One winter morning in 1996, Border Patrol agents charged into a Los
Angeles street-corner clinic where 40 day laborers had lined up to be
tested for AIDS. One worker, Omar Sierra, had just taken his seat,
and a nurse had inserted the needle for drawing the blood. As agents
of the migra ran across the street and sidewalk, Sierra jumped up,
tore off the tourniquet, pulled the needle out of his vein and ran.
Sierra escaped and made it home. Shaken by his experience and
determined never to forget his friends who were deported, he wrote a song.
I'm going to sing you a story, friends
that will make you cry,
how one day in front of K-Mart
the migra came down on us,
sent by the sheriff
of this very same place ...
We don't understand why,
we don't know the reason,
why there is so much
discrimination against us.
In the end we'll wind up
all the same in the grave.
With this verse I leave you,
I'm tired of singing,
hoping the migra
won't come after us again,
because in the end, we all have to work.
Sierra states an obvious truth about people in the US without
immigration papers: "We all have to work." Yet, work has become a
crime for the undocumented. That Hollywood raid took place 13 years
ago, but since then immigration enforcement against workers has grown
much more widespread, with catastrophic consequences. In the last
eight years of the Bush administration in particular, a succession of
raids treated undocumented workers as criminals.
<http://www.truthout.org/1123096>Link
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Posted By johannes to
<http://www.monochrom.at/english/2009/11/should-we-defend-undocumented-workers.htm>monochrom
at 11/26/2009 06:10:00 PM