Sunday 13 July 2008

Disappointed in America (again)

Is this all our current Administration can offer America?  We were once a beacon to people everywhere who yearned to create a new life, find freedom and lift their families to a better place.  
The Statue of Liberty offers this vision of America and these words to the world: 

"Give me your tired your poor, 

Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, 

The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.  

Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me,  

I lift my lamp beside the golden door!"

But as you can see in the editorial below (and the link to the article it references) apparently we take the tired, poor huddled masses who are just trying to work to create a better life for themselves and their families, arrest them, treat them like cattle and throw them in prison.  Right now I'm sad and embarrassed to be associated in any way with a government that has so little compassion and so much fear of the world's tired and poor people.  They are just yearning to be free and we've imprisoned them!
I'm also furious that our government would trample the good name and reputation of our country in the mud - again.  Haven't they done enough damage to America yet? 
************************* 
July 13, 2008
EDITORIAL (New York Times)

The Shame of Postville, Iowa

Anyone who has doubts that this country is abusing and terrorizing undocumented immigrant workers should read an essay by Erik Camayd-Freixas, a professor and Spanish-language court interpreter who witnessed the aftermath of a huge immigration workplace raid at a meatpacking plant in Iowa.

The essay chillingly describes what Dr. Camayd-Freixas saw and heard as he translated for some of the nearly 400 undocumented workers who were seized by federal agents at the Agriprocessors kosher plant in Postville in May.

Under the old way of doing things, the workers, nearly all Guatemalans, would have been simply and swiftly deported. But in a twist of Dickensian cruelty, more than 260 were charged as serious criminals for using false Social Security numbers or residency papers, and most were sentenced to five months in prison.

What is worse, Dr. Camayd-Freixas wrote, is that the system was clearly rigged for the wholesale imposition of mass guilt. He said the court-appointed lawyers had little time in the raids’ hectic aftermath to meet with the workers, many of whom ended up waiving their rights and seemed not to understand the complicated charges against them.

Dr. Camayd-Freixas’s essay describes “the saddest procession I have ever witnessed, which the public would never see” — because cameras were forbidden.

“Driven single-file in groups of 10, shackled at the wrists, waist and ankles, chains dragging as they shuffled through, the slaughterhouse workers were brought in for arraignment, sat and listened through headsets to the interpreted initial appearance, before marching out again to be bused to different county jails, only to make room for the next row of 10.”

He wrote that they had waived their rights in hopes of being quickly deported, “since they had families to support back home.” He said that they did not understand the charges they faced, adding, “and, frankly, neither could I.”

No one is denying that the workers were on the wrong side of the law. But there is a profound difference between stealing people’s identities to rob them of money and property, and using false papers to merely get a job. It is a distinction that the Bush administration, goaded by immigration extremists, has willfully ignored. Deporting unauthorized workers is one thing; sending desperate breadwinners to prison, and their families deeper into poverty, is another.

Court interpreters are normally impartial participants and keep their opinions to themselves. But Dr. Camayd-Freixas, a professor of Spanish at Florida International University, said he was so offended by the cruelty of the prosecutions that he felt compelled to break his silence. “A line was crossed at Postville,” he wrote.

1 comment:

Lynne said...

This is outageous - makes my blood boil really. Unbelievable. Thanks for posting to draw awareness.