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Posted on Sun, May. 16, 2010
Immigrants are the GOP's new political exiles
By MYRIAM MARQUEZ
mmarquez@MiamiHerald.com

Hi little girl, is your daddy home?
No, he's working, I said from the half-opened door in the apartment by the Miami River as my mom tried to intercede.

Too late. I had sealed my father's fate. Back he went to Cuba. Deported!

He was able to return months later, legally. He got into trouble with U.S. immigration because he had come to Miami on a tourist visa just nine months after Fidel Castro's revolution triumphed. Seeing things had gotten worse in Cuba, he was buying cars at auction in West Palm Beach, fixing them and selling cars in Miami to feed us. A neighbor must have snitched.

For this proud small-businessman/entrepreneur -- I take liberties, he drove his own taxi to take American tourists around Havana and bought cars here to ferry to Cuba to sell -- the firing squads that first year of the revolution weren't too good for tourism. Or car sales.

I was just a 4-year-old without a clue. But today, when I hear a Cuban American bash undocumented immigrants I cringe and talk back. Yes, we were political exiles -- not immigrants looking for a job. But guess what? We needed jobs to survive, and we weren't exactly welcome here in the early years.

In that first year the U.S. government wasn't offering asylum for taxi drivers or school teachers. (My mother was able to stay here because she was a teacher who left on a student visa to learn English.)

SELLING OUT

I share this personal moment because it aches to see what's happening in Arizona and throughout much of the nation, including Florida where GOP politicians will say anything to earn ``whitey'' points with Tea Party voters. It's sad to see Sen. John McCain, once a true statesman who pushed for immigration reform, virtually join the Minute Men in a desperate attempt to get reelected. Never mind that more people are being caught on the border and that fewer are coming in.

Then there's U.S. Senate candidate Marco Rubio, son of Cuban exiles, and Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum, running for governor. Both Republicans have retreated from their initial opposition to Arizona's new ``show me your papers'' law because, they claim, it was fixed to ban racial/ethnic profiling.

You know, the walking-while-brown legal challenge.

I'm not saying our borders shouldn't be protected. And let's not get into Mexico's own immigration laws -- ask any Cuban rafter or Honduran migrant who has been deported from Mexico back to their living hell. I realize, too, that Arizona is suffering from the drug wars that Mexican cartels have brought on the border states. But the vast majority of the 10 million undocumented immigrants in this country aren't killers, rapists or drug dealers.

They're the folks who grow our food, wash our cars, care for our kids, fix our gardens and clean dead chickens and cattle so we can eat them. Remove them from a country where the workforce is aging, where Baby Boomers are starting to retire and see just how much our food, for starters, is going to cost.

SKIN TONE TEST

We need immigrants -- and that's why we need to legalize those who are here while doing more to allow legal travel across our borders. (You know how many undocumented Canadians and Irish are here? Lots -- from Michigan to New York -- but they pass the skin tone test.)

Arizona's new and ``improved'' law won't stop profiling. It makes cops' jobs protecting their community that much harder. And it will surely open up Arizona to lawsuits as ``illegal'' looking Americans are stopped because they don't ``pass'' like I do for white.

Without true immigration reform, the kind that Congress came close to approving just a couple years ago, we'll still have millions of hard-working people here getting exploited and running scared. Hispanics -- legal and illegal -- have become the GOP's new political exiles.





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Round 'em up and ship 'em out. The sooner the better.


AK
Myopia can be treated
(May 21, 2010 09:56 PM)Lillian Wrote: [ -> ]Myopia can be treated

I have glasses.

Still say....ship 'em out.



AK

REDNECK

I guess Lillian won't be satisfied until double digit unemployment is the "new normal". These countries would howl like banshees if we encouraged immigration based on the ability to create jobs. It would also silence the discrimination accusations if visas were granted based on how many people the applicant employed in their native country.
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