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Pro-Illegal Immigrant Boycott Monday
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| josh4 |
This one should prove interesting. Its the first real demonstration that is supposed to display the strength of illegal immigrants in the economy. The whole illegal immigrant movement pretty much has a lot tied up into this, and I think there are more scheduled for this month. If it doesn't create a noticible flux in the day's events then that would certainly make this "movement" look real bad. Not that holding marches waving Mexican flags and pissing off Americans haven't already and not that even having a "movement" for pro-illegal immigration hasn't already..
| quote: | Rift Could Diminish Boycott's Strength
Immigrant Groups Argue Over Agenda
By Krissah Williams and Karin Brulliard
Washington Post Staff Writers
Monday, May 1, 2006; A01
Some local activists predicted that thousands of Washington area immigrants would participate in a national economic boycott today, but immigrant groups who have spoken out against the boycott said they fear that the immigration reform movement is being commandeered to promote political causes beyond immigration.
The public tug of war, which continued in the Washington area yesterday on Spanish-language radio, could result in more limited participation in the region than is expected in Dallas and Los Angeles, where the organizers of last month's massive protests have been more unified in support of today's boycott, which asks immigrants to refrain from buying goods and to stay home from work and school.
Police in Los Angeles said they expected a rally that may draw as many as half a million people. Some major national firms that rely heavily on immigrant labor said they would close for the day. Perdue Farms said about half of its chicken processing plants would close, and Tyson Foods Inc. said that nine of its 15 beef and pork plants will not operate.
Locally, business owners said they did not know what to expect. Some said they would close, and several construction firms said they would allow their employees to take the day off.
Ricardo Juarez, coordinator of Mexicans Without Borders in Northern Virginia, and a local leader of the boycott, predicted that "real economic impact" would be felt in the Washington area.
But Jaime Contreras, president of the National Capital Immigration Coalition, said he continues to encourage people to conduct business as usual so that they don't risk their jobs. And the Rev. Jose E. Hoyos, director of the Arlington Catholic Diocese's Spanish Apostolate, said he believes people will heed his message to go to work.
"A lot of people have said to me that their lives are going to be normal," Hoyos said.
The disagreement over the boycott played out last week in a series of news conferences. Many leaders of the April 10 immigration rally on the Mall cautioned against participation in the boycott, while some activists from the Washington region and elsewhere encouraged immigrants to stay away from work, schools and stores.
"What we don't want is for people to go around and confuse the community around the country. And that is exactly what has happened," Contreras said. "Sadly, there are those who claim that they own the movement. The folks that came here . . . would say that they were the people who held the gran marcha , the [March 25 rally] in L.A., when in reality that was not the truth."
The discord, Contreras said, is not over whether boycotting is a valid tactic. But with Congress just back from a recess -- and with a recent CNN poll showing that 77 percent of Americans favor allowing some illegal immigrants to apply for citizenship -- he said most local activists feel it is best to wait to see how Congress reacts.
Some local Latino leaders said they worry about being associated with a Los Angeles-based group, Act Now to Stop War and End Racism (ANSWER), that has been active in promotion of the boycott. They fear that the group's broad-based opposition to Bush administration policies could hinder attempts to win allies for immigration reform on Capitol Hill.
ANSWER protested numerous administration policies, including sanctions on Cuba, the 2001invasion of Afghanistan and the war in Iraq. The organization began supporting immigrants' causes last year in opposition to the Minuteman Project's plan to patrol the southern U.S. border, said Carlos Alvarez, a Los Angeles-based ANSWER spokesman.
"Ideological cohesion to the T isn't something that is absolutely necessary right now," he said.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy...6043000819.html |
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| josh4 |
| I like mine better. |
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| shaolin_Z |
| quote: | Originally posted by josh4
I like mine better. |
I don't see why this needs a thread of it's own and can't go in the other one, but whatever. |
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| trancaholic |
| quote: | Originally posted by shaolin_Z
I don't see why this needs a thread of it's own and can't go in the other one, but whatever. |
Indeed. Same goes for all the Iran threads.
We need a thread-merging mod. |
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| shaolin_Z |
| quote: | Originally posted by trancaholic
Indeed. Same goes for all the Iran threads.
We need a thread-merging mod. |
Let's make Occ a mod already. :D |
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| InterMilan31 |
| quote: | Originally posted by josh4
I like mine better. |
a kente
20 spanish ppl called out of work tomarrow at a local CVS - source my friend |
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| josh4 |
| quote: | Originally posted by shaolin_Z
I don't see why this needs a thread of it's own and can't go in the other one, but whatever. |
Because mine has an introduction, article, better title, and more views. |
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| InterMilan31 |
| quote: | Originally posted by josh4
Because mine has an introduction, article, better title, and more views. |
Mine is generalized!
Anyway have it your way. This thing to me is a joke. I think if this really effects certain areas as it isnt in mine so far there will be a huge backlash. Im already upset with these people already and if they with my day to day activites(protest martches etc) it wont make things anybetter. |
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| Lepanto |
| LOL. My prof today said that anyone who's out today flunks the course. P W N E D! |
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| priveye03 |
| Seeing as how immigration in current discussions is like expresso, what the hip kids talk about, then I think this could be an effective tool in showing exactly how intertwined our economy is with immigrants. It will hopefully get the "kick-them-all-outers" a reality check. |
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| Lepanto |
They say kick the illegal ones out that bring little to the economy ;).
On top of that, just because ILLEGAL immigrants do jobs that "Americans won't do" (which is bull anyway), plenty of LEGAL immigrants will do them? Know how i know? Cause my parents did some of them and a heap of my friend's parents and even my friends did them when they just immigrated here, for minimum wage and 12 hours a day to get back up on their feet. |
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