Saturday, May 8, 2010
Thoughts on Immigration, Reform, Arizona SB 1070
America, we have a problem. Arizona, we have a BIGGER problem. Adding to it all, though, is uninformed people (from both sides of the debate) spouting erroneous information and parroting
ideologies that comes from other uninformed, uneducated, or biased individuals or groups. Perhaps, you've heard Abraham Lincoln's saying: "It is better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to open one's mouth and remove all doubt." It is the good ol' US of A, free speech reigns (and ain't it great?!), but you should know what you are saying, especially when arguing an issue as divisive as the one before us.
The problem America has right now is immigration. Granted, there are many other issues with our country at this time, but the one getting the most play is immigration, and to be more specific, illegal immigration. I will state this plainly so there is no question about it: I am for immigration; I am against illegal immigration; I am for immigration reform; I believe the way Arizona is addressing the problem is extremely wrong. Also, in the midst of all of this rancor and debate, I am appalled and surprised at what I have seen and heard from some of my fellow Americans.
America, our problem is demonstrated by the picture above. We have a big open border, an open door per se, and we just want people to stay out because we say so. America is so inviting to many, the "land of opportunity", and we want people to come legally. The problem is that doing so legally costs a lot of money, takes a lot of time, and includes the chance that you won't win the "visa lottery" administered by the government. The alternative, swimming across a river or walking across a desert, although more dangerous, eliminates the three obstacles mentioned, and the benefits greatly outweigh the risks in the minds of many. Our borders are too porous. I don't know what the answer is. I have been against a border wall because it causes other issues, such as hurting landowner's rights, cutting off irrigation sources for farmers, etc, but no system is perfect. A border wall in desolate areas, along with increased enforcement closer to the cities and towns might work, but I am not versed enough in these issues to suggest a solution. The thing is, it is not just Mexicans, other Latin Americans, etc. crossing illegally. There have been suspected terrorists that have tried to get across, and we know we are at war with some ideological people that just want to come in and cause havoc. Somehow, we need to make it to where the picture of the open door above is not so open or easy to come across.
I strongly believe that if people want to come into our country, they need to do so legally. PLAIN and SIMPLE. Getting them here legally helps everyone, as it starts incorporating these individuals as members of our societies. They are more likely to be involved in their community, to encourage their families to participate, and to start making the "upward" move that America provides opportunities for. Legal immigrants pay taxes. Legal immigrants don't need to hide. You know about those low census response rates in these border cities and states? Well, I bet you they are even lower than what is reported. This hurts our cities, our schools, our roads, our bridges, our projects, etc, etc, etc. Yes, it is true that many of these illegals take the jobs no one wants, and it is true that they take less pay than what Americans would for the same jobs. Some would argue that this makes prices lower, but I would argue that we are paying what the market will bear, and the only people benefiting are the owners of these companies or operations who profit tremendously. They aren't going to charge you less because they pay their labor less...they are capitalists and successful for a reason, but it puts them on an uneven playing field with those that do it by the book and pay employment taxes, etc. Oh, don't get me wrong, I am a hardcore capitalist at heart, but people should do things the right way to get their just rewards. I guess that makes me an idealist, too.
My grandparents came here legally over a half century ago and made the trek over the years from visa holders to permanent resident aliens to American citizens. My grandfather started his own plumbing company, with his proper licenses, ascended to be designated a Master Plumber by the state of Texas, and was extremely successful with his company at the time of his death. He built and owned his own home. He was the hardest worker I have ever seen, fair, reliable, honest...his reputation above reproach. In my eyes, he lived the American dream. Many immigrants, both legal and illegal, are here to work, and they work hard. The illegal immigrants hurt themselves since they are stuck without the opportunity to ascend. They can't legally own a home, they can't own a business, they don't know what is available to them and their families as many shirk away from these opportunities in fear of being exposed and possibly deported. This is why some sort of immigration reform is necessary. We MUST do something. Doing nothing is wrong.
