DREAM Movement: Challenges With the Social Justice Elite's Military Option Arguments and the Immigration Reform "Leaders"
Tuesday 21 September 2010
by: Jonathan Perez, Jorge Guitierrez, Nancy Meza, and Neidi Dominguez Zamorano, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

(Photo: Ruben Hernandez / DreamActivist)
You may well ask: "Why direct action? Why sit-ins, marches and so forth? Isn't negotiation a better path?" You are quite right in calling for negotiation. Indeed, this is the very purpose of direct action. Nonviolent direct action seeks to create such a crisis and foster such a tension that a community which has constantly refused to negotiate is forced to confront the issue. It seeks so to dramatize the issue that it can no longer be ignored.
. . . We know through painful experience that freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor; it must be demanded by the oppressed. Frankly, I have yet to engage in a direct-action campaign that was "well timed" in the view of those who have not suffered unduly from the disease of segregation. For years now I have heard the word "Wait!" It rings in the ear of every Negro with piercing familiarity. This "Wait" has almost always meant "Never." We must come to see, with one of our distinguished jurists, that "justice too long delayed is justice denied."
-- Martin Luther King, Letter From the Birmingham Jail, April 16, 1963
We are undocumented youth activists and we refuse to be silent any longer. The DREAM Act movement has inspired and re-energized undocumented and immigrant youth around the country. In a time when the entire immigrant community is under attack, and increasingly demoralized, stripped of our rights, the DREAM movement has injected life, resistance and creativity into the broader immigrant rights struggle.
Until we organized this movement, we had been caught in a paralyzing stranglehold of inactivity across the country. We were told that the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act, or CIRA, was still possible. Yet we continued to endure ICE raids and we witnessed the toxic Arizona SB1070. Meanwhile, CIRA had lost bipartisan support and there was no longer meaningful Congressional or executive support for real reform.
Youth DREAM Act activists stopped waiting. We organized ourselves and created our own strategy, used new tactics and we rejected the passivity of the nonprofit industrial complex. At a moment when hope seemed scarce, we forged new networks of solidarity. We declared ourselves UNDOCUMENTED AND UNAFRAID!
Mirroring the experiences of Dr. King and the youth activists of Birmingham, our allies encouraged us to avoid implementing "controversial" tactics.[1] We were told to wait for a better time in the future where immigration reform would again become plausible.
Just as the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee followed the advice of Ella Baker to create their own organization independent of older organizations, we did the same. The nonprofit organizations and politicians pushing for Comprehensive Immigration Reform continued to try to dictate what our actions should be. We felt that a barrier in achieving legalization was the Nonprofit Industrial Complex.
The Nonprofit Industrial Complex is a network of politicians, the elite, foundations and social justice organizations. This system encourages movements to model themselves after capitalist structures instead of challenging them.[2] In this manner, foundations control social movements and dissent; philanthropy masks corporate greed and exploitation. We reject this by functioning as donation-only and volunteer-based organized groups controlled by the communities we are a part of.
We are building the DREAM Movement action-by-action, city-by-city, and campus-by-campus. In the spirit of the Freedom Rights and Chicano movements of the 1960s, we have decided to put our bodies and lives on the line. Repeatedly, undocumented youth have risked the threat of physical violence, incarceration, and deportation by engaging in acts of non-violent direct action in order to push the immigrant rights movement forward.
On August 19, DREAM Team LA and OC DREAM Team, in collaboration with the Dream Is Coming, a national campaign, held the first DREAM Act town hall organized and led by undocumented students. The objective of the town hall was to address major questions and concerns about the legislation as well as to discuss the strategy and tactics that undocumented youth have embraced. One main goal was to create a safe space for undocumented youth and allies to talk about the shift in the DREAM Movement.
More than 250 people attended the town hall, and more than 50 people joined through live stream from all over the nation. More than half of the participants stayed all the way until the end of the evening at 10:30 pm, after we responded to the last question from the audience and finished all announcements from different members of the Los Angeles community.
