OPINION: Oh Wait, There are Other Types of Immigration?

Immigrants

The latest discussion on immigration has largely focused on the illegal immigration of people crossing over into the United States from Mexico. After taking a backseat into issues regarding our financial crisis, healthcare reform, and political tactics, the passing of immigration law SB1070 in Arizona has rekindled the discussion on immigration and our need to find an effective and just solution. Supporters of the law believe that the law will discourage illegal immigrants from entering the state. Critics believe that the new law will encourage discriminatory actions and encourage racial profiling. I will not focus on the new law enacted in Arizona, but rather take a broader perspective of how immigration affects the United States in a global economy.

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OPINION: Shared Culture, Shared Burden

kid with SB1070 sign

It is hard to conceive of a more complicated relationship than the one between Mexican immigrants who only recently arrived in the United States – legally or illegally – and Mexican-Americans whose families have lived here for generations.

It’s a relationship that is center stage now that Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer has signed SB 1070, a ghastly piece of legislation intended to get rid of one group by targeting and inconveniencing the other. It is no surprise that, when opponents of the law turned out recently in dozens of U.S. cities to condemn what is a license to racially profile in trolling for illegal immigrants, Mexican-Americans were well represented among the protesters.

They know a bad thing when they see one. The Support Our Law Enforcement and Safe Neighborhoods Act is a hypocritical and self-destructive law that is probably – in a legal sense – not long for this world. Hypocritical because Arizona now wants to play the victim of an illegal immigration problem that it helped create by offering illegal immigrants a friendly hiring climate for decades. Self-destructive because Arizona – if it succeeds in ridding the state of illegal immigrants — is sure to suffer from boycotts, diminished productivity, and lost federal revenue tied to Census figures. Not long for this world because it violates the 4th Amendment’s protection against unreasonable search and seizure, the 5th Amendment’s right to due process, and the Necessary and Proper Clause which makes plain that enforcing immigration law is the job of the federal government and not of individual states.

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OPINION: Mom, “I understand.”

preemo

Preemo, www.myspace.com/preemo

I sometimes question my path. I question it because, sometimes, the path we walk is wide and has big beautiful trees lined along its borders that give off miles of fresh air. You breathe deeply and you know life is right. It’s where you’re supposed to be.

Then the path narrows, the light and the trees disappear and nothingness surrounds it. Nothing surrounds you. You breathe deeply and you’re short of breath and you know life is confusing.  It’s not where you’re supposed to be.

My path has widened and narrowed several times. My path recently widened and there were no trees, just hip-hop. Brown hip-hop. Latino hip-hop. Instead of trees, rappers lined up along my path’s borders. They’re staring at me and I don’t know what it means. They represent thousands of songs, millions of lyrics, billions of beats.  Their music is a manifestation of the streets. My streets. They tell a story and it’s mine. But I question my path. Why me? Why am I here?

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OPINION: Is Soda the New Crack?

kid drinking soda

If it is, I was born a crack-baby. I was born craving the bubbly. I was one of those Mexican-American babies with that fizzling dark liquid in their bottle you shake your head at. I grew up on Coca-Cola. It accompanied breakfast, lunch and dinner. No joke, I used to drink a two-liter bottle… per day.

Think that’s funny?

I was a shitty big brother to my sibling eight years my junior, which is normal. Let me tell you what’s not. One time when he pissed me off, I made him drink water and he threw up everywhere. What’s more sickening? The act I committed against my brother or the fact that his body rejected one of the most important elements of the human body, because it was so foreign to him.

I rose up from tough circumstances and persevered. Today, I have everything a man could want – toys, beautiful women who keep me company at home and at work, clothes, a daughter who speaks multiple languages and is faster than a grown man, a car that’s faster than yours, 11th floor view from the living room, you name it – I got it. One of the greatest things I have is control over is my life. I do what I want, when I want.

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OPINION: “Soda: It’s Bad for You.”

fat man soda

“Soda: It’s bad for you.” That’s the main reason why a growing number of public health experts and government officials propose taxing it, because soda consumption contributes to the obesity epidemic. Experts at Johns Hopkins call the trend “a public health crisis,” projecting that by 2015, 75 percent of Americans will be overweight or obese. No one’s more at risk than Latinos. So tough as it is, Latino leaders should put down the bubbly and step up to the plate in support of soda taxes.

Most of us grew up with a soda in our hands and a twelve-pack in the pantry, but it’s time to wake up and smell the stench of empty calories. Diabetes Health reports that researchers from UCLA and the California Center for Public Health Advocacy discovered “a strong correlation between soda consumption and weight.” Specifically, they found that “adults who drink a soda or more per day are 27 percent more likely to be overweight than those who do not drink sodas.” The results were published in a study called, “Bubbling Over: Soda Consumption and Its Link to Obesity in California.”

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