Immigration reform is tricky. What can we do? There needs to be both incentives and deterrents to make it work. Amnesty, such as letting whoever is here just stay as long as they apply for citizenship, is a horrible idea...why would you reward people for breaking the law, and then just let them get away with it? My idea is an offshoot of amnesty, but with penalties attached. Yeah, kinda an oxymoron, not really amnesty, but how about this: If you are already here, working, and without a criminal record, you can stay, but you must provide several things. You must provide a letter of employment from your employer, a job history, and proof that you are self-sufficient and not depending on government handouts to make it. You must agree to pay taxes for the length of time you've been here, along with additional penalties or citizenship application fees, and those can come from your employment wages going into the future. You can be granted provisional status until these things are fully paid, and at the time your debt is satisfied, you become a legal immigrant. Why would someone agree to do this? Well, pressure will be put on by their employers since we would fine employers a huge amount if they are found to be employing illegals who aren't participating. Furthermore, if you are here and you don't enroll in this program in the 6-month to 1 year window provided, for example, then you waive your right to ever be considered for citizenship. Make this a bigger crime than what is in the books now. Don't send people to cushy jails or deport them right across the border where they can just come back easily...it is a time to bring back hard labor camps. Yeah, a little extreme, but you have every single opportunity to make yourself legal. Do it right, or leave. Again, PLAIN and SIMPLE.
This brings me to the new Arizona legislation, AZ SB 1070...wow. First of all, those of you arguing against this on the basis of discrimination because most illegals aliens are Mexicans, etc are wrong, and you detract from the real issues at hand. Entering our borders illegally makes you a criminal, based on the laws of our country which have been around for a very long time. Those of you arguing for it on the basis of "if you aren't illegal, you have nothing to hide" are also wrong as to what the real issues are. Look, the intent of the law is to curb illegal immigration, but Arizona totally screwed up with the way they are doing it. The law states that if a law enforcement officer suspects that you might be here illegally, that s/he has the right to ask for you to provide documentation showing that you can be here. The main point of contention that I, and many other people have, is that this will lead to racial profiling. How, you ask?
I am an American citizen of Mexican descent. My skin is brown. I can speak Spanish, I prefer English, but I am not ashamed by my ability to speak Spanish. If I were to be in a fender bender in Arizona, say, with my grandmother in the car who prefers Spanish, and I am explaining to her in Spanish whatever it may be, and the cop hears me, he can ask me to prove that I am an American citizen. Why would he ask me....why would he suspect that I might be illegal? Well, I'm brown, and I speak Spanish, and "most" illegals are Mexican. Here's the problem: I can refuse. It is my right as an American citizen. I am entitled to my 14th amendment rights of due process. I don't care who the hell you are, but I do not need to prove to you that I am an American, because as an American, that is my right. A driver's license is not official documentation. You need a birth certificate or passport. If you don't or can't provide it, you can be arrested and taken to jail. If my accident was (and this is only an example) with someone who was white and speaking English, the cop might not be inclined to ask them for proof that they are US citizens, and therein lies the problem. The Constitution of this country is what makes America great. I will not let you infringe on my rights. I am an American, too.
Some people say: "Just speak to the cop in English, tell him you are a US citizen, and be done with it." Due to my work, I dealt with many Mexican nationals, many here living or visiting legally, and you would be surprised how many speak perfect English or don't look like whatever the stereotype of a Mexican is. English is not the official language of the United States...I can speak whatever I want. Make it the official language, but people can still learn English. Just as many of us had Spanish classes in school, are you not aware that many Mexican schools have English classes, too?
Some people say: "Look, illegal immigration is a big problem. Just put up with it. It is just a little inconvenience for you. Big deal." I paraphrased that from a debate I had with a white friend of a cousin of mine. Look, it is a very big deal. If you are going to put checkpoints at every corner and check everyone's papers, I'm fine with it, just as I'm perfectly fine with the Border Patrol checkpoints when you leave any border city. If you are going to put checkpoints and wave most people through, but ask me for my papers because you suspect I might be illegal due to my Intocable music coming out of my stereo, the soccer jersey a friend is wearing, or mainly because of my skin color, yeah, that is a huge problem. This guy I was debating has a quote he likes to say: "White is right." He was kinda proud of himself that he was so unabashed in saying it. This country is a little backwards sometimes. It's sad. I have rarely felt discrimination or bigotry/racism before, but in the last couple of years it seems that the far right ideologies are making it okay to spew this hatred. I worked at a company that absorbed a company in the Deep South, and although I never had a problem with many of the people from that area, there were two individuals that spoke down to me and made me feel uncomfortable, and you could tell their disdain was from the fact that they thought I was beneath them as a person, since I was "Mexican." I'm not, you know? LOL, some people are just raised differently.
