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5 Reasons to Participate in the Immigrant Rights Marches on May 1st

Posted by Roberto Lovato, Of America at 6:30 PM on April 30, 2008.


In the face of interests aligned against us from above, let us march if only to connect to the tradition of freedom brought from below.

As the Mayday marches approach, I hear the pattering of well-meaning, but worried hearts. Some have told me that they are worried that Mayday may become low-turnout day. Though normal and to be expected, especially in a climate so toxic with state and corporate media-sponsored hopelessness, such fears need to be recognized and dealt with, for such personal, internal negotiations in times of global crisis are the stuff that the best political dreams are made of.

So, as we ponder whether to move our bodies to march in an age when politics and, especially, “progressive” politics, have given way to the important, but largely disembodied politics of the web, here are a few things to consider:

1. Marching Matters - we might want to remember what ACTUP, Latin American and other activists taught and told us: silence=death. As the Pentagon propaganda scandal makes chillingly clear, the domestic war, the war within the borders is primarily psychological and symbolic. Elites know this and so should we. Add to the equation the physical war targeting migrants and you get a situation that demands that we demonstrate self-respect and courage in the face of such serious repression. Rather than simply absorb the messages of hopelessness and discouragement coming out of our TVs and computer screens (and even from some of our friends and families), let’s move our bodies against the state and the elite interests controlling it. One of the best antidotes to the fear and isolation propagated by the media, government and other interests is to march with others. Marching helps us realize that, in a pathologically ill country, migrants and their supporters are, indeed, “aliens”; Marching reminds us that, yes, we are not alone. Regardless of how many of us march, it’s critically important that those living in isolation and fear, especially our children and young people, need to see some of us raising our fists and heads before injustice. Next time someone tells you “marching doesn’t matter”, just ask them what marching might mean to those undocumented parents who’ve never participated in marches or anything political and who’s small children watched them come out of the political closet of undocumented status for the first time in their lives.

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/photos/uncategorized/2007/05/02/macarthur.jpg

2. The Government has Spent Billions to Attack Migrants and Destroy the Immigrant Rights Movement - in case you didn’t realize it, in times of war and declining empire, immigrants and those who defend them become enemies of the state, useful enemies that help militarize life within the borders of the “nation”. Just look at what happened after 9-11, especially after the marches of 2006: raids and home invasions by the thousands, massive deployments of thousands of heavily-armed ICE agents and national guard troops, billions spent on defensive walls, electronic surveillance and military equipment,..the list goes on and on. The exponential amounts of money, imprisonment rates and the state violence aimed at migrants should make abundantly clear what we’re witnessing: a domestic war on immigrants. Local, state and federal governments have spent billions to destroy us, yet still we march.

3. The mainstream media is fatally ignorant of -and antagonistic towards- immigrants and immigration issues - you might remember that this is the same media that repeated mantra-like that the marchas of 2006 “came out of nowhere”; the same media that then proceeded to report on the marches without context, reporting as if Mojadopotli, the God of the Undocumented, magically moved DJ’s as he/she rained millions of marchers down on hundreds of U.S. towns and cities. Rather than worry that your local and national media are already reporting on the marches as a failure because “far fewer” people are “expected” to show up, you might stop for a moment to consider that the media is simply doing its political job-and then march anyway. And there are much better, even funner ways to spend your Mayday than taking in gobs and gobs of messages from the most sophisticated and private sector-driven spin and propaganda system ever devised.

4. Movements have their ebbs and flows-and we’re ebbing right now - if your political commitment depends on the fix of massive marches for you to feel good or inspired, you might consider checking into a political detox facility immediately. Such conjunctural logic fits perfectly into the “look, their marches have diminished” “reporting” that we even hear from the Spanish language and broken-Spanish-inflected reporting of some Latino surnamed reporters. Not to march means we further enable the diverse and cowardly interests aligned against migrants: Minutemen, the Bush Administration, the media, Democrats and Republicans and others. The moment we forget that the true measure of movements that inspire social and political change is what happens in the heart and mind is the moment we allow the whispers and hollers of our adversaries to crystallize inside of us. This dark, defensive moment will pass only if at least some of us continue to carry the candle of hope.

5. Immigrants Still Lead the Way - more than anything, Mayday should serve to remind us of the power of immigrants to alter history. It’s because of immigrant workers that children (at least most working class children) no longer languish in factories; it’s because of immigrant workers that there’s an 8 hour workday; it’s in no small part because of immigrants and other free, partially free and wholly unfree workers that any “freedom” exists in the cold heart of the most powerful and most rapidly declining empire ever.

