“He
[King George] has erected a multitude of new offices and set
hither swarms of officers to harass out people and eat out
their subsistence.” - The Declaration of Independence, 1776
(NOTE:
This piece, which originally appeared in Public
Eye, is, in my opinion, one of the 2 most important things
I’ll write this year. Though written for a think tank
(Political Research Associates) and though not as literary
as I’d like, it does represent my best effort to date
to conceptualize something we all know: that the immigrant
crackdown is neither solely nor primarily about immigrants,
that efforts to end the raids and other repression against
immigrants requires more than simply denouncing the racism
and raids of the crackdown. At the same time, I try to contribute
something that complements and challenges the political thinking
in the immigrant rights movement, which, like you, I feel
great urgency about. Should you read it, please do drop a
note ([email protected]) as it is a work in progress, one
I will weave into a larger project. Gracias, R)
I.
Building Up the Domestic Security Apparatus
Most
explanations of the relentless pursuit of undocumented immigrants
since 9/11 view it as a response to the continuing pressures
of angry, mostly white, citizens. The “anti-immigrant climate”
created by civic groups like the Minutemen, politicos like
(name the Republican candidate of your choice) and media personalities
like CNN’s Lou Dobbs, we are told, has led directly to the
massive – and growing – government bureaucracy for policing
immigrants.
The
Washington Post, for example, told us in 2006 that “The Minutemen
rose to prominence last year when they began organizing armed
citizen patrols along the U.S.-Mexico border, a move credited
with helping to ignite the debate that has dominated Washington
in recent months.”
Along
the way to allegedly responding to “grassroots” calls about
“real immigration reform” and “doing something about illegals,”
the Bush Administration dismantled the former Immigration
and Naturalization Service (INS) and created the Immigration
and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency, whose more than 15,000
employees and $5.6 billion budget make it the largest investigative
component of the Department of Homeland Security and the second
largest investigative agency in the federal government after
the FBI.2 In the process of restructuring, national security
concerns regarding threats from external terrorist enemies
got mixed in with domestic concerns about immigrant “invaders”
denounced by a growing galaxy of anti-immigrant interests.
Implicit
in daily media reports about “immigration reform” is the idea
that bottom-up pressure led to the decision to dismantle the
former INS and then place the immigration bureaucracy under
the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Citizen activism
contributed significantly to the most massive, most important
government restructuring since the end of World War II. Nor
do press accounts mention Boeing and other aerospace and surveillance
companies, which, for example, will benefit as government
contractors to the federal Secure Border Initiative (SBI)
that is scheduled to receive more than $2 billion in funding
for fencing, electronic surveillance and other equipment required
for the new physical and virtual fence being built at the
border.3
Nowhere
in the more popular explanations of this historic and massive
government restructuring of immigration and other government
functions do the raisons d’etat – the reasons
of the state, the logic of government – enter the picture.
When talking about immigration reform, what little, if any,
agency ascribed to the Bush Administration usually includes
such mantra-like phrases like “protecting the homeland,” “securing
the border,” and others. And even in the immigrant rights
community few, for example, are asking why the Bush Administration
decided to move the citizenship processing and immigration
enforcement functions of government from the more domestic,
policing-oriented Department of Justice (DOJ) to the more
militarized, anti-terrorist bureaucracy of the Department
of Homeland Security.
Little,
if any, consideration is given to the possibility that immigrants
and immigration policy serve other interests that have nothing
to do with chasing down maids, poultry workers, and landscapers.
Failure
to consider the reasons of state behind the buildup leading
to the birth of the ICE, the most militarized branch of the
federal government after the Pentagon, leaves the analysis
of, and political action around, immigration reform partial
at best. While important, focusing on the electoral workings
of the white voter excludes a fundamental part of the immigration
bureaucracy equation: how immigrants provide the rationale
for the expansion of government policing bureaucracy in times
of political crisis, economic distress, and major geopolitical
shifts. Shortly after the attacks and the creation of DHS,
the Bush Administration used immigrants and fear of outsiders
to tighten border restrictions, pass repressive laws and increase
budgets to put more drones, weapons and troops inside the
country.
Government
actions since 9/11 point clearly to how the U.S. government
has set up a new Pentagon-like bureaucracy to fight a new
kind of protracted domestic war against a new kind of domestic
enemy – undocumented immigrants. While willing to believe
that there were ulterior motives behind the Iraq war and the
pursuit of al Qaeda, few consider that there are non-immigration-related
motives behind ICE’s al Qaeda-ization of immigrants and immigration
policy: multi-billion dollar contracts to military-industrial
companies like Boeing, General Electric and Halliburton for
“virtual” border walls, migrant detention centers, drones,
ground-based sensors, and other surveillance technology for
use in the Arizona desert that were originally designed for
war zones like the deserts of Iraq; the de-facto militarization
of immigration policy through the deployment of 6,000 additional
National Guard troops to the U.S.-Mexico border4; hundreds
of raids in neighborhoods and workplaces across the country;
the passage of hundreds of punitive, anti-migrant state and
federal laws like the Military Commissions Act5, which denies
the habeas corpus rights of even legal residents who are suspected
of providing “material support” to terrorist groups.
In
the same way that private companies like the Pinkerton Detective
Agency provided highly profitable policing, surveillance,
and other government services targeting immigrants and citizens
in the 20th century, companies like Halliburton, Blackwater,
the Corrections Corporation of America, Boeing, and others
are reaping profits by helping build the government’s immigrant
policing bureaucracy today.
