects the dots:

"Beyond a broken immigration system, U.S. policies make U.S. farm products cheap, open borders so we can dump them on Mexico, promote an economic development model that fails to create jobs, and make it easy for companies to use undocumented workers to drive down wages and prevent unionization."



Unless we address our trade, agricultural and labor policies, any efforts to fix out immigration system will fail.

By Tim Wise
May 21, 2010 | Foreign Policy in Focus

Monday, May 17, 2010

Utah, Main showing GOP coming unglued

By Dana Milbank
May 16, 2010 | Washington Post

Future historians tracing the crackup of the Republican Party may well look to May 8, 2010, as an inflection point.

That was the day, as is now well known, that Sen. Robert Bennett, who took the conservative position 84 percent of the time over his career, was deemed not conservative enough by fellow Utah Republicans and booted out of the primary.

Less well known, but equally ominous, is what happened that same day, 2,500 miles east in Maine. There, the state Republican Party chucked its platform -- a sensible New England mix of free-market economics and conservation -- and adopted a manifesto of insanity: abolishing the Federal Reserve, calling global warming a "myth," sealing the border, and, as a final plank, fighting "efforts to create a one world government."

One world government? Do our friends Down East fear an invasion from the Canadian maritime provinces? A Viking flotilla coming from Iceland under cover of volcanic ash?

I was pondering this mystery while on the elliptical machine this week and watching Glenn Beck (I find he increases my heart rate), when I heard him inform his viewers that "they" -- President Obama and friends -- "are creating a global governance structure."

"Social and ecological justice and all of this bullcrap," Beck told his viewers, "is man's work for a global government." Beck -- who is second in popularity only to Sarah Palin among the type of Tea Party activists who hijacked the Maine GOP -- tossed out phrases such as "global standards" and "global bank tax" -- all part of a conspiracy by the "global government people." He further provided the news that "Jesus doesn't want a cap-and-trade system."

Not once did Beck refer to the big news events of the day, such as Afghan President Hamid Karzai's visit to the White House or the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. It was as if he had created a parallel universe for his 2-million-plus viewers. Similarly, on Monday, when Obama nominated Elena Kagan to the Supreme Court, Beck omitted that news in favor of a fanciful administration attempt to restore the broadcast Fairness Doctrine. On Tuesday, USA Today had the headline "Tax bills in 2009 at lowest level since 1950" (the nonpartisan Tax Foundation put it at 1959); Beck skipped that, instead saying he doesn't want changes to the Internet "at least until people aren't worshipping Satan, you know, in office." (Beck maintained later that he really wasn't "saying that Obama was a Satan worshipper.")

Beck justifiably credited his viewers for "what happened to Bob Bennett in Utah." He warned: "People in Washington, you should be terrified."

We should be terrified -- particularly the Republicans, whose party is turning into this One-World-Government, Obama-worships-Satan, Jesus-opposes-climate-bill mélange. And Beck is only part of the trouble. Consider these GOP milestones of recent days:

In the Alabama gubernatorial race, a conservative attack ad charged that a Republican gubernatorial candidate "recently said the Bible is only partially true." The outraged candidate reaffirmed his "belief that this world and everything in it is a masterpiece created by the hands of God."

In Utah, just a couple of days after Bennett's fall, conservative Rep. Jason Chaffetz talked about trying to topple none other than Sen. Orrin Hatch (89 percent lifetime conservative rating) in 2012.

In Arizona, Sen. John McCain, who once said a fence is the "least effective" way to secure the border, continued his fight against a conservative primary challenge by releasing an ad demanding, "Complete the danged fence."

Democrats are having purity putsches, too, in Arkansas, Pennsylvania and Colorado. But these are mild compared with the sort of uprising Republicans are experiencing in places such as Maine, tranquil land of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.

The Maine Republicans a week ago rejected a platform proclaiming that "we believe that the proper role of government is to help provide for those who can not help themselves"; that "we believe in ensuring that our children have access to the best educational opportunities"; and that "every person's dignity, freedom, liberty, ability and responsibility must be honored."

