12:41 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Activism|Cities|Immigration
23 Apr 2008The National Immigrant Solidarity Network has put out its Points of Unity for the May Day marches. They are as follows:1.
No to anti-immigrant legislation, and the criminalization of the immigrant communities.2. No to militarization of the border.
3. No to the immigrant detention and deportation.
4. No to the guest worker program.
5. No to employer sanction and “no match” letters.
6. Yes to a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants.
7. Yes to speedy family reunification.
8. Yes to civil rights and humane immigration law.
9. Yes to labor rights and living wages for all workers.
10. Yes to the education and LGBT immigrant legislation.
Additionally the Immigrant Solidarity Network states:
1) Multi-ethnic, Decentralized and Multi-topic mobilization: while everyone will pledge to support immigrant workers rights at May Day 2007, local groups can choose to includes any other topics for their mobilizations: civil rights, anti-war, Katrina, labor rights, health care…., etc.2) Decentralized Multi-Tactic May Day organizing: We will encourage everyone to organize their actions at May Day, but will let local groups to decide what they want to do at the day: march, boycott, strike, lunch action, vigil, community event, conference or congressional lobby day, etc.Understanding the connections between our individual conditions of life and the lives of people everywhere in the word allows us to come together and organize across all borders. WE NEED to link the connections between: wars in Africa, south America, Asia, Iraq, Palestine & Korea with sweatshops in Asia as well as in Los Angeles, New York; international arm sales and WTO, FTAA, NAFTA & CAFTA with AIDS, hunger, child labors and child solider; multinational corporations and economic exploitation with racism and poverty at home–then we can win the struggle. Let’s all come together, on May Day 2008, to build a new immigrant rights
and civil rights movements!
While I am all for the pointing out of the intersections of all these issues, as a person who has organized rallies and marches, I am concerned about how all these issues could be used to drown out the immigrant rights issue.
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3 Responses to Points of Unity for May Day Marches
EYES OF TEXAS
April 23rd, 2008 at 1:58 pm
Hopefully all of these marches will be well covered by national media. This will be the best way for American citizens to fully understand the negitive results of illegal immigration and open borders. With thousands of marchers demanding that our laws should be changed to satisfy those that are illegally in the country will further unite Americas call for stricter enforcement and the preservation of our language, borders and culture. With any luck there will be many foreign flags displayed and banners written in a foreign language. What you will be doing to unite citizens against illegal immigration and illegal aliens will be more than any pro-American separatist organization could ever accomplish.
Maegan la Mala Ortiz
May 2nd, 2008 at 3:59 pm
Texican : I deleted your comment for racist commentary. The next comment that crosses a line and I will ban you.
texican
May 2nd, 2008 at 7:53 pm
Meagan I urge you to re read the Post you deleted it was not racist but it did have accurate descriptions of illegal aliens It doesnt matter if they are yellow,white, brown, black or green. I know it makes you mad because what I say is true but it wasn’t racist. My wife is a naturalized citizen from a Central American country and our oldest daughter is still a mexican citizen (its a long story that has its roots in the guerra in El Salvador decades ago)They are both legal immigrants and they also loathe what has been done to our schools and communities by a huge influx of illegal immigrants. I am sorry you can’t see the reality of the situation. It is sad to see the difference in the life I was raised in in the 60′s and the life my children are raised in now. There are a few things that are better now but the overall decline of standards makes for a poor enviornment to raise children in.