Thursday, May 3, 2012

'IMMIGRATION' on the ground level


  Farmworkers (mainly the newest wave of immigrants) are not an issue to address, but people that I care about, fellow inhabitors of this world and citizens of God's kingdom. I am grateful for this privilege of becoming friends with some of these hardworking families.  I dont usually write so 'politically', but when politics impact people, 11 billion undocumented people in fact, it's hard to keep quiet! :) I want our country’s policies to treat all people humanely and fairly, acknowledging the incredible contribution they are in fact making. Our country’s Social Security benefits $6.8 billion dollars every year from the work of undocumented workers who indeed pay income taxes and yet don’t qualify to receive refunds.
  Unfortunately fear is increasing in the undocumented immigrant community. Between the Arizona law in Supreme Court this week and Secure Communities program that was enacted statewide in the beginning of April, fear is unfortunately somewhat understandable. Last summer, several of us from Tierra Nueva joined other immigrant rights leaders in meeting with our Skagit County sheriff and police chiefs to persuade them to not join this program. However recently, Immigration Customs & Enforcement (ICE) got their foot in on the state-level and it is now a statewide mandate.  This means that when people are booked into Skagit County Jails (with probable cause for arrest but no conviction), their fingerprints are not only sent to FBI but also to ICE.
    Contrary to the goal of ‘removing criminal aliens from our communities’, as we know, not everyone arrested is guilty. So unfortunately it means that innocent people will be deported, splitting families and making it even harder to survive on minimal employment, let alone the level of trauma. Although this may seem to address the ‘problem of undocumented workers’, it in fact ignites fear in the community. People are less inclined to call the police for emergencies, which compromises our communities’ safety.  Even though it doesn’t give police the ‘right’ to ask for documentation, that is the word that has spread and something I’m trying to tackle at late-night phone calls and home visits.  “No, the police don’t have the right to stop you without reason or even ask for your documents.” No, racial profiling is not legal.  At least, not yet.  

Please join with me in interceding for humane US policies, and click on the below links if you want to advocate for some options on the table. 

To participate in a current action opportunity through Sojourners' Christians for Comprehensive Immigration Reform, click here

or to sign a petition for Obama through Witness for Peace, click here

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