For the first time undocumented youth publicly shared their work and experiences as UNDOCUMENTED, QUEER AND UNAFRAID activists in the nation. Also, the event allowed these same youth to address the critiques from friends and allies regarding the military service option of the DREAM Act.
The energy in the church was overwhelming and exciting. We knew that in this place we would need to conduct painful but necessary conversations. We invited everyone who is part of our larger community -- especially those who we know are not in full support of our work or the military service option of the DREAM Act, which is part of the current language of the bill.[3] We had decided that instead of waiting for the people in the audience to ask the difficult questions, we would pose those same questions there in public, just as we do in private and in our organizing spaces.
We accomplished this through a panel of all UNDOCUMENTED AND UNAFRAID activists. Our panelists were: Lizbeth Mateo, one of the arrestees in Senator John McCain's office in Arizona on May 17, 2010; Yahira Carrillo, another arrestee from the Arizona action on May 17, 2010 who also identifies herself as a queer woman; Carlos Amador, one of the many hunger strikers from California who organized a 15-day hunger strike for the Dream Act in front of the Senator Dianne Feinstein's office and Jorge Guiterrez, a queer man who also participated in the 15-day hunger strike in California that started July 19, 2010.
Many of the straight men who took the mic had strong critiques of the DREAM Act and its military provisions. They questioned our support for an admittedly less-than perfect piece of legislation. Each time, the panelists responded candidly to questions as well as concerns about the DREAM Act and our movement.
This experience was uplifting as well as frustrating for us. We did not want to silence anyone in that space, nor did we dismiss anyone's critiques or comments, but we left that space feeling like it was necessary for us once again as UNDOCUMENTED AND UNAFRAID activists to put forward our responses and reactions to these critiques, with the purpose of creating dialogue in order to move forward. After a number of conversations with fellow DREAMers, we felt that we needed to challenge the attitudes of privilege and self-righteousness that we believe fuel the opposition to our movement.
Our so-called allies need to realize that they are not undocumented and, as such, do not have the right to say what undocumented youth need or want. Our progressive allies insist in imposing their paternalistic stand to oppose the DREAM Act and tell us that this is not the "right" choice for us to acquire "legal" status in this country. We wonder: Who are they to decide for us? And by what criteria do they deem the DREAM Act not to be the "right" legislation for undocumented youth to become "legal" in this country?
The passage of California's AB 540 in 2001, a bill that allowed undocumented youth to pay in-state tuition for college, and the later creation of the DREAM act, gave our communities hope; they held out the promise that legalization was eventually possible. A decade later, we face a horrific anti-immigrant backlash, and tens of thousands of our sisters and brothers are languishing in prisons; untold numbers of human beings have been killed or have died of thirst during increasingly dangerous border crossings.
Many of us have been organizing in other movements such as the anti-war, LGBTIQ, and labor movements. We have also studied and learned through experience and academics from past freedom movements. We learned to see our struggle in a global perspective and historical context -- that attacks on undocumented immigrants and refugees of color are not unique to the United States. We see the same thing happening in Europe, Oceania, Asia and Africa. We understand that we are working within an imperialist nation. There is a long history of Nativism in the United States and it continues to manifest itself with laws that criminalize immigrant communities and communities of color.
The DREAM movement has come under criticism by liberal and conservative critics alike. We face racist, sexist, homophobic attacks from the right wing. From the left, many peace activists and immigration-rights advocates disapprove of the DREAM Act because of its so-called military option. Meanwhile, CIRA supporters across the country remain largely silent in this debate and fail to heed the voices of undocumented youth activists. Seemingly impervious to the growing anti-immigrant hatred sweeping this land, some of our former allies began advocating for a watered-down Comprehensive Immigration Reform bill that would lead to more enforcement and criminalization of our immigrant communities and communities of color.
