Saturday, March 13, 2010

LET'S HAVE A DEBBATE ABOUT IMMIGRATION REFORM - OPEN LETTER via Nativo Lopez

http://bit.ly/bqbuJ5

Network Aztlan News3-13-2010
 

From: Nativo Lopez nlopez@hermandadmexicana.org
To: NetworkAztlan_Action@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Thu, March 11, 2010 3:24:14 PM
Subject: RE: [NetworkAztlan_Action] 


LET'S HAVE A DEBATE ABOUT IMMIGRATION REFORM - OPEN LETTER

No number or sponsor as of this moment. We are attempting to open up a broader and honest debate about the issue and the parameters from which the immigration issue and reform should be considered, and not only debate the issue within the narrow confines of the current versions of legislation that have been proposed, or what Schumer has in store for us, for example. We can observe that the debate is narrower to only address what's on the table, and not the root causes of immigration and the manipulation of labor and the labor-force - both domestic and international. That's the point of the OPEN LETTER, which is already gathering many endorsers nationally.

Nativo V. Lopez
National Director
Hermandad Mexicana Latinoamericana
611 W. Civic Center Drive, Suite 402
Santa Ana, CA 92701
(714) 541-0250
Fax: (714) 541-4597

National President
Mexican American Political Association (MAPA)
310 N. Soto Street
Los Angeles, CA 90033
(323) 269-1575
nativolopez@mapa-ca.org

This letter was initiated by the Grassroots Immigrant Justice Network, a group which was recently formed by leaders in the immigrant rights and labor movements across the country. Initial members include Isabel Garcia, David Silva Villalobos, Carlos Arango, Juan Jose Bocanegra, Nativo Lopez, David Bacon, Lisa Luinenburg, Cristobal Cavazos, John Steinbach, Daniela Ortiz-Bahamonde, George Shriver, Jason McGahan, and Domingo Gonzales.

Although the political climate seems uncertain, we are proposing a different approach to discussing Comprehensive Immigration Reform. We need to generate a national debate based on immigration as a labor mobility and human rights issue, not as an issue of national security and enforcement. Immigrants have made vast contributions to the U.S., and they should be granted the right to live here legally and without fear. We should recognize migration as the global phenomenon it is and address the root economic causes of migration.

The principles guiding the national debate around immigration reform should consist of:

1. Build bridges between the peoples of the U.S. and Mexico instead of walls that segregate them and turn them into competitors in a struggle for survival. Take immediate action to stop the deaths along the border and end border militarization.

2. Analyze the effects of free trade agreements like NAFTA on the economies of "sender" countries. End all economic and foreign policies that leave people in "sender" countries with no choice but to migrate in order to support their families.

3. Provide a clear and easy legalization program for the millions of undocumented immigrants who have built their homes here and contributed greatly to the prosperity of the U.S. economy. All immigrants deserve the full rights accorded to U.S. citizens, not a second-class status.

4. Clear the backlogs of hundreds of thousands of immigrants who have been waiting to legalize their status since the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986. Allow more families to reunite with their loved ones by expanding the definition of "family" under current immigration law.

5. Bracero-style guest worker programs and other forms of labor exploitation should be eliminated, and the labor system made to benefit workers and their families, not corporations and agribusiness. Increased labor protections for immigrant workers should also include the freedom of movement between jobs and across national borders.

6. End the criminalization of work through the use of 1-9 audits, E-verify, "silent raids," and other tactics used to carry out mass firings of workers. All workers, immigrants included, have the right to work and seek work without the fear of retaliation.

7. Immigrants and their families have the right to live in their communities without fear. Stop the raids and deportations, end 'enforcement first' policies like 287(g) and Secure Communities, eliminate the privatization of the detention system, and decriminalize the status of undocumented workers. Extend equal rights to all by ratifying the International Convention on the Protection of Migrant Workers.