So, in the face of the unholy alliance of interests aligned against us from above, let us march if only to connect to the tradition of freedom brought from below.

A marchar!

Digg!

Tagged as: immigration, may day, marches

Roberto Lovato, a frequent Nation contributor, is a New York-based writer with New America Media.


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To those that don't understand
Posted by: RedNeckRed on Apr 30, 2008 8:27 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
They are here, not to steal jobs, because of our trade policies. Everyone wants to stay home, if they can. They were starved out of their own countries. They are being treated like my parents were treated in the central valley of California, during the Great Depression. All should stand up against this kind of inhumanity.
This country has been built on, and maintained by slavery. Where is Sparticus? We want a slave revolt!

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Immigrants are taking the rap
Posted by: janelynne on May 1, 2008 7:33 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The GOP has spent millions trying to say that it is immigrants who are stealing our jobs. The truth is that corporations have moved our jobs overseas. Products and services that were once the proud result of "Yankee ingenuity" have been shuttled overseas for their cheap wages, with poor quality control, even as American jobs are disappearing. This is why we cannot trust the tainted foods, medicine, toys, and leaching plastics that are everywhere. The United States is becoming impoverished by the lack of truth.

The media and the corporations would like us to forget all of this, and jump on the bandwagon to scapegoat the immigrants. It isn't the food/farm workers or the landscapers who are usurping our engineering jobs, our scientific acumen, our American safety.

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» RE: Immigrants are taking the rap Posted by: anneliese-nyc
This author of this article is using language to manipulate....
Posted by: Prophit on May 1, 2008 8:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First of all these are not MIGRANTS that everyone is screaming about. These are illegals not going through the process of being medically and criminally cleared to enter this country for whatever reason.

I have seen nothing against legal migrants from any country including Mexico. So he is misleading right off the gitgo. Next he tells us how horrible things are in Mexico that causes them to leave, well, why don't they stay and fight for their country?

Instead they come here, help to bring this one into the condition their country is in and will do the same here they did there. They will go somewhere else when this place gets like Mexico and who needs that???? We know what slaves are, we don't need them to come here and show us how to do that.

They should be back home fighting for their own nation. Besides, they hate us and our culture and our language. I could never live somewhere where I hated the people.

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It Must Be May
Posted by: desidid on May 1, 2008 8:31 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Alternet is testing the water with the new illegal immigrant amnesty talking points. The funny thing is not one person, that I can tell, has changed their position in the last 3 years.

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Apples and oranges
Posted by: Doubtom on May 2, 2008 9:09 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This dilemma will never be solved until we can all agree to use the same terms and agree on their meaning. There is such a thing as immigration, a legal process whereby individuals eventually gain citizenship in their chosen country and there is such a thing as illegal entry. The person entering illegally is not in the legal process of immigration. He is illegally circumventing the immigration procedure. He is an illegal alien perhaps but not an immigrant.
Crying out for amnesty and civil rights conferred under law is a peculiar pastime for someone who jumped the border in violation of our laws, regardless of "why" it was done.
For a clear reminder of the wrongness of this act, try doing it in reverse to Mexico and see what happens.
This clamor for "Comprehensive Immigration Reform" is the biggest bunch of bull ever perpetrated on the American public. First of all, there is not a thing wrong with our immigration program, so its difficult to see where or what would be improved. We have an operating immigration system which is as good or better than any in the world.
Our system is in no need of reform, unless by reform they mean allowing any and all Latinos from south of the border to come here, legal or otherwise. That would be comprehensive alright but hardly "reform"

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ilegal aliens are not immigrants
Posted by: jwpa13 on May 6, 2008 12:25 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
illegals are here to work and for any wage they can get. this drives down wages for Americans who compete for the same jobs. If you don' think so ask the meat packers who have seen their wages drop almost in half over the past five years. Illegals can afford to work for less, mostly because they work for cash and don't have to pay income tax, SS tax, workers Comp., don't have drivers license (so even if they have insurance on their car the insurance co. doesn't have to pay when they are in an accident because the driver wasn't a qualified driver). I want to see the illegals lives improved, IN THEIR OWN COUNTRIES. Mexico and most Latin American nations are the most corrupt on the planet, so get our jackass politicians to stop sleeping with the "el corruptos" and make them tow the line by demanding they make their citizen's lives better there. i feel badly that Mexico is a third world country, but tearing down our economy and social infrastructure is not the solution to their problems. we have room in America for everyone who applie4s for work and citizenship LEGALLY . WE do NOT have room for every poor soul on earth who sneaks in to OUR country against OUR laws. Illegals also send a large share of their earnings out of America back to their home countries. Protecting America agai9nst foreign invaders is NOT Un-American.

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