Readers Write: Meet the Nativists
Belief:
Hot, Steamy Mormons: Are the Latter Day Saints Getting Sexy?
Liz Langley
Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace:
Transforming the Rust-Belt into a Green Belt
DrugReporter:
L.A. City Council Votes to Reduce Pot Dispensaries by 90%
Phillip S. Smith
Environment:
11 Ways to Make Your Holiday Economically and Environmentally Friendly
Sarah Sloane
Food:
The 6 Weirdest, Scariest Processed Foods
Brad Reed
Health and Wellness:
Are Americans a Broken People? Why We've Stopped Fighting Back Against the Forces of Oppression
Bruce E. Levine
Immigration:
High Unemployment Rates Frame the Immigration Debate
Marcelo Balive
Media and Technology:
10 Biggest Sports Sex Scandals of All Time: How Does Tiger Woods Rate?
David Rosen
Movie Mix:
Disney Apocalypse: Why 2012 Sucks
Alexander Zaitchik
Politics:
Afghanistan: How the War Hawks Caged Obama
Robert Parry
Reproductive Justice and Gender:
Is Taxing Plastic Surgery Really an Infringement on Women's Rights?
Alexandra Suich
Rights and Liberties:
Meet Joe Bageant: One of America's Best Redneck Populist Writers
Sex and Relationships:
Why Fake Optimism Is the Worst Way to Deal with Life's Problems
Liz Langley
Take Action:
G-20 Meetings: Nothing Much Happened in the Suites, and There Was Too Much Punch in the Streets
Laura Flanders
Water:
Damning New Evidence Raises Concerns About Threats to New York's Water from Gas Drilling
Byard Duncan
World:
Explosions and Fraught Negotiations Show Iraq Struggling to Emerge From U.S. Shadow
Abeer Mohammed, Neil Arun
An article reprinted from the Southern Poverty Law Center's Intelligence Report about leaders of the burgeoning "nativist" movement in the U.S. prompted some smart discussion that revealed -- to me, at least -- that AlterNet's audience extends well beyond the traditional confines of the liberal worldview.
The reader comments revealed that the concerns about immigration are not so much about the immigrants themselves as the larger economic and political processes that brought them there -- namely, that corporations have manipulated governments, American workers and foreign immigrants to sustain a cheap supply of labor, consequences be damned. I thought this description of what happened in reader zooeyhall's hometown in Norfolk, Neb., is a perfect example of how complicated the issue really is:
"I live in Nebraska in a rural area. In the '60s and '70s, work at the local packing plants paid a VERY good middle-class wage -- almost $22 per hour in today's money -- and they had a strong union. Sure, it was hard, dirty work, but that didn't bother farm kids used to such work and who were anxious for a job over the summer to earn some money. It also provided a good full-time job for those who wanted to work hard and move up. I had many farmer-neighbors who got a good income working there.Commenter dlf responded to zooeyhall with important points:
"Well, in the 1980s companies like Tyson cut the wages by 50 percent, boosted the line from 60 to 200 animals per hour -- and then started bringing in Mexican workers (even setting up employment recruiting offices along the border). They busted the local union when it went on strike, and then claimed they "couldn't find enough local workers" to justify their importing of illegals.
"So now little towns around here that used to be local farming centers are 60 percent Mexican. Local Andy Griffith sheriffs have to deal with Mexican drug gangs that make the Bloods and the Crips look like Boy Scouts. We had a bank robbery last year in Norfolk, Neb. (pop. 25,000), where a Mexican bank robber killed five people in cold blood."
Jan Frel is an AlterNet staff writer.
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