Champions of Anti-Immigrant Legislation Have Public Perception Problem

Last week, the nativist organization Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) wrapped up its annual Hold Their Feet to the Fire event in Washington DC. Every year, FAIR and its constituents descend on the capital for a two day carnival of anti-immigrant lobbying events and media appearances. At the center of this circus is the radio row, for which FAIR amasses dozens of nativist talk radio personalities in one room. FAIR understands the importance of its press, and cultivates it every day—for it is a sharp and perhaps the most powerful weapon in their fight to malign immigrants.

But this goes both ways. While Hold Their Feet to the Fire planted some good press for FAIR, the organization also used the event to address some of its resounding bad press as well. In his closing remarks, FAIR’s president, Dan Stein, reportedly took issue with the media’s attempt to wedge the anti-immigrant movement and presidential candidate Mitt Romney. Once unequivocal in his nativism, Romney is now entertaining the proposals of Republican upstart Marco Rubio (R-FL), who himself would like to pass legislation resembling the DREAM Act and, thus, challenge the Democratic monopoly in that constituency.

Romney’s apparent shift came amid news that he was quietly demoting his “immigration advisor,” Kris Kobach, first to the status of supporter, then “informal” advisor. Kobach writes anti-immigrant legislation—like SB 1070 and HB 56—for lawmakers through his employer, the Immigration Reform Law Institute (IRLI); IRLI is a subsidiary of FAIR used to produce and disseminate such nativist laws around the country. As Kobach is practically an employee of FAIR, the organization did not take this news well. Hence, Dan Stein’s address at Hold Their Feet to the Fire reflected this disappointment, hoping to deflect the public perception that Kobach is too extreme for the Republican Party.

In recent months, FAIR has dealt with such ambivalent press in a number of high-profile situations. In one such instance, another Hold Their Feet to the Fire attendee, Michael Hethmon was profiled by the Washington Post. Hethmon, the general counsel for IRLI, has settled for less notoriety than his colleague Kobach. Even still, when the US Supreme Court held hearings over Arizona’s SB 1070, an anti-immigrant law that IRLI produced, the media wanted to know the other member of the brain trust behind it. Though the Washington Post portrays Hethmon in a generally positive light, it does note the more sinister, racist aspect to the lawyer’s project, namely, his fear of demographic changes in the population of the US.

Moreover, this became the focal point of a debate at Cleveland State University, in which Hethmon defended his anti-immigrant stance. His opponents more clearly drilled the racist aspects of IRLI’s intent, and the press’s portrayal of Hethmon was, this time, far less glowing. Again facing the legitimate point that the project of Kobach, Hethmon, and IRLI is altogether exclusionary and extremist, FAIR and its cohorts were once again placed on the fringe.

FAIR drums up its media support with the claim that it represents the people. Indeed, in its advertisements for Hold Their Feet to the Fire, it cites “our duty as citizens” and that “in a democracy it is the responsibility of the people.” But FAIR merely demonstrates the true need for the people to be the masters and deciders, not the image and press of demagogues. While FAIR portrays this benevolent image through media allies, it becomes clear that it does not represent “the people,” but extremist ideologues.

FAIR State Group Behind Anti-Immigrant Ordinance in Houston

A new group called Stop the Magnet formed recently in Houston in an attempt to get two anti-immigrant ordinances on the ballot for the November election. The first ordinance would allow police to check the status of detainees in the city and the second would force city contractors to check the status of all employees. Maria Martinez of the anti-immigrant group Immigration Reform Coalition of Texas (IRCOT) is the communications director of this new group. IRCOT is listed by the hate group Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) as a state contact.

Racist Violence, the Threat Next Door

There is a prevalence amongst individuals who see themselves as superior to prey on those that they perceive as weak. Those that act out extremist beliefs all too often inflict inconceivable violence. This is the meaning of terrorism, and it has nothing to do with any one religion or region of the world. It comes in all shapes and sizes.

When Anders Behring Breivik went to Utøya Island to massacre a summer camp full of teenagers, he did it because it was too difficult for him to attack people in power who were protected. So instead he went after those that were defenseless.

Fueled by the belief that he was superior, Breivik is a perfect example of how cowardly hatred is. And he isn’t alone. There are many in the U.S. who share his beliefs.

In Arizona, a man long known to prey on defenseless immigrants because of his white supremacist beliefs, murdered his girlfriend and a young family, including a 15-month-old girl. His home allegedly contained hazardous chemicals and “military grade munitions.”