*****

Many people in the immigrant community look with hope towards the Comprehensive Immigration Reform for America's Security and Prosperity Act of 2009 (CIR ASAP), recently introduced by Representative Luis Gutierrez (D-IL). The bill does make some positive and much-needed changes to the immigration system, including the suspension of 287(g) and Operation Streamline and improvements in the detention system, and the elimination of all bars related to undocumented status (although security and criminal bars cannot be waived). However, it fails to change the basic 'enforcement first' structure of the U.S. immigration system. The bill also falls far short of meeting the just demands raised by the grassroots immigrant rights movement, including an end to the raids and deportations and the militarization of the border, increased protections for immigrant workers, and a fair legalization for all.

Below is a list of concerns being raised by immigrant rights organizations and leaders across the country:

1. On Border Security: The bill increases militarization of the border, guaranteeing the continued deaths of thousands of desperate workers instead of addressing the root causes that fuel immigration across the U.S.-Mexico border. Although 287(g) and Operation Streamline will be suspended, the bill increases collaboration between police and ICE agents along the border.

2. On the Immigrant Detention System: The bill fails to ban the privatization of the detention system, which has led to an increasing number of human rights abuses at the hands of for-profit, non-transparent corporations. Although some improvements are made to conditions in detention centers, immigrants will continue to be criminalized under the current system of enforcement.

3. On Enforcement Activities: While providing a few protections for vulnerable populations picked up in raids, the bill does not guarantee due process procedures for those being deported. At the same time, while in theory suspending the 287(g) program, or polimigra, the bill also seeks to accelerate (at least in border areas) the process of integrating local and state law enforcement agents into the detention and deportation of immigrant workers.

4. On Employment Verification: The proposal mandates the use of the Employment Verification (E-Verify) system by all employers within three years. It also requires employers to fire workers whose social security numbers don't match Social Security Administration databases. This results in the criminalization of immigrant workers and gives employers another tool to break unions and degrade workers' rights across the board.

5. On Family Unity: Although increasing the numbers of family visas available and giving the government greater discretion to waive unlawful presence bars to family reunification, the proposal keeps in place the 1996 law that requires the undocumented to leave the U.S. for 3-10 years in order to become eligible to legalize their status. This law has resulted in unnecessary family separation and immense suffering.

6. On Legalization: The bill will not grant a fair and fast path for the millions of undocumented immigrants who deserve a chance to legalize their status quickly and affordably. Instead, the bill creates a new conditional non-immigrant status (CNIS) visa. Those with CNIS status could apply for legal permanent resident (LPR) status, but no Green Cards would be issued for 6 years after the proposal's enactment (unless existing immigrant backlogs have been cleared). The path to citizenship would likely take many more years.

7. On Agricultural Jobs: The Gutierrez bill includes the AgJOBS Act of 2009, which would provide temporary "blue card" visas to undocumented farm workers who have been living in the United States. In the past, temporary visa programs like the infamous Bracero program have been rife with abuse, benefiting growing companies and not workers.

8. On Students: The Gutierrez bill also includes the DREAM Act, which aims to offer in-state tuition rates to the children of undocumented immigrants. But it conditions the college loans and grants that these young people need on a type of 'community service' which includes military service. This is unacceptable.

9. On Future Flows of Immigrants: The bill creates a Commission on Immigration and Labor Markets to determine the future quotas of temporary legal immigration visas. Any changes in immigration and labor policies will be based on the report of that commission. The establishment of this commission is the first step towards setting up an expanded guest worker program.

*****

Immigrants have fought for justice for many years, and in 2006 they reminded our legislators and politicians just how strong and intelligent their voices are. Now is the time to engage with our communities in honest dialogue and continue to hold our elected officials accountable to the vision of justice coming from the immigrant communities that make up our nation. We shall overcome! ¡Vencerémos!