In its place, they approved a document invoking the Tea Party movement and Ron Paul and insisting that "health care is not a right." The new platform demands: "Eliminate motor voter"; "Reject the UN Treaty on Rights of the Child"; "Eliminate the Department of Education"; "Arrest and detain . . . anyone here illegally, and then deport, period."

[I can actually agree with that last part, assuming we don't start kicking down doors on flimsy or zero evidence, Gestapo-style. Also let's just remember that enforcement, legal processing, and deportation of illegals all entail significant Big Guvmint costs. Freedom from illegals isn't free. - J]

It was a swap they will come to rue -- assuming they survive the Viking invasion.

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Arizona, Boomers, and USA's demographic future

Once again we see that selfish, self-absorbed Baby Boomers are the root cause of all America's problems. But unfortunately they all vote.



Will Arizona Be America's Future?
Immigration, Demographics, Race, Regions and States

By William H. Frey, Senior Fellow, Metropolitan Policy Program
April 28, 2010 | The Brookings Institution

[...]

Demographically, there is no doubt Latinos and other immigrant minorities are America's future, and on this, Arizona stands on the front lines. Over the past two decades the state has seen its Latino population grow by 180 percent as its racial composition shifted from 72 to 58 percent white.

Yet there is an important demographic nuance to this growth—providing context to the white backlash in Arizona in ways that could play out else where. It is the fact that the state's swift Hispanic growth has been concentrated in young adults and children, creating a "cultural generation gap" with largely white baby boomers and older populations, the same demographic that predominates in the recent Tea Party protests. A shorthand measure for this cultural generation gap in a state is the disparity between children and seniors in their white population shares. Arizona leads the nation on this gap at 40 (where 43 percent of its child population is white compared with 83 percent for seniors). But the states of Nevada (34 percent), California (33 percent), Texas (32 percent), New Mexico (31 percent), and Florida (29 percent) are not that far behind. (See Table 1).

Nationally this gap is 25 percentage points.

The appeal of anti-immigrant, anti-Latino messages among boomers and seniors may seem surprising especially because the former are so closely associated with 1960s era liberalism and Civil Rights. Yet this stereotype hardly applies to all boomers and recent presidential elections have shown them to be either politically split or, in the case of white boomer men, veering toward the right. Moreover, boomers grew up in a more insular America than did their parents or their children. Between 1946 and 1964, the years of the boom, the immigrant share of the nation's population shrunk to an all-time low (under 5 percent) and those who did arrive were largely whites from Europe. Most boomers grew up and lived much of their lives in predominantly white suburbs, residentially isolated from minorities.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Hawking: Earth should beware aliens


Hawking proves that space aliens can't be any scarier looking than he is.
Warned Stephen Hawking:
"We only have to look at ourselves to see how intelligent life might develop into something we wouldn't want to meet. I imagine they might exist in massive ships, having used up all the resources from their home planet. Such advanced aliens would perhaps become nomads, looking to conquer and colonise whatever planets they can reach."
He concludes that trying to make contact with alien races is 'a little too risky'. He said: "If aliens ever visit us, I think the outcome would be much as when Christopher Columbus first landed in America, which didn't turn out very well for the Native Americans."

Well, you don't have to be a disabled genius astrophysicist to know that. All you had to do was watch Independence Day or the re-make of War of the Worlds

And if you've ever listened to Sarah Palin or Tom Tancredo, then you know we should also beware terrestrial aliens who are nomads looking to conquer and colonize whatever countries they can reach.


By Jonathan Leake
April 25, 2010 | Times Online

Friday, March 19, 2010

The final solution to $1.4 billion border fence boondoggle?

"In 2006 the Department of Homeland Security contracted with The Boeing Company to build a string of towers along the 2,000-mile U.S. Mexican border to keep illegal aliens out. The 'virtual fence' was supposed to use current technology including radar, cameras and ground sensors. It was also supposed to be complete by now.

"So, 'we the people' have now devoted three plus years and $1,400,000,000, and all we have is a twenty-eight mile test section in the Southern Arizona desert. Boeing, the largest military contractor in the history of humankind has made lots of money, and Janet Napolitano, head of Homeland Security for President Obama just said that she is freezing funds for the fence, which is officially called the Secure Border Initiative Network."