In Florida last week, members of the American Front, an anti-Semitic group, were arrested for allegedly planning “to kill Jews, immigrants and other minorities.” In a heavily protected compound, American Front members conducted firearms, explosives and tactical training. If they had succeeded in starting their so-called “race war,” odds are it wouldn’t have been a fair fight.

Just a few months ago not more than 50 miles away, a man brandishing a gun targeted a teenager named Trayvon Martin, because he felt that Martin did not belong. Because, as he told a 911 operator, “these assholes, they always get away.” It’s no coincidence that just a few weeks later white supremacists showed up in the same town to “protect” white citizens.

It’s puzzling that so much attention is paid to external threats of terrorism. Especially when racist violence is so prevalent in the U.S. and further threats seem to be mounting. The “war on terror” may very well be protecting us from threats from afar, but what’s protecting us from the threat next door?

Cross-Post: Anti-Islam teachings ‘widespread’ in US law enforcement, campaigners warn

in New York – guardian.co.uk,Friday 11 May 2012.

A course at a military academy that taught US officers to prepare for “total war” with Islam does not represent an isolated incident, campaigners have warned.

The Pentagon moved swiftly to distance itself from revelations that officers in a defense department class were taught that “Hiroshima”-style tactics would be needed to combat the threat from Islam.

“It was totally objectionable, against our values and it wasn’t academically sound,” said General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff.

The class in question was canceled in April and Dempsey noted the instructor responsible for the course, army lieutenant colonel Matthew A Dooley, is “no longer in a teaching status”. Dooley, however, is still employed at the Joint Forces Staff College in Norfolk, Virginia.

Linda Sarsour, executive director at the Arab American Association of New York, said the course is merely the latest example in a proliferation of anti-Muslim teaching materials in law-enforcement agencies. “It’s part of a much larger problem,” Sarsour said, pointing to similar controversies involving the FBI and the New York police department.

On Thursday, Danger Room – a national security blog at Wired.com – published a series of documents revealing that a defense department class for US military officers urged soldiers to prepare for a “total war” against the world’s 1.4 billion Muslims. In this battle for supremacy, Geneva Convention standards for armed conflict would be irrelevant and the historical precedents of Dresden, Tokyo, Hiroshima and Nagasaki would be applied to civilian populations “wherever necessary”.

Hundreds of pages of teaching material and reference documents obtained by Danger Room show the course – which was open to US military commanders, lieutenant colonels, captains and colonels – argued that the real threat to US national security stemmed not from radical militants, but from Islam itself.

In a July presentation, Dooley claimed: “We have now come to understand that there is no such thing as ‘moderate Islam’. It is therefore time for the United States to make our true intentions clear. This barbaric ideology will no longer be tolerated. Islam must change or we will facilitate its self-destruction.” He proposed a four-stage solution that included the possibility of reducing Islam to “a cult status” and threatening Saudi Arabia with starvation.

Continue reading at guardian.co.uk

Cross-Post: White Supremacist Leader, Crew Nabbed In Fla. Terror Probe

Accused members of American Front white supremacist group, arrested in Osceola County, Florida. From top left, clockwise: Dustin Perry, Diane Stevens, Christopher Brooks, Richard Stockdale, Jennifer McGowan, Paul Jackson, Mark McGowan, Kent McLellan, Marcus Faella, Patricia Faella. (Osceola County Corrections Department)

Originally posted on Talking Points Memo by Nick R. Martin:

The race war, he believed, was coming. So Florida white supremacist leader Marcus Faella instructed his followers over the past two years to prepare for it.

The preparations, according to law enforcement documents made public this week, included stockpiling weapons, experimenting with the creation of ricin and plotting some sort of “disturbance” on Orlando City Hall.

In a series of arrests that began on Friday, a joint terrorism task force that included the FBI and local police moved in on the Florida chapter of the white supremacist organization American Front.

They arrested Faella, his wife Patti Faella and eight other people on suspicion of a number of offenses, including hate crimes and training a paramilitary group. Prosecutors with the Ninth Circuit State Attorney’s Office said on Tuesday they were working on putting together felony charges for the 10 members.

An affidavit for Faella’s arrest said investigators were working with an informant in the organization since mid 2010. Agent Kelly Boaz, an investigator with the state attorney’s office, wrote that the unnamed informant started as an outsider but eventually became a “patched” or recognized member of American Front.

In the months since, the informant allegedly documented Faella, 39, becoming increasingly erratic and ordering his followers to commit crimes on the group’s behalf. The informant took secret photos and videos of Faella teaching certain members, including convicted felons, to shoot guns and prepare for a race war in a compound fortified with railroad timbers and cement pilings that he established on his property in Saint Cloud, Fla.

