26 May 2010

National Geographic - Border Wars - Mixed Messages

Are we at war on the Mexican Border?






Given President Obama's recent decision to send National Guard troops to the border and the fact that we are in the midst of Arizona's new immigrant round-up bills, I have come to question the reality behind "border wars."


So in an effort to "control" the border, money and personnel are being sent to the region to 'secure' the border. While Obama may have done this because of President Calderon's recent visit, the timing also coincides with the signing of the Arizona immigration law. 

Granted, the violence on the border (Mexican side) has increased and the number of drug arrest on the US side continues to grow, what is a national guard presence going to do? Deter criminals? Not unless these troops are planning to camp out in the desolate areas (since that's where the drugs, smugglers, and violence will continue to be pushed toward) would this strategy work!

While both Republican and Democrat Congressmen applaud the measures taken by Obama, both groups feel that these measures are not enough - more money and more troops are being requested by both campus:


In general the border is a mess...a HOT MESS!  

Earlier this year I was watching the National Geographic series, "Border Wars." After about five episodes I had failed to come to a definite conclusion about the reason the channel decided to follow various Border Patrol officers and Customs agents along the San Diego and Nogales border region. At first, it seemed like a pro-war series, perpetuating the fact that Mexicans are bringing problems to the US via drug smuggling, migrant smuggling, and illegal border crossings using fake IDs, documents, and slick criminal networks.  Not only did the first few episodes seem to put immigrants in a negative light, it also seemed to place the Border Patrol on a pedestal as the gatekeepers protecting America's border in the strong desert sun using sophisticated war tactics. 

Toward the end of the series a new light was being shed on the problem. The US war tactics don't solve the problem(s) and yes, there is more than one problem. The series ended with questions about the use of war tactics to end illegal immigration versus drug smuggling. It showed the sophistication of the drug cartels and gangs seeking to smuggle drugs, money, and weapons into the US and the market that pulls these criminals (US Market). It showed the lack of sophistication with which working-class Mexicans are attempting to cross the border for employment opportunities that pull these hard working people to the US. In essence the series closed with the summary that the US is largely to blame and that solutions need to come by changing the pull factors within the US (drug abuse, the drug trade, employment, lack of comprehensive immigration laws to allow workers to come to the US for periods of time to earn money and that lead to proper citizenship processes). I was shocked! 

After following various agents for 5-7 episodes and the learning about the sophisticated weapons, scopes, and gear that the Border Patrol employs, it seemed like a waste of money! These were not working solutions! National Geographic could have just said "This is a small plug in a huge leak" and it would have been just as clear. Money was being spent and wasted because, in the end, huge amounts of drugs still make it through to the states, and huge numbers of people still work and live in the US illegally. Overall, I was slightly satisfied with the series - I think its worth watching to see just how our taxes are spent to pay for all of these war-like tactics in a situation that needs/requires more than one solution. And I am not sure that President Obama's recent decision for more money and more troops is answer. If we want to stop the violence, I think President Calderon should allow US law enforcement to assist the Mexican government with actual arrests and detainment for drug cartels. The Mexican federal police is not capable of managing/ending the violence. Placing our troops at various border cities is like sticking a couple of fingers into plug a hole the size of a Hoover Dam. 

I hope that Presidents Obama and Calderon had more ideas than just this one to help stop the violence (FIRST) and begin to reform immigration laws (SECOND).

25 May 2010

Hysterical Blog!! Check it out!!

So I got this link from my undergraduate chapter's MEChA listserve:


It is definitely worth checking out and reading in its entirety! Someone else posted some additions:


More hilarity! I was rollin'. I have had so many of these experiences with friends and personally that I can't even type them all out because my mind is running through so many right now. As a Chicana/Latina/MEChista who moved to the East Coast from Tejaztlan for an Ivy League education - so many of those topics hit so close to home. I started to think if there were other things that my fellow Chicano/a friends used to do...YES THERE ARE:

1. Regardless of the weather - MEChA soccer/flag football tournaments were a common social activity

2. MEChA Parties were known around campus as the spot for drinking games and obscene amounts of liquor. (We never had money to buy books, always sat for hours waiting to meet with a financial aid counselor at the beginning of each semester, but we always had money each weekend for liqs and cerveza.)

3. Educated Chicano/as always want to take pictures with Mariachi bands (how many do you have?)

4. We swear that we know each Mexican dance even if we never danced it back home (Cumbia, Norteno, Tejano two-steps, waltz, etc.)

5. Check our IPOD - we have Vicente Fernandez (Only "El Rey"), Alejandro Fernandez, Mana, Los Tucanes, Selena (Not Gomez), Luis Miguel and for our own sentimental, homesick reasons, Linda Ronstadt.

6. We like our Chicano/a literature, history, and sociology books - our personal libraries are guaranteed to have a copy of Occupied America; The Borderlands/La Frontera; House on Mango Street; Bless Me, Ultima; and an anthropology of Chicana/o poetry...this is required Chicano/a studies reading that we thought we ought to keep in our homes.

PLEASE ADD YOUR OWN!!

19 May 2010

Lord Help Arizona...



Well if Mrs. Kobe Bryant (Vanessa) is talking (indirectly) about it, then dammit everyone should! 

Arizona's immigration bill S.B. 1070 aims to allow police forces the ability to detain anyone they feel could be in the country illegally.  Furthermore, carrying papers to prove legality will be mandated, and in the event one does not have them - the police can hold the individuals to ascertain their legal status.  Governor Jan Brewer signed the bill in late April and followed up with another absurd bill signing regarding ethnic studies.  Public schools would no longer be able to offer courses that focus on a particular ethnic group (largely this affects Mexican-American/Chicano/a studies).

Following these obviously racist bills, Latinos have had a lot to say and many ways to show their displeasure with such laws. Everyone from local residents to mega-superstars, such as Shakira, have spoken out against the measures.  Pitbull, Cypress Hill and Shakira have publicly refused to do shows/concerts in Arizona.  The Phoenix Suns also publicly made a statement by wearing a special jersey a few days following the signing of the bill (Cinco de Mayo)- "Los Suns". Point guard Steve Nash said outright that this law would racially profile people and that as a proud resident of Arizona he did not want it to have a reputation as unfair and unwelcoming. 

Incredible as it may seem, these laws were the natural progression of laws and practices aimed at turning Arizona into a haven for white supremacists and a death trap for Latinos and immigrants, an obvious abomination of Arizona's natural birthright.  Maricopa County and celebrity racist sheriff Joe Arpaio  - who lives in infamy over his leadership on juvenile chain gangs, tent cities, and toughness on jail inmates, is under investigation by the FBI for misuse of funds for lawsuits. 

So again it's not surprising that Arizona lawmakers have the confidence and arrogance to put forth these laws when the state's leadership believes in "true American values" (ahem...John McCain).  What these laws have done is awaken the resting giant - the Latino voting block! And once you get the beast going - it will be hard to control!

Si Se Puede Mi Gente!