Nativo V. Lopez
National Director
Hermandad Mexicana Latinoamericana
611 W. Civic Center Drive, Suite 402
Santa Ana, CA 92701
(714) 541-0250
Fax: (714) 541-4597
nativolopez@sbcglobal.net

National President
Mexican American Political Association (MAPA)
310 N. Soto Street
Los Angeles, CA 90033
(323) 269-1575
nativolopez@sbcglobal.net
 

http://aztlannet-news-blog.blogspot.com/2010/03/lets-have-debbate-about-immigration.html
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Friday, March 12, 2010

Today At Sunrise, March 12, 2010 Uekualli Yankuik Xiuitl!!!!! Happy New Year!!!!!

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Today At Sunrise, March 12, 2010
Uekualli Yankuik Xiuitl!!!!! Happy New Year!!!!!
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Thursday, March 11, 2010

The Nation: The Democrat's Immigration Priority by Kai Wright

http://bit.ly/bLv1YS
The Nation: The Democrat's Immigration Priority by Kai Wright
a voter
Enlarge David McNew/Getty Images

Voters go to the polls for Super Tuesday primaries in the predominantly Latino neighborhood of Boyle Heights on February 5, 2008 in Los Angeles, California. Latinos, as a growing population, are an increasingly important factor at the polls.

a voter
David McNew/Getty Images

Voters go to the polls for Super Tuesday primaries in the predominantly Latino neighborhood of Boyle Heights on February 5, 2008 in Los Angeles, California. Latinos, as a growing population, are an increasingly important factor at the polls.


March 10, 2010

The great thing about racists is they'll always take the bait. You won't get far into an immigration-reform debate, for instance, before the GOP's more zealous legislators start doing things like criminalizing priests and calling Miami a "third world country." Which is why Democrats ought to be more eager to spend 2010 debating immigration.


Back in summer 2009, that looked like the plan. President Obama made a big show of brainstorming reforms, by holding a White House summit and meeting with legislators in both parties. New York Sen. Charles Schumer teamed up with South Carolina Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham to work on a bipartisan bill and immigration seemed destined to get space at the top of the 2010 agenda.


Now, of course, Graham remains the lone Republican on board and the congressional calendar remains clogged with the bipartisan blockades of 2009. It's hard to imagine where Democrats will wedge meaningful immigration reform in between health insurance, jobs and banking.


Nonetheless, reform advocates have run out of patience — and the White House is once again very publicly brainstorming the issue. The president met with Schumer and Graham Monday for what Deputy Press Secretary Bill Burton described as "getting an update from them on efforts to create bipartisan immigration legislation." One gets the feeling Obama's trying merely to get in front of a conversation that's destined to heat up, with a reform rally on the National Mall set for March 21 and tea partiers prepping an April response.


But Democrats would be wise to do a good bit more than parade Schumer around. Lay to the side the clear economic and moral arguments for fixing our corrupt, exploitative system. Immigration reform is an issue where Democrats are served better politically by picking a fight with the GOP than running from one. The long-term politics are plain: Latino communities nationwide are young, growing and increasingly ready to show up at the polls. And the certain-to-be xenophobic reaction of the GOP's loudest voices today will not only motive Latinos this November, it will alienate independent voters as well.


Obama's hearty embrace of immigration reform served Democrats well in 2008 (a fact the National Council of La Raza is reminding him of in a new ad; see below). Polling wonks split hairs over whether the Latino vote turned any states, but the fact that we're down to hairs is enough. Latino voters arguably made victory possible in places as disparate as Indiana and Florida, and their political networks have only matured since. Throughout both the South and the Midwest, motivated Latino voters can strengthen Democrats' hand. And after the party's tin-eared 2009, in which it squandered its reform capital while courting enemies, Obama and the Dems could surely use at least one motivated voting bloc this fall.


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Amnesty Now! No compromises on principles!
Unidos Venceremos! United We Will Win!

~Peta-de-Aztlan~ Sacramento, California, Amerika
Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com  
http://help-matrix.ning.com/

http://twitter.com/Peta_de_Aztlan @Peta_de_Aztlan

http://www.facebook.com/Peta51 

"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible,
make violent revolution inevitable."

