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Coalition of Minutemen and Migrant Groups?

by Claire Greene Sunday, Jul. 24, 2005 at 12:27 PM

A coalition of Minutepeople and Migrant-rights groups working together would really get the attention needed to make this nation aware. The real illegal aliens are the corporations that cross natural and cultural borders with impunity and are destroying the environment and people’s lives in the name of “global progress.” The only border that needs protecting is the moral and practical one that will shield us from this plunder and the destruction of quality living standards in ALL countries.

Don’t like Minutemen tactics, but…

While you read this, remember that “the Minutemen” is a motley group with splits and cracks. What they all intend however is to get the necessary attention for congress to fully militarize the border. But since their hysteria comes in multiple shades, perhaps migrant rights supporters can consider a multiple approach, on the chance that some Minutemen would be persuaded to see the big picture and synergize instead of antagonize. Consider:

“Now you have an unemployed American or another American working for dirt cheap wages and you have an illegal alien or economic refugee working for dirt cheap wages, and the employer, the slave master if you will of the 21st century, laughs all the way to the bank...it’s almost a conspiracy between the political powers and economic powers around the world to have a global corporation…we will exploit the poor from Mexico and the new poor in the U.S., new poor in Europe and in Asia. And those new poor will be indentured slaves of a very small percentage of incredibly wealthy trillionaires, which is the way they want it, and as long as they have that kind of economic power they literally can control police forces, armies, navies…” according to Minutemen leader Jim Gilchrist in an interview with Rene Flores for the San Diego Free Press.

I don’t like the Racist Rambo direction that the Minutemen’s anger has taken, but to their credit they have gotten us to think about forced economic migration and Jim Gilchrist has pointed the finger at two of the critical culprits: Global corporations and the Mexican power structure with its corrupt spinelessness to stand up to the U.S. and help lift Mexico out of poverty, becoming instead one of the wealthiest exploitation-elites on the planet while conveniently using the U.S. as a social safety valve for Mexico’s poor.

Affluent employers in the U.S. reap the benefit of course, saving big on lower wages, and no health or disability insurance, pension plan, or social security contributions, letting the rest of society pick up the tab.

It is this rush of the affluent to live a life of luxury like the Mexican elite that has created the huge wealth gap in this country and has so many U.S. workers feeling uneasy.

Given these inequities, is it any wonder that organized anger would surface? Anger is real and derives from valid indignation. From there it manifests itself in diverse forms, and sight of the real cause is often lost.

Today angry Minutemen and angry Migrant rights groups face off. Should they feel satisfied by venting and attempting to contain each other? Or is there a chance that energies could be synergized to tackle the common source of their indignation: the insidious corporate global plunder that operates without borders and is bankrupting standards of living worldwide?

Remember that the global elites benefit from conflict and confusion among the economic losers in this game, and with imperial amusement watch the gladiatorial contests between the poor and those getting poorer, no matter what their color, language or beliefs. If it were really a matter of race, you’d see rich Whites resisting the wealthy Arabs and Mexicans who come to live here. Instead they trade and flow their capitals to G-8 rhythms and together smile down at the arena.

We each exist only with the gender, racial and cultural components that shape our personality, and whereas we may very well be tolerant and value differences among us, we cannot escape the effect of affronts to our person. We always feel the offense, whether we choose to react or not. We are very vulnerable to the pushing of these identity buttons, which is precisely why they are useful to provoke and distract people from the real problem.

Although it’s likely many of the Minutemen act with racist tension, the underlying tension today is not race, but the precipitous crumbling of our standard of living in two decades. Not being able to afford college, find a decent paying job, own a home, pay for health care; and amidst insecurity about the basics, nothing but mounting debt offered as the solution. Some Minutemen sense the real causes, others are just having a grandiose time feeling bravado. People of color must guard themselves from those who lash out, but at the same time not lose this opportunity to reach out and seek the common ground, attacking the real causes of this hostility, instead of attacking the symptoms.

Mexican-Americans who used to earn legal union wages also resent the influx of an illegal labor supply in our fields, construction sites and hospitality industry. This is clearly not a race problem.

What the Minutemen and Migrant-rights groups want is essentially the same: a respectable livelihood, both in the U.S. and in Mexico instead of manipulation by oil, manufacturing, construction and agro-business interests that want cheap labor worldwide.

If the focus of all this anger shifts to eliminating global corporate welfare, it would do for racism what rodent control did for the plague.