In mid February, investigators learned the group’s preparations were growing.

“Faella started planning to cause a disturbance at City Hall in Orlando, Florida,” the affidavit said. “Faella advised that the AF had been dormant too long and wanted to cause a disturbance so the media would report on it and bring new members to the AF.”

ontinue reading this article at TPMMuckracker.

Politics

North Carolina Anti-immigrant Supporters Fail to Advance in Elections

Although marriage equality suffered a setback in North Carolina this week, not all of the news out of Tuesday’s elections in the Tar Heel State was bad. A few major players in the state’s anti-immigrant movement suffered serious setbacks.

Ilario Pantano, the darling of nativist organizations in the state, lost to state Senator David Rouzer (R-Johnston) for the Republican nomination to run in North Carolina’s Seventh District. Pantano made immigration a central plank of his campaign, regularly attending the immigration select committee meetings in the state legislature and bringing on William Gheen, president of the Americans for Legal Immigration PAC (ALIPAC), to work for his campaign. Pantano hit Rouzer hard on charges of supporting “amnesty,” referring to his previous work as a lobbyist for the AgJOBS Act of 2007—Pantano even launched a website, RouzerForAmnesty.com, to malign him over his past. Pantano was the Republican candidate in 2010, riding the name recognition and fame afforded to him after he killed two unarmed Iraqis by shooting them with roughly 60 rounds of ammunition and leaving a placard with a Marine Corps motto over their desecrated bodies.

After campaigning with anti-immigrant and “birther” Sheriff Joe Arpaio, Jim Pendergraph lost the endorsement of the state’s largest paper, the Charlotte Observer to run for the Republican nomination in the state’s Ninth District. Pendergraph was a major booster of programs like 287(g) and Secure Communities in the state—as a former sheriff of Mecklenburg County (where Charlotte is located), Pendergraph took a job with the federal government to help facilitate cooperation between local law enforcement and Immigration and Customs Enforcement. After initially being the heir apparent to Congresswoman Sue Myrick’s seat (he also received her endorsement), Pendergraph is now in second place heading into a runoff election. His opponent, Robert Pittenger, doesn’t vary too much from Pendergraph on the issue, but pro-immigrant advocates in the Ninth District may be making other politicians around the country reconsider their endorsements from Sheriff Joe, and might be making space for their own cause in the future.

For state-wide office, state Representative Dale Folwell (R-Forsyth) lost in his bid for the nomination for Lieutenant Governor. Folwell is a member of State Legislators for Legal Immigration, an arm of the Tanton Network used to introduce anti-immigrant bills in state legislatures. Folwell was motivated to run for this office in no small part to carry out his anti-immigrant agenda. The Lt. Governor sits on the state Board of Education and the NC Board of Community Colleges. Last year, Folwell introduced a bill that would have intimidated undocumented students from attending public school, prompting a strong rebuke from immigrant advocates.

The nativists lost some of their biggest champions on Tuesday, even in races in which they put in all their chips. Could it mean that the tide is turning?

 

Immigration

New Play about Undocumented Students: The Pot

A new play about undocumented students premiered this month in Charlotte, NC.

The Pot is about a college student, Laura, bringing her boyfriend, Rick, home to meet the family at Thanksgiving.  Her father has been elected to the state legislature and is upset to learn that although Rick has lived in the States for most of his life, he is undocumented.

The play’s narrator is Nathan, the adopted son who is of a different ethnicity than his parents.   He tells Laura and Rick’s story as he tries to write a term paper on the tough question: Who are you?

I first started to write The Pot after I learned what happened to my friend’s brother, Erick Velazquillo.  In 2010, he was driving home from the gym and was stopped for using his high beams.  The police officer arrested him for having an expired license and because Erick was undocumented, the government planned to deport him.

Lead by the NC Dream Team, the community rallied around Erick and stopped the deportation of this 22-year-old college student who has lived in the States since he was 2 years old.   And last fall, his sister, Angelica, participated in an act of civil disobedience with the NC Dream Team to protest North Carolina’s anti-immigrant laws.

The play, inspired by these young activists, explores how people are responding to the anti-immigrant movement in our nation.  At the Thanksgiving table, characters argue about whether our immigration system is racist.  One of the characters in the play is Uncle John, a retired ophthalmologist from Michigan, who adds to the tension of the drama as he espouses his views about “illegal” immigrants.

I wrote the play, because I thought theater was one effective way to dramatize an important American story affecting millions of people.  What first moved me was the idea that someone could live in a place for nearly all of his life, consider it home, but be told by others that he doesn’t belong.  Also, as I wrote, I realized that I was exploring a larger question about identity.

