Immigrants Used to Justify a Homeland Security Police State

By Peter Phillips

Threats of terrorism and twelve million “illegal” immigrants are  
being used to justify new police-state measures in the United States.  
Coordinated mass arrests, big brother spy blimps, expanded detention  
centers, repeal of the Posse Comitatus Act, and suspension of habeas  
corpus have all been recently implemented and are ready to use  
against anyone in the US.

The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) flooded Mexico with  
cheap subsidized US agricultural products that displaced millions of  
Mexican farmers. Between 2000 and 2005, Mexico lost 900,000 rural  
jobs and 700,000 industrial jobs, resulting in deep unemployment  
throughout the country. Desperate poverty has forced millions of  
Mexican workers north in order to feed their families.

In the wake of 9/11, Immigration Customs Enforcement (ICE) has  
conducted workplace and home invasions across the country in an  
attempt to roundup “illegal” immigrants. ICE justifies these raids  
under the rubric of keeping our homeland safe and preventing  
terrorism. However the real goal of these actions is to disrupt the  
immigrant work force in the US and replace it with a tightly  
regulated non-union guest-worker program.  This policy is endorsed by  
companies seeking permanent low-wage workers through a lobby group  
called Essential Worker Immigrations Coalition (EWIC). EWIC’s fifty- 
two members include the US Chamber of Commerce, Wal Mart, Marriott,  
Tyson Foods, American Meat Institute, California Landscape  
Contractors Association, and the Association of Builders and  
Contractors.

A new program, established by the Department of Justice in  
cooperation with Homeland Security, uses the code-name Operation  
Falcon (Federal and Local Cops Organized Nationally). Operation  
Falcon carried out three unprecedented federally-coordinated mass  
arrests between April 2005 and October 2006. More than 30,000  
fugitives, including immigrants, were arrested in the largest  
dragnets in the nation's history. The operations directly involved  
over 960 agencies including FBI, ICE, IRS, Homeland Security and  
other federal, state and local law enforcement agencies.

To accommodate the detention of tens of thousands of people, Homeland  
Security, in 2005, awarded Halliburton’s subsidiary KBR a  $385  
million contingency contract to build detention camps in the United  
States. According to the Halliburton website, “The contract provides  
for establishing temporary detention and processing capabilities to  
augment existing Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Detention  
and Removal Operations (DRO) Program facilities in the event of an  
emergency influx of immigrants into the US, or to support the rapid  
development of new programs.”

Other new police-state programs include U.S. government contracting  
with Lockheed-Martin to design and develop enormous unmanned  
airships, seventeen times the size of the Goodyear blimp, outfitted  
with high-resolution cameras to spy on the Mexican border. The  
airships are designed to float 12 miles above the earth, far above  
planes and weather systems. The high-resolution camera will watch  
over a circle of countryside 600 miles in diameter and could be moved  
to spy on any region of the US.

The programs described above combined with two recent changes in US  
law make the reality of a full police-state in the US increasingly  
more feasible. The Military Commissions Act signed October of 2006  
suspends habeas corpus rights for any person deemed by the President  
to be an enemy combatant. Persons so designated could be imprisoned  
indefinitely without rights to legal counsel or a trial.  And the  
Defense Authorization Act of 2007 allows the president to station  
troops anywhere in America and take control of state-based National  
Guard units without the consent of the governor or local  
authorities.  By revising the two-century-old Insurrection Act, the  
law in effect repeals the Posse Comitatus Act and gives the US  
government the legal authority to order the military onto the streets  
anywhere in America.

Threats of terrorism and illegal immigrants are being used to justify  
the implementation of police-state programs. But once started,  
enforcement can be rapidly deployed to any group of people in the US  
and we all become endangered. Mass arrests, big brother in the sky,  
and the loss of civil rights for everyone does not bode well for  
those who believe in democracy, free speech, and the right to  
critically challenge our government without fear of reprisals.


Peter Phillips is a Professor of Sociology at Sonoma State University  
and Director of Project Censored a media research organization. He is  
co-editor with Dennis Loo of Impeach the President: The Case Against  
Bush and Cheney from Seven Stories Press, 2006.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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