Imagine a Tea Party protesting today’s exploiters: Minutepeople and Migrant-rights groups marching together at the enclaves of the Mexican elite in the U.S., at the Zocalo and down Pennsylvania Ave. and Wall Street to expose and resist the global exploitation that promotes and gains so much from illegal economic migration?

Jim Gilchrist has mentioned the need for Mexico to have a revolution, and he says hopefully a non-violent one. Sure, but if it’s time for a revolution in Mexico, it’s evidently time for a revolution by the citizens of this country as well. The two countries are intertwined at many levels, not the least of which is the selling out to US interests by the Mexican ruling-elite, and the de facto control by our government of Mexico’s economic policies and destiny.

All the Mexican poor I have met would prefer to stay in the land they grew up in, where they know the language, like the food and have their families. It could be a productive land for them, were it not for the final foreign takeover of the Mexican economy with the wholesale sellout by President Salinas to foreign interests in the early 90’s. Many of Mexico’s agricultural cooperatives, state services and unions were indeed in need of an overhaul, but not the greedy betrayal by wealthy megalomaniacs to global commercial, service and agro-business interests.

Poor Mexicans prefer Mexico, but they are being squeezed out to provide a cheap labor source for the US. Imagine if they were paid legal wages and benefits. Anyone who imagines how this would change the US economy can easily realize why it is an economic issue, not a racial one.

What about Minutepeople working with Migrant-rights groups to provide micro-loan incentives for Mexicans to establish themselves successfully back home with their families? Farmers need tractors and non-GMO seeds. In rural areas, one to three thousand dollars can set up a family with a viable cottage industry. Tackle for fishermen, high-powered saws for carpenters, tools for computer technicians, a wide system of people-to-people loans that could provide real solutions. Remember these would be loans, not handouts.

We still have the means to do something about the standard of living in our two countries. It will get much worse for every race if we allow corporate welfare to continue ruling our economic destinies.

The dialogue between Anti-immigrant groups and Migrant-rights groups to work on real solutions would be a good start. And since Mexican workers coming here is directly related to U.S. corporations going to Mexico, why not anti-globalization projects with the Minutepeople who understand the real causes of illegal immigration?

Perhaps patrolling against ChevronTexaco and Sempra thanks to their latest escapade to set up offshore re-gasification terminals just south of San Diego might be of interest to Minutepeople, since these plants will offer a prime target to terrorists.

These major industrial projects recently received the Mexican government’s blessing, but not that of the local Mexican population, and most people in Southern California are unaware of the projects. These plants will not benefit Mexicans who have plenty of oil and solar energy. They are meant for energy-guzzling Californians. Yet they are not built off the California coastline because they would spoil oceanfront views and frightening explosions could hinder our sunsets. Let the Mexicans deal with ugly industrial sights, dangers, pollution, damage to their rich marine biodiversity, fishing industry and eco-tourism.

Could reliance on these gas pipelines from Mexico affect our national security? Would Mexicans have a right to escape into the US if these plants explode and damage their livelihood? What do the Minutepeople think?

The real illegal aliens are the corporations that cross natural and cultural borders with impunity and are destroying the environment and people’s lives in the name of “global progress.” The only border that needs protecting is the moral and practical one that will shield us from this plunder and the destruction of quality living standards in ALL countries. By re-directing hostility toward the real causes of slave migration Minutepeople and Migrant-rights groups could work together to build such a border.

A border protecting us all from corporate plunder would allow Mexicans to make a living in sunny Mexico. If their hard-working ethic and hands were needed in our fields, restaurants, hotels, food-processing plants and building industries, it would take legal wages and benefits to motivate them to leave their homes.

To start the vigilant protection from unfair global trade and corporate raiders a call is made to all true Minutepeople to join a nationwide Tea Party by throwing big business bullies overboard boycotting their products until they play fair.

A coalition of Minutepeople and Migrant-rights groups working together would really get the attention needed to make this nation aware. By not fighting each other, Whites, Blacks and Browns can focus on fighting the unscrupulous corporate practices that are rapidly destroying our quality of life. Hopefully Minutemen will realize that hunting down the weakest victims in this global game is a short-sighted and inhumane strategy. The world needs a tall border of integrity to protect us so we can get back and develop the quality education, healthcare, housing, environment and jobs that are clearly possible everywhere. It's the economy, not race. Synergizing our collective anger, energies and resources effectively is a better strategy. Isn’t it possible that a few, some, many Minutepeople would agree?



