1:18 pm By la Macha · Immigration| Labor · Comments Off
8 Apr 2009
This is one of the many consequences of criminalizing and dehumanizing those in the U.S. without proper documentation. Workers who are here legally, who have those precious papers, work in reprehensible conditions and have almost no power at all to fight back.
The U.S. Department of Justice reports a new case of forced labor in Florida agriculture. This is the seventh confirmed case of forced labor in the last decade in the state.
The report describes poor working conditions as well as workers being chained to poles, beaten, robbed, and locked inside trucks. A 17-count federal indictment outlines how a dozen workers living on a farm were forced to sleep in trucks and shacks, went unpaid for their work, and had to pay for food and showers. The cases were reported at the Six L’s and Pacific Tomato Growers farms. Both the farms are certified by the Florida Tomato Growers Exchange Socially Accountable Farm Employers program, which is supposed to prevent labor abuses.
In 13 confirmed cases, workers were beaten, including for trying to leave the farm. The workers also had their identification documents held to keep them from escaping.
To all those people who insist that they “support” those here legally–what is your answer to this? How do these workers get more power when the corporations employing them know damn well how to play a system against workers with limited or no power?
3:03 pm By la Macha · Immigration · Comments Off
25 Mar 2009Believe it or not, migration is a normal state of the world. Enforcing borders is a fairly recent event, not happening in some areas until post-WWII and/or post-USSR.
So it’s interesting to me to see how poorly migrants are treated world-wide. How similar so many of the problems are. How nativism helps to create a permanent underclass–specifically, violence is used to create a permanent underclass.
Believe it or not, Mr. Nativist–immigrants are not coming to the U.S. to steal your way of life or rape your children. They are coming for jobs.
You want a job, they 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?
7:01 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration| Labor| Politics · Comments Off
11 Dec 2008
President Bush isn’t going to leave migrant workers empty handed as he leaves the White House. Changes to the H-2A agricultural guestworker program were released in the dark of night, in an attempt to hide their blatant disregard for the lives of others, namely a majority Latino immigrant population.
The changes are horrible. At a time when the jobless rate is at a 15 year high, they reduce obligations for growers to effectively recruit U.S. workers before applying to bring in guestworkers for these jobs. They lower the wage rates for all farmworkers by changing the program’s wage formula and, in an industry known for labor abuses, they eliminate or reduce government oversight.
So while the anti-immigrant advocates point their fingers at immigrants for the U.S.’s current economic problems, the current administration hits hard against ALL workers, in terms of wages and rights.
From CNN comes the news of the migrant family that became the icon of a generation:
McIntosh is the girl to the left of her mother when you look at the photograph. The picture is best known as “Migrant Mother,” a black-and-white photo taken in February or March 1936 by Dorothea Lange of Florence Owens Thompson, then 32, and her children.
Lange was traveling through Nipomo, California, taking photographs of migrant farm workers for the Resettlement Administration. At the time, Thompson had seven children who worked with her in the fields.
“She asked my mother if she could take her picture — that … her name would never be published, but it was to help the people in the plight that we were all in, the hard times,” McIntosh says.
“So mother let her take the picture, because she thought it would help.”
The next morning, the photo was printed in a local paper, but by then the family had already moved on to another farm, McIntosh says.
“The picture came out in the paper to show the people what hard times was. People was starving in that camp. There was no food,” she says. “We were ashamed of it. We didn’t want no one to know who we were.”
The photograph helped define the Great Depression, yet McIntosh says her mom didn’t let it define her, although the picture “was always talked about in our family.”
“It always stayed with her. She always wanted a better life, you know.”
Her mother, she says, was a “very strong lady” who liked to have a good time and listen to music, especially the yodeler named Montana Slim. She laughs when she recalls her brothers bringing home a skinny greyhound pooch. “Mom, Montana Slim is outside,” they said.
The differences in how white folks who are in poverty are treated compared to brown skinned people is really upsetting to me. While a picture of a white family brought help and change from the government–the same picture of a brown family would get ignored if the community was lucky or an ICE raid if they weren’t. The life the woman describes here is no different than what Mexicans (among other groups) are living right now today–but nobody considers that a tragedy. And in light of what happened to the black immigrant worker whose life was made less valuable that a 69$ camera by shoppers, I have to ask all those who insist that unions are no longer necessary–are you serious?
4:03 pm By Maegan La Mala · Lifestyle| Politics · Comments Off
26 Sep 2005
Gregory Rodriguez, a contributing editor to the LA Times is making a big prediction. In his recent article, “La Nueva Orleans”, Rodriguez states that the population of rebuilt New Orleans will look quite different than the pre-Katrina New Orleans. More specifically, he says that New Orleans will have such a large Latino population that it will resemble Los Angeles.
On September 6, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) temporarily suspended a sanction that requires employers to have proof of citizenship for their workers. This suspension is in effect for at least 45 days from the day of issue, and could be renewed.
An excerpt from the article:
Because they are young and lack roots in the United States, many recent migrants are ideal for the explosion of construction jobs to come. Those living in the U.S. will relocate to the Gulf Coast, while others will come from south of the border. Most will not intend to stay where their new jobs are, but the longer the jobs last, the more likely they will settle permanently. One recent poll of New Orleans evacuees living in Houston emergency shelters found that fewer than half intend to return home. In part, their places will be taken by the migrant workers. Former President Clinton recently hinted as much on NBC’s “Meet the Press” when he said New Orleans will be resettled with a different population.
I encourage all Vivirlatino readers to check out the entire article, even though you may have to fill out a registration form to access it.
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by 2 Mujeres Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse and influential Latino and Latina community in the U.S.
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