Wednesday, July 28, 2010

The Elephant in Arizona



"An injunction against SB 1070! Hip hip hooray!" That was my first reaction upon hearing the news that federal judge Susan Bolton has ruled against the major sections of the anti-Latino immigration law signed in April by Arizona governor Jan Brewer. It would have been enacted tomorrow.

Since April, 7 different lawsuits have been brought against the law. Today brought Bolton's ruling on the federal government vs. AZ. Still to come are the decisions regarding human rights' groups and law enforcement officials who have filed suit against the law.

The injunction will effectively block the provisions of the law that would make it a 'crime to fail to apply for or carry alien registration papers or "for an unauthorized alien to solicit, apply for, or perform work," and a provision "authorizing the warrantless arrest of a person" if there is reason to believe that person might be subject to deportation' and the provision which required cops to solicit "papers" from individuals who by "reasonable suspicion" they deem may be illegal.

Needless to say, I am happy about this ruling, but I know that the war has just begun. In addition to the inevitable backlash that this injunction will cause (Brewer will bring it to the courts of appeals), the injunction can not put a stop to the misguided and hateful attitudes towards Latino immigrants that caused the bill to be drawn up initially.

[Warning: the following paragraph was not preconceived. It is an erratic stream of consciousness. Read at your own will.] Even though racial profiling is now outlawed in the state of Arizona, there's been enough attention given to Arizona throughout this process, that I almost feel as though they have still succeeded. Jan Brewer and her cronies have, if you will, planted the idea of being Mexican as being a criminal, and too many Americans have subscribed to this idea instead of thinking for themselves and seeing the truth. I offer an analogy: the elephant is to the room as immigration status is to Arizona. Does that make sense? The government has protected the elephant for now, but the poachers are there, waiting to take down the elephant in Arizona. Immigration status and race is the only thing on Arizona citizens' minds now. Remember the scene in Inception when Joseph Gordan Levitt explains the concept of inception to the Japanese dude? He says, "I say to you, 'don't think about elephants,' what do you think about?" The answer: elephants. Susan Bolton rules against SB 1070. What's gonna happen? Citizen support of SB 1070 is going to skyrocket. Ughhh.

Like I said, the above was a total diversion from my main point, which was supposed to illuminate the varying roles played by the major television news outlets in reporting the SB 1070 ruling.

Earlier this afternoon, I flipped between Fox, msnbc and CNN, which were all covering the SB 1070 news, each from their own charming political perspective. I payed attention to three aspects of the news shows: footage, commentary and key terms when referring to the bill. I observed the following:

Fox News

  • Footage: "illegal aliens" being handcuffed, sitting on curbs under supervision of ICE agents
  • Commentary: mainly came from an Arizona sheriff
  • Key terms: The provisions blocked in the injunction were the “toughest teeth” and the “critical parts” of the bill SB 1070.

msnbc

  • Footage: Activists protesting against law in Arizona, prior to ruling
  • Key Terms: The provisions blocked were the ones that were "unguided," "unjust" (quoted from Obama's immigration speech)

CNN

  • Footage: immigrant workers picking fruit, scenes on the border with the fence and border patrol agents
  • Commentary: legal analyst, conservative latino group leader
  • Key terms: The provisions blocked were the “controversial parts”
Moral of the story: know what you're watching. Avoid brainwashing.

1 comment:

  1. And the three most famous illegal aliens in history, Molly?

    Jesus, Mary, and St. Joseph -- who had no documentation while fleeing Herod's slaughter of the Holy Innocents. Glad they weren't turned back.

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