The title is The Pot because Nathan and other characters are searching for an answer to this question of America as a melting pot of different cultures and ethnicities.  Why do we fear the other?  What happens when we cross borders on the map or the borders we place between one another?  Since Nathan doesn’t know his biological parents, he realizes:

“I live in that space between a word and a question mark.   But if I don’t answer that question right–Who. Are. You.–if I don’t answer right, borders, boundaries are crossed.  People get mad.  People get disappointed.  People change.  America.”

The Pot was performed at Johnson C. Smith University, a historically black college, located near downtown Charlotte.  After each performance (1 hour 15 minutes), there were talkbacks where audience members could discuss their reactions to the play.  If anyone is interested in reading or producing the show, please contact me at glennhutchinson@mac.com.

US Border Patrol Announces Change in Tactics

On Tuesday, May 8, the United States Border Patrol announced that it would realign its tactics concerning the enforcement of immigration law. The change comes amid a decisive drop in the number of undocumented border crossings from Mexico, and the Border Patrol claims its new strategy will emphasize repeat offense and will allocate resources to high-traffic areas. Figures in both the anti-immigrant and immigrants’ rights movements have expressed doubt in the new plan; Peter Nunez of the nativist group Center for Immigration Studies claims that “interior enforcement” is still lacking under the new policy, while Pedro Rios of the American Friends Service committee described it as “militaristic” with the potential to trample the rights of those residing near the border.

Anti-immigrant Group’s Annual Event Attracts Clowns

Clowns descended on the Capitol yesterday, figuratively and literally.

The former are dozens of conservative radio hosts and nativist leaders attending an anti-immigrant bonanza at the Phoenix Park Hotel. Every year anti-immigrant group Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) holds a publicity and lobbying event in Washington D.C. In years past, the event has attracted a plethora of white nationalist leaders.

This year the nativist circus attracted real clowns. But they certainly weren’t on the guest list.

With balloons, banners and signs that read “FAIR is a Circus, Send in the Clowns” and “these clowns are connected to white nationalism,” the creative protesters made a mockery of FAIR’s event.

FAIR president Dan Stein, no stranger to controversy, reportedly tried to scare the clowns away to no avail.

Biking Beyond Bigotry New England

by Martha Pskowski

The recent New England Biking Beyond Bigotry tour was an exciting chance for me to combine three of my passions – politics, biking and the New England countryside.  As a current college student, it was an important opportunity to reach my peers with the links between the anti-immigrant movement and environmentalism that are often overlooked.  Growing up after the first wave of anti-immigrant in-roads to the environmental movement in the 1990s, I’m passionate to help other young environmental activists to be aware of new arguments and organizations that threaten the integrity of our movements.

Middlebury, VT, was the perfect starting point, and we met many students ready to make the connections between race, migration and the environment.  Middlebury College was the birthplace of 350.org, one of the largest global climate organizations.  Bill McKibben, 350 leader, is a scholar in residence at the College.  As such, it’s often viewed as an important hub of the student climate movement.

Our event at Middlebury, co-hosted by the student groups Juntos and the Sunday Night Group, was a chance to talk about the Tanton Network and its efforts to “green” the anti-immigrant movement.  As a fellow student, I spoke to experiences at Powershift 2011 and other student spaces which made me feel we still have more work to do to dispel these messages.  We shared dinner with students afterward to continue the conversation.

We set off biking in the morning, en route to Hampshire College in Amherst, Mass., a total of 160 miles of biking south.

The final day of biking was my favorite.  We did more than 30 miles from Brattleboro, VT and. The day started off passing by Vermont Yankee, the beleaguered Vermont nuclear plant which is the target of increased protests, as its safety credentials are questioned.  It was interesting to see this plant up close for the first time, even though I have been living within fifty miles of it for several years.

Then we entered into Franklin County, where I live and help organize Summer of Solutions Pioneer Valley.  We were able to stop for lunch at a beautiful permaculture farm where I have helped out in the past.  Riding through the local towns made me think of all the sustainability work going on which really represents environmentalism, and gave me hope that grassroots movements are stronger than the anti-immigrant opposition we face.

Of course, the day ended at the Civil Liberties and Public Policy conference at Hampshire College.  After a few days of biking through farmland and forests, all of a sudden there were hundreds of activists all around.  It was a great finish to the tour, and we were all excited to share with conference attendees our experiences.  Throughout our tour we were able to meet people who are passionate about justice and the environment and have meaningful conversations about how to build an environmental movement that stands up for justice.