Today, nearly two million so-called undocumented students languish in our society. Some of these students are high school honor students who are prevented from attending college; those who can attend college often cannot receive scholarships or in-state tuition simply because of where they were born. Countless thousands are prohibited from learning skills and acquiring the education they need to survive in this society.
The DREAM Act would provide a crucial opening for these immigrants, and yet many people of good faith oppose the DREAM Act because of the military option added to the bill by Senator Feinstein. They argue that the DREAM Act is a Pentagon-supported bill that is dressed up in a pro-education and pro-immigrant costume. We believe that progressive politics should be based on facts and not conspiracy theories.
It has been argued that the military option will funnel thousands of young people into the military. We disagree with this argument. Military recruitment in our communities will continue whether the DREAM Act passes or not. In 2007, the DREAM Act did not pass, but the military recruitment in communities of color continued unabated. Moreover, who, in this current anti-immigrant climate would step forward to sponsor a reconfigured DREAM Act without a military option? A military option could easily be introduced as a stand-alone bill. Let's be honest. We all know that the Democratic Party refuses to be painted as "unpatriotic," especially with mid-term congressional races looming. A DREAM Act shorn of its military option, sadly, is an impossible proposition.
Why should undocumented immigrants pay the price of US militarism while more privileged groups in society see their interests looked after? The undocumented youth movement -- unlike some other causes -- is led and shaped by the people most directly impacted. The social justice elite have posed the argument that because of the current state of public education it is unwise for the DREAM Act to pass because it will force undocumented youth into the military. So should we wait until there are no more wars? Should we wait until our public school systems are perfect?
Should we wait until a perfect politician introduces the perfect bill? Or should we wait until there are another 1.8 million undocumented youth with little chance at a successful future. We say hell no! We are tired of our third-class status, and we are tired of the social justice elite dictating what we can and cannot do, all the while speaking on our behalf and pretending they represent our interests.
The nonprofits, think tanks, the privileged and self-righteous activists who comprise the social justice elite have had their hand in stopping the DREAM Act from being introduced, and at times, they have been more vicious than the right.
WE DO NOT WANT IMMIGRATION RIGHTS "ADVOCATES" SPEAKING FOR US ANY LONGER. WE DEMAND THE RIGHT TO REPRESENT OURSELVES!
From the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa to the freedom movements in the 1960s and to the Chinese student rebellions in Tiananmen Square, youth have always been at the forefront of successful movements and radical social changes. Unfortunately, it seems that we have not learned from this rich heritage of youth speaking truth to power. Because if we accept and embrace the current undocumented student movement, it means the social justice elite loses its power -- its power to influence politicians, media and the public debate. The power is taken back by its rightful holders.
We have challenged the Nonprofit Industrial Complex, the Prison Industrial Complex and the Military Industrial Complex. Many of the DREAMers have organized in high schools and universities against military recruitment and done anti-military recruitment education with thousands of women and youth of color. Undocumented students have shown the country and the world that we are more than capable of leading a new freedom-rights movement in this decade.
DREAMers face unique challenges in this country: We must support our families while going to school; we must pay for college while we organize and at the end of the day, our allies attack us. Some of us have made the sacrifice and risked deportation willingly. The DREAM movement is a genuine large-scale movement; we have taken from what happened in the '60s, learned from it, fine-tuned it to our current context and relentlessly moved forward.
For all of these reasons and more, undocumented students and our allies have launched a struggle that will culminate in a victory for immigrant rights in the United States. In order to understand the current situation, we must look to the students who are shaping this movement. We must look to Yahaira, Mo, and Lizbeth, the students who staged a sit-in in McCain's office. We must look to the "Trail of Dreams": Felipe, Gaby, Carlos, and Juan. We must look to DREAM Team LA and Orange County DREAM Team, groups of young activists for the DREAM Act. We must look to the women and men in the DREAM movement, undocumented queer and transgender young activists with emerging ideologies that challenge the capitalist, heterosexual and misogynistic systems here in the United States.