~ President John F.Kennedy ~ Assassinated November 22, 1963
c/s


Tuesday, March 09, 2010

FYI: Sonya and Simona, MALO, Honoring Cesar Chavez at LRGP

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Unidos Venceremos! United We Will Win!
~Peta-de-Aztlan~ Sacramento, California, Amerika
Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com  
http://help-matrix.ning.com/

http://twitter.com/Peta_de_Aztlan @Peta_de_Aztlan

http://www.facebook.com/Peta51 

"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible,
make violent revolution inevitable."

~ President John F.Kennedy ~ Assassinated November 22, 1963
c/s


----- Forwarded Message ----
From: La Raza Galeria Posada <larazagaleria@gmail.com>
To: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com
Sent: Tue, March 9, 2010 5:55:45 PM
Subject: Sonya and Simona, MALO, Honoring Cesar Chavez at LRGP

                MARCH  at  LRGP
La Raza Galeria PosadaSonya and Simona
Honoring Cesar Chavez

Exclusive photos from Chile and Haiti
            MALO in May




dmv

EXHIBITION EVENTS

 

Friday March 12

Reception for the artists

5:30pm-7:30pm Saturday

Free to the public


March 13

Second Saturday

11am-1pm

Free to the public


Saturday March 20

11am-1:pm

Workshop with Simona

Printmaking for children and their families

$8.00 donation


Saturday March 27

Storytelling with Sonya and author Arturo Vasquez

$8.00 donation


Wednesday March 31

Artist talk 7pm

Free to the public


Saturday April 10

11am-1pm

Second Saturday

Free to the public


CESAR BUTTON
JOIN US ALL DAY
MARCH 31, 2010

HONORING
CESAR CHAVEZ

ALL DAY SCREENINGS
OF
"FIGHTING FOR OUR LIVES"
(60 minutes)
 
AND

 THE MUSIC OF
LOS LOBOS
 FROM THE CD
"SI SE PUEDE"

SCREENINGS AT 11:30AM, 1:PM, 2:30PM, 4PM, 5:30PM

UFWmarch 2
 
OPENING MARCH 13   MULTI-MEDIA EXHIBITION

CHILE AND HAITI: FROM THOSE WHO WERE THERE

EXCLUSIVE PHOTOS FROM CHILE AND PORT A PRINCE

ALEJANDRO ANDRES ROCHA NEVAREZ FROM SANTIAGO

LYNNE HARRITON FROM HAITI

SPECIAL THANKS TO DR. FRED DOBB, LRGP FILM CURATOR


TICKETS NOW ON SALE!

MAY 22 12PM-6PM AT CESAR CHAVEZ PLAZA
TICKETS ONLY $10.00

Tickets on sale March 10th at LRGP. WE ACCEPT CASH OR CHECKS ONLY
OUR HOURS ARE TUESDAYS-SATURDAYS 11AM-6PM. SECOND SATURDAYS FROM 11AM-9PM

V 101 OUR OFFICIAL ENGLISH LANGUAGE MEDIA SPONSOR

CALIFORNIA ARTS COUNCIL-LEAD SPONSOR

MORE SPONSORS TO COME...WATCH THIS SPACE











La Raza Galería Posada is located at 1022-1024 22nd St. between J & K Sts. in Sacramento, California.  Hours of operation are Tuesday - Saturday 11pm - 7pm, 11 - 9pm Second Saturday.

larazagaleria@gmail.com                    916-446-5133           www.larazagaleriaposada.org

About La Raza Galería Posada: LRGP is a non-profit, multi-disciplinary cultural center and public space serving the Sacramento community, offering Latino/Chicano and Native arts exhibitions, art education programs, workshops , and serves as a community gathering place.  School tours and group tours are offered Monday- Saturday 10am-5pm by reservation.


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