OK, so maybe that didn't work, but I'm sure we can leverage Boeing's vast military-aerospace expertise in other ways to get rid of illegals... like shooting them in giant rocket ship into outer space? It would only cost a few trillion. Come on, we're good for it! Or maybe we can send unmanned aerial drones to drop bombs on them before they try to cross the border? Or robotic gun turrets that blast anything that moves? Come on, people, we gotta think outside the box here.

Oh, wait, I know! Let's invade and occupy Mexico! Then there wouldn't be a border anymore, it'd all be ours! Brilliant! I'll get our industry-funded Washington think tanks right on it to circulate their little articles to FOX, Newsmax, and talk radio, while Boeing sets up an anonymous lobbying firm to convince Congress, and Dick Armey and the Koch brothers astroturf a grassroots organization called something like "Citizens for U.S.-Mexican Reconciliation," and the CIA bankrolls a cherry-picked Mexican "dissident" group called something like "The Mexican National Congress," full of exiles who will testify that Mexican drug cartels are converting to Islam, possess WMD, and plan to kidnap and have their way with thousands of U.S. high school girls south of the border this Spring Break. Yep, that oughta do it. OK, everybody, you know your assignments, now get to work!


Do good fences make good neighbors?: US cancels Mexican virtual fence project (video)
By L. Steven Sieden
March 17, 2010 | Seattle Examiner

URL: http://www.examiner.com/x-11394-Seattle-Spiritual-Pathways-Examiner~y2010m3d17-Do-good-fences-make-good-neighbors-US-cancels-Mexican-virtual-fence-project-video

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Obama better 'Deporter-in-Chief' than W?

As thanks for this Obama will get moans of "traitor" from liberals, and continued hatred and paranoia from Repugs and teabaggers who believe he's trying to destroy America.

As Abe Lincoln once said, you can please some of the people some of the time, but you can't please anybody if your name is Barack Hussein Obama.


Immigrant groups say deportations up under Obama
March 8, 2010 | AFP

Immigration rights activists said Monday that deportations have jumped nearly 50 percent under President Barack Obama despite a pledge by the president for a more compassionate immigration policy.

A total of 387,790 people were deported from the United States in 2009, up from 264,503 under the administration of President George W. Bush, according to government figures cited by the Fair Immigration Reform Movement, a coalition of several organizations.

"We are asking President Obama for an immediate halt to deportations and to show leadership to advance immigration reform," said Angelica Salas, executive director of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles.

"This is not sound economic policy or moral policy, this is not leadership nor change we can believe in," said Pramila Jayapal, executive director of One America, one of the groups participating.

"We expect more, we expect the president to order the administration to stop the deportations and demonstrate leadership on passing immigration reform."

The groups at Monday's news conference plan a march on March 21 in Washington to revive efforts for immigration reform.

Monday, February 8, 2010

Review of 'Working In the Shadows: Jobs Americans Won't Do'

Hm. I wonder how many Americans have decided to pick lettuce or fruit or work in dangerous slaughterhouses -- all alongside illegal workers -- during this recession?

Is there anything that could force middle-class Americans to do these jobs?


The Violence of Work: New Book Brings Work Out of the Shadows
By Micah Williams
February 3, 2010 Toward Freedom

Reviewed: Working In The Shadows: A Year of Doing the Jobs Americans Won't Do, By Gabriel Thompson, Nation Books, December 2009

URL: http://towardfreedom.com/home/content/view/1845/1/

Monday, January 11, 2010

Literal blood-sucking corporate vampires

To correct Ross Perot, that "giant sucking sound" isn't U.S. jobs going to Mexico, but rather poor Mexicans' blood being sucked into this multi-billion-dollar U.S. industry.

America is one of the few countries that allows corporations to buy human plasma, but according to the NYT, "the plasma industry says it pays donors for their time, not for the plasma itself." How nice. Maybe we should start calling these desperate Mexican donors "hematology consultants."


By Mark Ames
January 9, 2009 | Exiledonline