We are not only the undocumented youth that live in the United States; we are the displaced youth from across the Americas, Asia, and Africa. We were displaced by American-funded violence, wars, and the expansion of capitalism through globalization.
We have lived with fear since arrival and our exploitation runs rampant because we are also women, queer and transgender people of color. For those of us undocumented youth who also identify as queer, coming out is a something we must do twice. We come out as queers to our families and friends and then come out again as undocumented in this country.
We can no longer be afraid of revealing our status or identities. We must fiercely challenge privilege and oppression, whether located among allies or the opposition. We hold the right to self-determination of those most affected by the US empire's oppression. We are in a struggle to regain what has been taken from us: our dignity, our freedom and our spirituality. Our fight is for the legalization of all people, and the DREAM Act is a vehicle towards that goal.
We, the undocumented youth have shaken the social justice struggle to the very core . . . and we have so much more to offer. We know that our acts of liberation and hope will generate more acts of liberation and hope.
"Caminante, no hay puentes, se hace puentes al andar"
(Voyager, there are no bridges, one builds them as one walks)
-- Gloria Anzaldua
[1] Martin Luther King, Jr., Letter from the Birmingham Jail. Foreword by Rev. Bernice A. King (Harper Collins; 1st edition (August 1994).
[2] INCITE! Women of Color Against Violence, eds., The Revolution Will Not Be Funded: Beyond the Non-Profit Industrial Complex (Cambridge: South End Press, 2007).
[3] For more information on the DREAM act, see the DREAM Act portal at: http://dreamact.info/

This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.



Comments
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Seems a bit dreamy, to take
Tue, 09/21/2010 - 16:58 — dan (not verified)Seems a bit dreamy, to take on the history and particulars of so many struggles as one's own. If one is going to go against a government, and be outside the law, and risk one's body (maybe) why not go to Mexico and fight to liberate it? Many more people in Mexico can benefit from those who are willing to stand up and fight, and provide a platform, legal or not, from which to organize and start to create a society in Mexico that many of its citizens dream would happen, not the least being indigenous people in Mexico. It's too easy to take a radical stance in the US, be serious and really organize a struggle, or transform some of the existing Mexican opposition structures.
You speak of " Social
Tue, 09/21/2010 - 18:35 — Arminius Aurelius (not verified)You speak of " Social Justice ? " Social Justice means you wait your turn to legally enter the country with the hundreds of thousands of others from various nations . You DO NOT sneak in and jump the line to your advantage . I respect legal immigrants from assorted countries BUT I DETEST the SCUM of the world who could care less about others who are patiently waiting to legally enter the country . You " Sir " and your ILK are unconscionable ILLEGALS . If I were to sneak into your country , I would be imprisoned. If you are allowed to remain , there is then NO "Social Justice"
VERY TRUE... Your Native
Tue, 09/21/2010 - 18:39 — Anonymous (not verified)VERY TRUE... Your Native Mexico has more Problems & needs ALL the help it can get.
WHY NOT go back to Your Homeland (MEXICO) & FIGHT for your "NATIVE LAND"
There are FAR MORE inequities there that need addressing, & the Current Politicians are ALL CORRUPT as well.
CHANEL Your ENERGIES there where they're needed most. Then Once Successful come back & STAND IN LINE , like Everybody else!
Jonathan, Jorge, Nancy, and
Tue, 09/21/2010 - 19:16 — Tray (not verified)Jonathan, Jorge, Nancy, and Neidi .... go back where you came from and take your illegal presence out of OUR country. You are not wanted and not welcome. Lodge your insipid protests back to your own countries, unless you lack the courage to do so.
