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<DIV align=left><FONT face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size=2>[One more
take on S11-- NN]</FONT></DIV>
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size=2></FONT> </DIV>
<DIV align=left><FONT face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"
size=2><I>Published on Thursday, October 4, 2001 Special to <A target=_new
href="http://www.populist.com/">The Progressive Populist</A><!-- #EndEditable --></I></FONT></DIV></TD></TR>
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<DIV align=left><FONT face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size=5><B><!-- #BeginEditable "Header" -->A War on Immigrants to Fight the
War of Terrorism?<BR><FONT size=3>Lessons from the Failed War on
Drugs</FONT><!-- #EndEditable --></B></FONT></DIV></TD></TR>
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<DIV align=left><FONT face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size=2><B><!-- #BeginEditable "author" -->by Nathan Newman<!-- #EndEditable --></B></FONT></DIV></TD></TR>
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<TD width=540><FONT face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size=2><!-- #BeginEditable "Body" -->With exquisite opportunism,
anti-immigrant groups have seized on the attacks of Sept 11 to call for
reversing the emerging movement for amnesty for the millions of
undocumented immigrants in our country.
<P>Anti-immigrant groups like the Federation for American Immigration
Reform (FAIR) jumped to announce not only opposition to any plans for
amnesty but support for new harsher laws to further harass millions of
undocumented residents and to deny greater civil liberties to all
Americans. Topping their list is a new national ID system that would allow
the government to electronically track every citizen's and resident's
movements, from where they are registered for school to where they work
day-to-day. Attorney General John Ashcroft also weighed in with
legislative proposals to sharply curtail or even obliterate the
constitutional rights of immigrants through indefinite detainments and
other harassment.
<P>Given fears of terrorism, a lot of people may say a loss in civil
liberties and privacy will be a small price to pay for greater security,
but such a "solution" is a delusion, one that may lead to making the
situation far worse. We've been down the road of promises that rolling
back civil liberties was a short-cut to solving a broad-based problem--
it's call the "war on drugs" and the results have been a minimal decrease
in drug use but an explosion of organized crime and violence in the
illegal underground bred by government policy.
<P>One reason immigration amnesty had been gaining ground in policy
circles is that, in areas ranging from public health to labor rights, many
analysts had acknowledged that past policy had just encouraged an ever
expanding ring of illegal exploiters, from smugglers to employers, feeding
on the mass of vulnerable undocumented residents in legal limbo. Where the
AFL-CIO had once supported sanctions against employers of undocumented
workers, new policy by the labor federation in support of amnesty was
passed this year as union leaders saw that lesser rights for immigrants
just turned them into easy targets for intimidation and sweatshop
exploitation, often at the expense of other workers.
<P>Cutting back immigrant rights is an even more dangerous policy in the
context of threatened terrorism. A national ID or any other tool is
unlikely to be a problem for terrorists backed by both cash and patience--
no system is full-proof and such a system is least likely to catch such
targets. However, it will likely drive the millions of already existing
undocumented immigrants further underground, creating a whole network of
petty illegality where such terrorists would easily hide when needed with
few questions asked.
<P>That is the lesson of the drug war-- the blurring of the lines between
dangerous crime and petty actions just creates new arenas for illicit
profit and expanding violence in society. You cannot criminalize the
actions of millions of people without creating opportunities for extreme
exploitation of those left with no recourse to normal channels of the law.
Junkies turn to crime to pay for their habit, while undocumented
immigrants turn to smugglers and sweatshops to care for their families.
Left with little alternative in a world of poverty and hunger in
developing nations, such immigrants will come to the United States
whatever the cost, but those costs will just end up mounting for the rest
of society.
<P>Unsurprisingly, terrorism has thrived on the underground institutions
that have risen in the shadow of the drug war. Globally, the war on drugs
has created massive profits to pay for the guns that fuel local violence.
Little of the price paid on the streets of America go to economic
development in poor countries, but the "middle men" of smugglers skim
their share, with some of those funds inevitably fueling violence of all
kinds globally. Prohibition in the 1920s helped institutionalize organized
crime in the United States while the drug war has done the same on a
global scale. And terrorists have used that traffic to fund their efforts,
thereby unmoored from the need for support from nation-states.
<P>A new war on immigrants would merely add to the chaos and desperation
on which terrorism feeds. There are tens of millions of refugees globally
fleeing interstate violence and civil wars. Economic misery and
desperation are driving tens of millions more out of their homes and
countries. Even as we focus on the tragedy of September 11, we cannot
ignore the millions of Afganis displaced from decades of war in their
homeland. In the face of such global misery, a war on immigrants will be
not only ineffective but further undermine our security by deepening the
chasms of shadow existence in our midst.
<P>If the threat of physical terrorism will not be lessened by such
attacks on immigrants and our own civil liberties, the threat of
biological terrorism will be exponentially increased. With a strong public
health system, the introduction of any biological agent poses relatively
little threat, since any significantly lethal disease would be quickly
detected and isolated. But as we isolate undocumented immigrants from that
public health system, and a rigid national ID system would inevitably do
that, it increases the likelihood of disease, natural or
terrorist-inspired, spreading without detection to the point it may be far
harder to contain.
<P>Ultimately, the solution to drugs, excess immigration and terrorism
share a basic approach-- isolate the violent elements of any community
while focusing on prevention and easing the misery that drive the problem
and which the extreme elements exploit. Wars and misery have been a large
source of these problems; so the last thing we need are need are more
"wars" as a cure.
<P>Driving immigrants further underground is a recipe not for greater
security but of exploitation. Instead, we need to address the fundamental
social ills globally that drive tens of millions of people into their
shadow underworld. In the case of immigration policy, the best bet is a
combination of legalization of current immigrants to end their
exploitation combined with social development investments in the lands
from which they come to ease the pressure that force them to emigrate in
the first place.
<P>It's an old saying but still universally true- If you want peace, work
for justice. The events of September 11 just reinforce that lesson in
unforgettable ways.
<P><I>Nathan Newman is a longtime union and community activist, a National
Vice President of the National Lawyers Guild and author of the forthcoming
book NET LOSS on Internet policy and economic inequality. Email <A
href="mailto:nathan@newman.org">nathan@newman.org</A> or see <A
target=_new
href="http://www.nathannewman.org/">http://www.nathannewman.org</A>.
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