Anyway, sorry for the freaking overly long post. I will part with the following status a cousin of mine from AZ, who is serving our country in Afghanistan right now, posted on his FB a few weeks ago: "Do you realize that in AZ they can randomly pull you over for being brown? Check your birth certificate and ask for your SSN card (which you are not supposed to carry.) That's a very short step to invading my house to see if I got illegals hiding out. It's kind of how the national socialist party started in Germany in the 1930's. Except they were after the Jews. And we all know how that turned out."
Thoughts? Agree/disagree? Why?
Tuesday, March 30, 2010
Selena (Quintanilla-Perez) died 15 years ago today
On March 31st, 1995, Selena was murdered. It has been 15 years since that day, and it is weird that I still remember where I was when I heard the news. You know how people say they remember where they were when JFK died, or even how we remember the exact moment we heard about the 9/11 attacks...well, this image and moment is ingrained in my mind. It is weird how the mind chisels these memories in, and although I'm not saying it is the same magnitude as a president getting assassinated or the largest terrorism attack in history, it was a huge moment in the Mexican-American culture.
I was on an old Bluebird school bus, and we had just gotten to a UIL Academic meet in Del Rio, TX, which was going to be our only overnight trip for the year. It was a Friday, and we had just pulled up to the hotel where we were going to be staying that evening, as there were events both days. One of our sponsors, our teacher/vice principal, Mr. Sanchez, got down to go get the keys and check us all in. He took a while, and when he came back on the bus, he had a somber look on his face, and said he had an announcement for us. Coincidentally, the one and only Johnny Canales (you got it, take it away!) was staying in the same hotel, as he was getting married that weekend there (in Del Rio?!). He was in the lobby on the phone, talking to someone in Corpus Christi about the news. This was before cell phones were all over the place, no text messaging, etc...I mean, my brother and I had a beeper for my Mom to reach us, and that was as high-tech as it would get!
Mr. Sanchez told us all that he had just been informed by Johnny that Selena had been shot, and it was rumored that she had passed away, but that they were awaiting further confirmation and details. Some of us smart-asses (yes, me included, can you believe it?) were certain that Mr. Sanchez was playing an early April Fools joke on us and didn't believe him initially, but a girl who had gotten down to call her mom from a payphone came back in tears and confirmed it. (She came back with other crazy rumors, though, one being that it was rumored that the murderer was Emilio Navaira's wife, as she had caught Selena and Emilio together). Some of the girls broke into tears. The mood got somber. I remember not knowing how to feel about it.
I liked Selena, but I wasn't what you would call a huge fan. I mean, to me, she was a regional artist with talent, and I knew she was very popular in Laredo and South Texas. She was only 6+ years older than me, but I had been hearing about her for over a decade, from even back in the day when my parents would go see her perform as a 14-15 year old at the Roxy (where the Metex on San Bernardo now stands). She was everywhere and she was just a part of the culture. I remember her music always being on at my house, especially in my little sister's room, and I remember all the little girls wanting to be like her. Either New Years 1995 or that February at the Jalapeno Festival, my parents had gotten 4 tickets, 2 for them, and 2 for my brother and me. My brother and I, eerily and regrettably, declined to go, saying that she'd be around for decades and we'd just see her live some other time. Unfortunately, we never got that chance.
Now that it is 15 years that she has been gone, a significant milestone has been passed...she has now been dead longer than the length of what her career was, which was 14 years. Nevertheless, she hasn't left the minds of many people in our culture, and I think people will remember her forever. A couple of years later, in 1997, the movie biopic Selena starring and making a star of Jennifer Lopez came out, and made some more people aware of her. Her posthumous album, Dreaming of You, was well-received, and I have no doubt that she would've been a cross-over success. I remember and I have confirmed that People magazine did a special commemorative issue for her, something that had only been done before for Jackie O, I believe. Her issue was reprinted countless times and outsold the other split cover, which had the cast of Friends on it, and it led to the creation of People en Espanol.
I reflected on what she meant to our culture after that, and have thought about it several times since then, and it is amazing to see what a force she was. One of my friends (anti-his own culture, pero con el nopal en la frente) said that Kurt Cobain's suicide was bigger impact-wise in their music genres, but I strongly disagree. You don't see as many people commemorating his death or radio stations playing his music all day on that date as they do for Selena. Here was a poor Mexican-American girl who made it, who changed the face of Tejano music, and funnily enough, she did it initially by phonetically learning the words to her songs as she didn't speak Spanish.