Well first one thing I would
Tue, 09/21/2010 - 19:26 — Jonathan Perez (not verified)Well first one thing I would like to clear up is not everyone that is undocumented or even the authors of this piece is Mexican. We are Indigenous who were displaced from all parts of the world, grew up here in this culture and is all we know. We cant simply go back this is our home. My father entered legally but they did not allow my family to enter legally. Under the violent circumstances we could not wait around till we got killed like my uncle william who got shot six times in the head. We tried to wait in a line that a limited to a few. Don't get me wrong even if we go back to the countries we were only born in and try organize the people there don't want us there to organize them because we haven't experienced their struggle. Also to address the comment on fighting for our native land. For thousands of years indigenous peoples of the americas have freely migrated across the continents and this was acknowledged by the First Nations of Canada and U.S. and that we have a right to come her like we have done so for thousands of years.
Yea! I support the DREAM
Tue, 09/21/2010 - 19:40 — Anonymous (not verified)Yea! I support the DREAM act! Thank you for your intelligent, impassioned, researched essay!
Listen to Justice calling
Tue, 09/21/2010 - 21:43 — Anonymous (not verified)Listen to Justice calling your name! This is our fight.
Remember "We know through painful experience that freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor; it must be demanded by the oppressed. "
Herman@s: This letter is
Tue, 09/21/2010 - 22:03 — Silvia Rodriguez (not verified)Herman@s:
This letter is deep felt, and inspiring. I do not consider myself or any of the Dreamers undocumented, for the reason that we all in truth are over documented.
I graduated from Arizona State University a year ago with two degrees, and now am doing my Masters at Harvard. The struggle that we have is intense, and is about human rights. Education is a human right, and as an indigenous person... we are not Aliens, Foreigners, we are migrants in the land of our ancestors.
In this battle, there are many lies, that we must uncover, and get to the core of, so that in the way we will help other see the truth. Justice my friends is something that makes some uncomfortable. However, we are not here to comfort. We are demanding our rights!
Que siga la lucha.
Tiahui.
www.harvardsisepuede.wordpress.com
Google Hogorita (
Tue, 09/21/2010 - 22:19 — hogorina (not verified)Google Hogorita ( facts )
To Dan, Armenius, Anonymous,
Tue, 09/21/2010 - 22:19 — Esther (not verified)To Dan, Armenius, Anonymous, and Tray:
I don't know you, but judging by the actions and words of these undocumented youth, they are more American than you will ever be. They may not have the papers to prove it, but true patriotism comes from the heart.
These impassioned youth are fighting the same fight upon which our forefathers founded this nation. These kids grew up in our schools, bearing through the same boring lectures, competing alongside us in the same sports, and reciting the Pledge of Allegiance in unison with YOU. "Liberty and justice for all" may not have meant much to you in fourth grade, but it means the world to these kids. Not all of them are Hispanic, either. The pasty white kid who sat in front of you in algebra could very easily be an illegal immigrant from Europe, did you ever think of that? (continued...)
As documented Americans, you
Tue, 09/21/2010 - 22:20 — Esther (not verified)As documented Americans, you have rights, you count for something in this nation. These undocumented kids have to struggle to get what you take for granted. Oh, so you've decided to go to college? But you can't afford 10 grand for tuition? Just apply for financial aid, right? Well, Maria wants to go to college, too, but she's undocumented. She's been in the United States since kindergarten, and worked harder than you ever did in school, got all her homework done on time, took all the hard classes, but she doesn't qualify for financial aid because she's undocumented. No one is going to hand her money unless she gets a private scholarship, and even then, she's lucky if they don't ask for proof of citizenship.
So, you think Maria should go back to where she came from? Where she was born and spent a whole 5 years of her life? A place that's as foreign to her as Antarctica is to you? She can't even speak the language of her birth country anymore!
Jonathan and his co-organizers are standing up for something they believe in, they are trying to better their communities, they are fighting for freedom and justice. What have you done for America? What makes you so much more "American" than them?
I support you DREAMers!
Tue, 09/21/2010 - 23:28 — Marlom Portillo (not verified)I support you DREAMers! Every battle achieved is a path for bigger successes. You statement and declaration is very true and powerful ... "We are in a struggle to regain what h...as been taken from us: our
dignity, our freedom and our spirituality. Our fight is for the legalization of all people, and the DREAM Act is a vehicle towards that goal."
