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At the Border Security is Privilege

8:27 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · crime|Drugs|Immigration|mexico|Politics

25 Mar 2009

All eyes are on Mexico with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arriving there. Yesterday, Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano revealed a border security plan that was allegedly less about undocumented immigrants and more about protecting the “us” from the violence coming from “them”. And next month U.S. President Obama will meet with Mexican President Calderon to discuss “their” problem.

I think that it’s important to note that the Obama administration is sending a clear signal that it is going to follow the safety first rhetoric that the Bush administration nearly perfected, that is the rhetoric that before we talk human rights, especially those of immigrants, we need to make sure we are protected from them.

Who are they?

They are the drug cartels and human traffickers. Now don’t get me wrong the violence is horrible but violence in Mexico isn’t anything new. Look specifically at the massive killing of women in Juarez. Pero the U.S. gets down to business when college students worry about their spring break vacation plans being ruined.
350 additional security personnel will be sent to the border including agents from the Department of Homeland Security, the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and Explosives (ATF).

Border Enforcement Security Task Forces (BEST) teams will be doubled and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is to create a special south-west intelligence group to co-ordinate all its efforts to tackle Mexican drug-related crime.

ATF is to send 100 agents to the border within 45 days to crack down on illegal gun transfers from the US into Mexico.

They are the undocumented coming into the U.S. protected by plants that conspire to hide them. So part of the plan includes spraying potentially harmful chemicals to kill the plants that help to hide “them”.

Perhaps I shouldn’t be so cynical and hold out hope for the new administration. Napolitano did mention how U.S. drug consumption is helping to fuel the cartel violence. Hmm but no mention of how the current drug policy is the U.S. including mandatory minimum sentencing guidelines have increased the prison population. Napolitano did mention how walls aren’t an especially helpful security plan but that parts of the border wall under construction will be finished and other parts reinforced with technology.

Feel safer yet? I know in my neighborhood, on this side of the border and in neighborhoods across the country, families are growing restless with their growing insecurity. ICE is still conducting raids. Families are still be separated. When will the security of many many U.S. citizen children with undocumented parents matter? How long will they have to wait while the rest of us sit back feeling safe and sound?

Via / Feet in Two Worlds, Para Justicia y Libertad. , BBC, Latina Lista

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5 Responses to At the Border Security is Privilege

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Noemi

March 25th, 2009 at 9:05 am

I agree with most of what your saying, and yes the murders of women in the El Paso/Juarez area is ongoing and no one gives a fuck, but the violence and murders throughout Mexico is increasing. The border violence & riots is escalating

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Maegan La Mala

March 25th, 2009 at 9:12 am

So do you think that this new plan will help?

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Jennifer Woodard Maderazo

March 25th, 2009 at 10:59 am

I found it interesting that El Paso Mayor Beto O’Rourke thinks militarization at the border is a terrible idea (listen to the interview) and NPR still wrote a headline like this:

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=101859919

…but I guess they needed to squeeze some support from him somehow. After all, O’Rourke believes in legalization of drugs to end the violence, which in the U.S. is like telling people they have to sell their firstborn child.

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Migrants outside of the U.S. | VivirLatino

March 25th, 2009 at 3:03 pm

[...] want a job. When we know the motivations of both sides–can we come up with a better response to border problems than increased militarization? Tags: Immigration, migrant workers, [...]

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A Town Bands Together to Save a Friend from Deportation | VivirLatino

March 26th, 2009 at 10:48 am

[...] a change from the posts about raids and militarized borders, an immigration story with a very happy [...]

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