Texas Monthly has an excellent cover story on her this month, where people reflect on her life. I am sure her music will be played all day tomorrow on the Tejano stations. I am sad she got taken away, as even though she was ultra-successful already, I am positive she would've been a huge superstar when she crossed over. I just wanted to remember her today, 15 years from the date of her death, as I have realized what she meant to our culture.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dvfZ95ueOcQ
I was on an old Bluebird school bus, and we had just gotten to a UIL Academic meet in Del Rio, TX, which was going to be our only overnight trip for the year. It was a Friday, and we had just pulled up to the hotel where we were going to be staying that evening, as there were events both days. One of our sponsors, our teacher/vice principal, Mr. Sanchez, got down to go get the keys and check us all in. He took a while, and when he came back on the bus, he had a somber look on his face, and said he had an announcement for us. Coincidentally, the one and only Johnny Canales (you got it, take it away!) was staying in the same hotel, as he was getting married that weekend there (in Del Rio?!). He was in the lobby on the phone, talking to someone in Corpus Christi about the news. This was before cell phones were all over the place, no text messaging, etc...I mean, my brother and I had a beeper for my Mom to reach us, and that was as high-tech as it would get!
Mr. Sanchez told us all that he had just been informed by Johnny that Selena had been shot, and it was rumored that she had passed away, but that they were awaiting further confirmation and details. Some of us smart-asses (yes, me included, can you believe it?) were certain that Mr. Sanchez was playing an early April Fools joke on us and didn't believe him initially, but a girl who had gotten down to call her mom from a payphone came back in tears and confirmed it. (She came back with other crazy rumors, though, one being that it was rumored that the murderer was Emilio Navaira's wife, as she had caught Selena and Emilio together). Some of the girls broke into tears. The mood got somber. I remember not knowing how to feel about it.
I liked Selena, but I wasn't what you would call a huge fan. I mean, to me, she was a regional artist with talent, and I knew she was very popular in Laredo and South Texas. She was only 6+ years older than me, but I had been hearing about her for over a decade, from even back in the day when my parents would go see her perform as a 14-15 year old at the Roxy (where the Metex on San Bernardo now stands). She was everywhere and she was just a part of the culture. I remember her music always being on at my house, especially in my little sister's room, and I remember all the little girls wanting to be like her. Either New Years 1995 or that February at the Jalapeno Festival, my parents had gotten 4 tickets, 2 for them, and 2 for my brother and me. My brother and I, eerily and regrettably, declined to go, saying that she'd be around for decades and we'd just see her live some other time. Unfortunately, we never got that chance.
Now that it is 15 years that she has been gone, a significant milestone has been passed...she has now been dead longer than the length of what her career was, which was 14 years. Nevertheless, she hasn't left the minds of many people in our culture, and I think people will remember her forever. A couple of years later, in 1997, the movie biopic Selena starring and making a star of Jennifer Lopez came out, and made some more people aware of her. Her posthumous album, Dreaming of You, was well-received, and I have no doubt that she would've been a cross-over success. I remember and I have confirmed that People magazine did a special commemorative issue for her, something that had only been done before for Jackie O, I believe. Her issue was reprinted countless times and outsold the other split cover, which had the cast of Friends on it, and it led to the creation of People en Espanol.
I reflected on what she meant to our culture after that, and have thought about it several times since then, and it is amazing to see what a force she was. One of my friends (anti-his own culture, pero con el nopal en la frente) said that Kurt Cobain's suicide was bigger impact-wise in their music genres, but I strongly disagree. You don't see as many people commemorating his death or radio stations playing his music all day on that date as they do for Selena. Here was a poor Mexican-American girl who made it, who changed the face of Tejano music, and funnily enough, she did it initially by phonetically learning the words to her songs as she didn't speak Spanish.
Texas Monthly has an excellent cover story on her this month, where people reflect on her life. I am sure her music will be played all day tomorrow on the Tejano stations. I am sad she got taken away, as even though she was ultra-successful already, I am positive she would've been a huge superstar when she crossed over. I just wanted to remember her today, 15 years from the date of her death, as I have realized what she meant to our culture.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dvfZ95ueOcQ
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