Go DREAMers!
In complete resistance until the triumph!
A word from a native-born
Tue, 09/21/2010 - 23:33 — Anonymous (not verified)A word from a native-born American of Asian descent:
Humanity has no borders, so please stop with the "go back where you came from" nonsense; I'm sure the Powhatan, Algonquin, and Navajo say the same thing.
My parents came to this country the slow, steady, and painful way - and it availed them little. Ph.Ds slave away at menial jobs, mothers work three jobs. My family's the "legal immigrant family" nativists mythologize - hardworking, "legal," educated, etc - and we've caught almost as much shit as the DREAMers in this country.
Nativism still exists. Stop hiding behind "legal" and "illegal," "papers" and "citizenship." You're anti-people of color and we know it.
Give the people what they
Wed, 09/22/2010 - 08:58 — Anonymous (not verified)Give the people what they want.
P.S. not all people who oppose the military clause are part of the social justice elite or anti-immigrant. Some of us have Iraqi family members who have been killed by U.S.forces.
If we're going to DREAM
Wed, 09/22/2010 - 09:03 — Anonymous (not verified)If we're going to DREAM let's DREAM BIG. Let's not settle.
Harvard Silvia, I agree to
Wed, 09/22/2010 - 10:23 — Arminius Aurelius (not verified)Harvard Silvia,
I agree to a degree with you when you say ," We are migrants in the land of our ancestors "
" We are demanding our rights " But your lands were stolen from you back about 175 years ago and I am sorry to say there is no going back . But then again if you have the support of power hungry -greedy politicians in Washington who are looking for the Hispanic vote , well you may succeed . Their loyalty lies not with the welfare of the citizen taxpayers of this country but with those who will benefit them the most . These Traitors should be put on trial , tarred and feathered and then drawn and quartered . Laws are made in order to protect the masses and to maintain a reasonably civilized orderly society . How dare you say you demand your rights considering you are ILLEGALS in no uncertain terms. You should be back in your country fighting to bring liberty and justice to your totally corrupt and excessively VIOLENT society . We do not want your violent / vicious Drug Lords operating in our country . We have enough problems of our own.
I am sure you are extremely intelligent considering you are a Harvard student BUT that does not mean you are objective and/or have common sense. I lived on Brewer Street in Cambridge , an 8 minute walk from Harvard and experienced 1 st hand the Socialist / Marxist mentality of the future Commissars of Amerika .
WRAPPING YOURSELVES IN THE
Wed, 09/22/2010 - 15:25 — cheyennebode (not verified)WRAPPING YOURSELVES IN THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT AND USING ITS LINGO ISN'T GOING TO GET YOU ACCEPTANCE...BECAUSE ITS A FALSEHOOD LIKE CALLING YOURSELVES UNDOCUMENTED...AMERICANS ARE SICK OF THE LIES THAT PROP UP ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION...SO ITS DANGEROUS IN YOUR COUNTRY OF ORIGIN..MAN UP LIKE OUR FOUNDERS DID BY BEING COURAGEOUS..AND FACE MAKING THE ULTIMATE SACRIFICE...OTHERWISE YOU ARE JUST SLINKING
To Esther and others, I am
Wed, 09/22/2010 - 15:58 — dan (not verified)To Esther and others, I am not born in America and I did struggle for the liberation of my country, which then got much, much worse. I waited 3 years to get into the US. I have a white New Zealand friend of Maori/white origin who has been deported twice for being illegal, so give up on the skin colour, will you? And your glib judgements. And Jonathan Perez response (not verified it says if it really is you) - any really committed and progressive movements anywhere in the world will welcome your support - even from America or anywhere that money can be raised, political decisions influencedboth in the US and internationally, and information gathered and sent out, skills transferred, NGO's that usually are involved somehow to volunteer for -- there are people from other nationalities involved in most struggles in some way or another. And by changing the world out there you end up changing the US more, because the US is on its way out and will have to adapt.
