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Heated words.

arizona

 (Author’s Note: I needed to let some dust settle, hence the re-post and re-write–blog-0-rama) 

This is a very complicated issue. It involves human rights, nation’s rights, citizens’ rights, and is a huge soup of opinions, law, freedoms and responsibilities.

People use words to promote ideologies. Consider this article, and how the writer used rhetoric and techniques of persuasion to get his point across. Consider the responses, and how those writers articulated their points-of-view.

 

Arizona Legalizes Racial Profiling

I don’t know what’s going to come of all this, but it probably won’t be good. Read the blog’s comments to see how others think about this issue.

By the way, educators who’d like to discuss racial profiling in the classroom can use this Teaching Tolerance lesson, which defines it and explains why the subject is so important.

http://www.tolerance.org/blog/arizona-legalizes-racial-profiling?newsletter=TT042710

Submitted by Sean Price on April 23, 2010

Hundreds of high school and college students gathered around the State capitol in Phoenix, Arizona, on Friday. They were there to convince Gov. Jan Brewer to veto Senate Bill 1070.  These young protesters were disappointed though. Brewer signed the bill and instantly set back relations between whites and Latinos in Arizona and other parts of the country.

The law is designed to identify, prosecute and deport illegal immigrants. As outlined by The New York Times:

The police would be authorized to arrest immigrants unable to show documents allowing them to be in the country and the legislation would leave drivers open to sanctions … for knowingly transporting an illegal immigrant, even a relative. It expressly forbids cities from adopting “sanctuary” policies that restrict the police and public workers from immigration enforcement….

In other words, Arizona cops now have a green light for racial profiling—unless anyone seriously thinks that an Irish national with blonde hair and blue eyes who is in Arizona illegally will receive the same scrutiny as an Arizona-born American with darker features. 

It was no accident that so many high school students protested the new law. They will be directly affected. Young people are often the chief targets of racial profiling.  And this law will almost surely split up families. In many cases, young people who are U.S. citizens have one or both parents who are undocumented workers. These families already cope with enormous economic pressure.  The Arizona law will almost surely ratchet up their misery. But since undocumented workers are often driven here by far greater dangers and economic pressures, the law is unlikely to do anything to slow down the flow of illegal immigration.

Opponents are lining up to attack the new law on constitutional grounds. But even if the challenges succeed, the poison has already been introduced to the state’s racial climate. Gov. Brewer argued that new methods of police training would keep police officers from abusing the law. “I will not tolerate racial discrimination or racial profiling in Arizona,” she declared. If that’s the case, she shouldn’t have signed a law that guarantees it will happen.

Words are powerful.

Who are we? Who were we? Who are we becoming?

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