Immigration reform is a hot issue right now (we have discussed this issue before) and I want to talk about immigration without a supercharged discussion about the benefits and/or drawbacks of Black Brown unity. Having said that, one contentious point in the proposed Senate bill “would put a higher premium on immigrants’ education, earnings level, or job skills.” If this bill passes as is, it would represent a reversal of long standing
I was watching the Daily Show with Jon Stewart and Jon asked one of his reporters to sum up the goals of the immigration reform debate. The reporter replied, “What can brown do for you?” (a play on the UPS commercial) I laughed because that one statement epitomizes long standing American foreign policy towards the vast Black and Brown people of the world.
Senator Barack Obama said the bill, “fails to recognize the fundamental morality of uniting Americans with their family members. It also places a person’s job skills over his character and work ethic.”
Some Black folk reading this post might disagree with my analysis but in the end, no person or group should be dehumanized to the point where their financial value is placed above being with their family, period. For Black people to do so in particular represents a severe and problematic ignorance of our own history in our tragic journey to
Brandon Q.
May 27th, 2007 | Politics, Black Issues, Immigration
Thank you for the comments Tyler and Aly, they mean alot me. I think we as Black folks have to get ahead of this immigration fight before it threatens to pit Brown against Black in ways that are too scary to describe.
Comment by Brandon Q. — April 22, 2008 @ 9:53 am