The indigenous people I have
Wed, 09/22/2010 - 16:05 — dan (not verified)The indigenous people I have met and other I have read about from the Americas do not have the ability to move freely about because of the mestizos et al who have taken over their lands. This is true all over Latin America. These newcomers take over the mantle of indigenous when they are of mixed blood and the true indigneous are fighting to survive, and not have their languages and cultures co-opted by Hispanic and Portuguese rooted culture. Not only that, indigenous peoples themselves are never homogeneous, indigenous is a word made by outsiders. Peoples with ancient histories on the land they still occupy themselves forbid access to their lands by others, fight to take others lands etc. Who are you kidding?
P.S. not all people who
Wed, 09/22/2010 - 16:58 — jonathan Perez (not verified)P.S. not all people who oppose the military clause are part of the social justice elite or anti-immigrant. Some of us have Iraqi family members who have been killed by U.S.forces.
I agree and people like you are the folks we should be having conversations with more because you are directly affected in many ways like we are and we are happy to have those conversations.
These activists failed in
Wed, 09/22/2010 - 17:03 — Alejandro Lara-Briseno (not verified)These activists failed in their hunger strike, because a hunger strike is not a tool to be used to target an individual. A hunger strike is one of the most powerful and selfless acts, it is borne out of love for your people & your community. It should never be used to try to change the mind of one person, or of a group of people--that is not nonviolent.
These activists need to learn about unity. Others have already told them that they will stand with them, if only they also learn to stand with those who wish to show their solidarity. But, as long as the violence imbedded in the act remains, no such solidarity will occur; instead, the ego of these individuals will supercede unity and continue to bifurcate the struggle. In the end they will get what they want, to stand alone (a stand alone bill) and it will fail because they failed to learn the lessons of the struggle.
We are in a new age of struggle, and unity is its name.
"Justice denied," without a
Wed, 09/22/2010 - 17:37 — "Justice denied" yes, but... (not verified)"Justice denied," without a doubt, but MLK was ultimately assassinated for moving towards an anti-war and anti-imperialist position. His writings towards the latter part of life lean towards liberation, not capitulation. The logical misstep in this article is that the version of the DREAM Act you defend was modified from a much more "progressive" version, back in '02 and '03, maybe before you even new of the DREAM Act.
Proof? check out: http://www.ilw.com/articles/2009,1124-stock.pdf
Cannon fodder. That's what they make us out to be. Instead of pointing fingers, let's work towards unity. Sure the "revolution will not be funded," that's been read to death, but DREAM is about reform, not revolution. If you divide, they conquer. Punto.
I feel your frustration. I
Wed, 09/22/2010 - 20:50 — Anonymous (not verified)I feel your frustration. I highly doubt you can run your movement from entirely volunteer, donation-based approaches. Even the church is a nonprofit complex from which your beloved MLK arose.
Using incentives to recruit
Thu, 09/23/2010 - 09:43 — Anonymous (not verified)Using incentives to recruit soldiers is a time-honored tradition. My dad joined the navy back in the fifties, in order to get the veteran's benefits that paid his way through college. Yes, he risked his life and helped kill people in order to get those benefits. I won't say he compromised his morals, though, because I think back then most people believed being a soldier was honorable and patriotic.
They're not offering you citizenship for free, and they're not likely to do so any time soon. They need soldiers, and they're offering to make a deal.
Here are the risks of supporting the current bill: 1) you might be passing up an opportunity to improve the bill , if they need the soldiers badly enough to sweeten it with a community service alternative. 2) the bill will give members of your community who are willing to fight a significant and long term advantage over pacifists. 3) they might pass the bill and then use its existence as an excuse to crack down on undocumented residents who don't take advantage of it.
If you're willing to take those risks, go for it.