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Kook spew

by Fredric L. Rice Monday, Jul. 25, 2005 at 3:40 AM
frice@skeptictank.org

> The real illegal aliens are the corporations that

> cross natural and cultural borders with impunity and

> are destroying the environment and people’s lives in

> the name of “global progress.”

When you can find any evidence that illegal imigration destroys the environment -- more than legitimate citizens do -- you'll let us know, won't you, Elmer?

Thanks.

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besides that quip she gets an A for effort

by Hex Monday, Jul. 25, 2005 at 4:15 AM

pretty smooth con job. short on action regarding actually doing anything other than smoothly sliding in more victimization of the powerless compared to say going afer the source of the problem - big business

(boycotts - tax revolts)

and as Fred pointed out another racist jewel slipped in quietly...

well their PR is getting a little better at least

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Do you think or just react?

by Claire Saturday, Jul. 30, 2005 at 11:58 AM

Please read more closely, it does not say illegal immigration destroys the environment, does it? It says the CORPORATIONS are the real illegal aliens.





There is no racism cover-up in this article. It says attack the real culprit -international big business- in the pocket, instead of victimizing the victims. Once the economics issues are dealt with, if you would just take off your blinders, you would see the racism issues would all but disappear. Yet it seems people on both sides like to feel racism is the real issue because it let's them blow off steam and feel self-righteous. It sure isn't going to solve the real problems, especially for the workers who become migrants because of IMFplanned poverty, despite whatever racism exists or doesn't exist in the world at any given time. (If we were all the same race, we'd still have the powerful trying to justify their mean and stupid ways, maybe they'd invent all people with curls or freckles deserved to be paid substandard wages).

I'm not saying racism doesn't exist, it just isn't the motor of migrant deaths, injustice and suffering, it's just a reaction to the ploys of the big boys on Wall

Street.

Sure the smoke is bad, but if you don't put out the fire, what difference does it make how much you complain about the smoke?



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Globalization

by johnk Saturday, Jul. 30, 2005 at 1:30 PM

Claire, you have to get in touch with reality.

Here's a short list of why the MMP are never going to unite with those who defend human rights.

1. They support the CCIR agenda of cutting social services to the undocumented. (Immigrant rights groups oppose this.)

2. The MMP target people at the border, with threats of violence.

3. You can't force wealthy people to invest locally. Where are the laws? To carry out a "class war," you need to feel class unity, and the MMP aren't interested unifying the working class. They are dividing it. Most labor-oriented immimgrants rights groups, in contrast, always attempt to unite across national, language, and cultural borders.

4. The MMP side lack an awareness that our standard of living derives, in some part, from the poverty of the people in Mexico.

5. The MMP hate globally oriented communists, anarchists, and other leftists. The MMP are nationalists. The Left in America generally aren't nationalist.

If the MMP want to get involved in fighting for the working class, they are welcome to stop pointing their guns at their fellow workers, and stop insulting liberals and the Left, and join this side.

Given that a good fraction of their movement are Fascists (or "National Socialists" or at least Hitler admirers) this isn't likely to happen.

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Mexican American Labor Movement

by johnk Saturday, Jul. 30, 2005 at 1:42 PM

I was looking up the topic, becase you brought up the issue of Mexican Americans in union jobs. I recalled that the AFL was pretty exclusionary.

This linked essay is interesting, because it mentions that leftists and the CIO were doing cross-border organizing in the 1930s.

The MMP would have opposed these Leftists if they were active today. The leftists would have been fighting off the MMP.

Individuals can choose to become enlightened and leave the MMP, but, the MMP as a whole will never unite with their opponents.

BTW - the book is called "Labor Rights are Civil Rights".

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"I'm not saying" - exactly

by Hex Saturday, Jul. 30, 2005 at 10:29 PM

it's what you were not saying that matters

A person would have to be ignorant about what SOS/MM's agendas are to even buy into the rosey picture you've attempted to paint of them

I've done datamining on them and have seen *extensive* links from aryan WP sites plus several are cross members to these racist organizations

All SOS/MM is are unpopular WP racists looking for a popular cause to hide behind to increase their numbers and popularity

truth, working with oppressed people and social justice mean nothing to them - they don't want to help or build anything - they only want to victimize easy targets for their own personal pleasure

they've already said so and displayed it on here, on their own websites and in public at protests

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