Using incentives to
Thu, 09/23/2010 - 10:25 — Anonymous (not verified)Using incentives to recruit...
When you are recruited to fight for personal gain, there is a name for that... it's called being a mercenary.
So you need to ask yourself the question, are you willing to kill for upward mobility?
It's interesting because that's the same argument that's used to justify the pilgrims and their pillaging of this land so that they can have a better life for themselves and be free of persecution for their religious beliefs.
Also, look at the State of Israel and the way it was formed, on the back of Palestinians with the justification that Jews need a land for themselves free of persecution because of European anti-semetism and the Holocaust.
Just because you are oppressed, it doesn't give you you a free moral ticket to do the same to others so that you can have a "better life".
Sincerely,
From a disposessed and uprooted person like yourself.
"we felt that we needed to
Fri, 09/24/2010 - 16:35 — KD (not verified)"we felt that we needed to challenge the attitudes of privilege and self-righteousness that we believe fuel the opposition to our movement"
I would say there is a certain privilege in living in an oppressor country that isn't occupied by the largest empire in the world. This is the kind of privilege that drives some to support the military provision of the dream act, and the inclusion of the it on the defense authorization bill. There are plenty of undocumented people against the dream act, there are many citizens for it and many against it. You can't citizen-bait away discussion, it makes the movement seem undemocratic and top-down. It seems like the movement can't win the argument on solid political grounds, so it resorts to moralism and identity politics. "You should support it because people support it" doesn't work, the same people who are pro-SB1070 could use this.
And stop denying that there are undocumented immigrants against the dream act because of the military provision; I know more than a few who have had their voices silenced. I support the dream act, very critically, but the tone of this article and the activists I've met make the movement seem very top down movement and undemocratic movement, more linked to the objectives of the Democratic Party than undocumented immigrants.
I find it hypocritical that a movement with a clear agenda tied to the Democratic Party is calling out the social justice "elite." Basically, these are the point that support and fund them. In this movement, what immigrants want is clearly subordinate to what Democratic Party politicians want.
I thank you for writing such
Mon, 09/27/2010 - 00:19 — Carlos Amador (not verified)I thank you for writing such a powerful paper. I know that many people on the comments section have expressed hatred because of our status and identities. But, I know that many others that read this article are being exposed to a side that is seen little of and therefore changing their minds for better. We will continue the struggle of making this, our country, better, which will in part will lead us in making those countries of origin better as well. we cannot liberate those countries if we don't change the root cause of the problem.
Your struggle is my
Mon, 09/27/2010 - 00:28 — Salvador Sanchez (not verified)Your struggle is my struggle. I know that your movement will eventually succeed and consequently you will make this community a more perfect community. It is great to see that yo have taken ownership of this movement and please don't allow your so call "allies" dictate what is good for you.
Dear DREAMers: I'm an old
Wed, 09/29/2010 - 14:57 — Frances in California (not verified)Dear DREAMers: I'm an old white lady who thinks Arminius and CHEYENNEBODE (that boy needs to learn how to type lower case) and the other disingenuous bigots commenting here need to disclose who's paying them to be so hateful, backed up with nothing. I stand with you "undocumented" because the laws are bad but you are good. Dream on; most people aren't hateful like the flying monkeys who fish for terms like Immigration just so they can be hateful.
Hello, I'm a teacher in SD
Wed, 10/06/2010 - 19:39 — Kiki Ochoa (not verified)Hello, I'm a teacher in SD and would like to invite all the writers of this article to a community forum in San Diego about the DREAM act in mid November... is this possible?. Can Anyone connect me with these student activist?
The immigration reform
Tue, 10/12/2010 - 13:18 — Mary (not verified)The immigration reform movement is not your enemy. Aiming your frustration at it only harms both movements. If anyone in the larger CIR movement did tell you not to pursue the DREAM Act, take it up with those individuals. Don't condemn an entire movement for the actions of a few.
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