Contrary
to the electoral logic prevailing in “pro-immigrant” and mainstream
media explanations of the current buildup of the (anti)immigrant
government bureaucracy, ICE’s war on immigrants is not solely,
nor even primarily about shoring up support for the Republicans
and other prowar political and economic interests as most
analysts and activists would have us believe. A look at precedents
for this kind of government anti-immigrant action yields the
conclusion that using immigrants to build up government policing
and military capabilities is, in fact, a standard practice
of the art of statecraft. The historical record provides ample
evidence of how national security experts, politicians, elected
officials, bureaucrats and other managers of the state have
used immigrants and anti-immigrant sentiments and policies
as a way of normalizing and advancing militarization within
the borders of the United States (the “homeland”).
At
a time when the mortgage and banking crises make obvious that
the American Dream is dying for most, a time in which even
its illusion is hardly tenable as revealed in polls that found
that less than 18 percent of the U.S. population believes
it is living the “American Dream,”6 the state needs many reasons
to reassert control over an increasingly unruly populace by
putting more ICE agents and other gun-wielding government
agents among the citizenry.
Focusing
on non-citizens makes it easier for citizens to swallow the
increased domestic militarism inherent in increasing numbers
of uniformed men and women with guns in their midst. Constant
reports of raids on the homes of the undocumented immigrants
normalize the idea of government intrusion into the homes
of legal residents. Political scientists, investigative journalists,
and activists have long reminded us of how elites are constantly
concerned with creating the structures that may be needed
to control a potentially unruly population, especially one
protesting for its rights like the millions of immigrants
who marched in 2006.
History
and present experience remind us that, in times of heightened
(and often exaggerated) fears about national security, immigration
and immigrants are no longer just wedge issues in electoral
politics; they magically morph into “dangerous” others who
fill the need for new, domestic enemies required by an economy,
a political system, a citizenry, a country created, nurtured
and dependent on civilizational warfare and expansionism.
Historians write about the geopolitical contours of the U.S.
empire that began with the stealing of Mexican land. But little
to no attention is paid to how, today, the domestic contours
of empire – and the infrastructure that supports it – are
also being reinforced by targeting Mexicans and other immigrants
actually living inside this now very troubled land.
The
ICE’s media and policy framing of the issue of immigration
as a kind of “war” complete with “most wanted” lists7 of terrorists,
drug traffickers, and immigrants like Elvira Arellano8, the
undocumented immigrant leader deported after seeking and gaining
sanctuary in a Chicago church, follows clearly the directives
outlined in a couple of critical documents developed just
after 9/11.
II
A Key Moment After 9/11
In
order to understand how and why ICE now constitutes an important
part of the ascendant national security bureaucracy, we must
first look at the intimate relationship between National Security
policy and “Homeland Security” policy. One of
the defining aspects of immigration policy and the current
attacks on immigrants is the fact that they are being shaped
by elite priorities of the post-9/11 climate.
Shortly
after 9/11, the Bush Administration had, in July 2002, introduced
its “National Strategy for Homeland Security,”
a document that outlines how to “mobilize and organize
our Nation to secure the U.S. homeland from terrorist attacks.”9
Two months later, the Bush Administration released the more
geopolitically focused “National Security Strategy of
the United States of America,” whose purpose is to “help
make the world not just safer but better.”10
9/11 provided the impetus to create a bureaucratic and policy
environment dominated by security imperatives laid out in
two of the most definitive documents of our time, documents
which outline strategies that, we are told, “together
take precedence over all other national strategies, programs,
and plans,”11 including immigration policy. Immigration
policy nonetheless receives considerable attention, especially
in the Homeland Security Strategy. The role of the private
sector is also made explicit on the DHS website, which says,
“The Department of Homeland Security is responsible for assessing
the nation’s vulnerabilities” and that “the private
sector is central to this task.”12
By
placing other government functions under the purview of the
national security imperatives laid out in the two documents,
the Bush Administration enabled and deepened the militarization
of government bureaucracies like the ICE. At the same time,
immigrants provided the Bush Administration a way to facilitate
the transference of public wealth to military industrial interests
like those of Halliburton, Boeing and others through government
contracts in a kind of Homeland Security Keynesianism.
For
example the two documents called for DHS to “Establish a national
laboratory for homeland security” that solicits “independent
and private analysis for science.”13 This materialized through
the budget of ICE, which has resources for research and development
of technologies for surveilling, capturing, detaining, and
generally combating what politicos and Minutemen alike paint
as the Malthusian monster of immigration. Again, immigrants
help the state justify massive expenditures like those for
the creation and maintenance of ICE, which, in turn, have
led to a major reconfiguration and expansion of the state
itself.
Perennial
complaints of the former INS’s infamous inefficiency
in both its border enforcement and citizenship processing
functions, and the 9/11 catastrophe, combined to create the
perfect political storm that swept in another historic bureaucratic
shift. Hidden behind what some call the “anti-immigrant hysteria”
characterizing periods like ours are the political crises,
economic earthquakes and geopolitical crises that drive history.
III
The Lessons of History
History
provides several precedents that illustrate how immigrants
have consistently provided elite political and corporate interests
the rationale for major government restructuring that often
has little to do with migration and much to do with other
things, things like: bureaucratic patronage (think big government
contracts for military industrial firms); deploying and displaying
power; controlling the populace and rallying different sectors
of society round the idea of the nation (nationalism).
Long
before the Patriot Act, DHS and ICE, policies linking immigrants
to the security of the country have formed an important part
of U.S. statecraft. The period before and after the passage
of the Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798 14, which gave then-president
John Adams the authority to remove any immigrant he deemed
a threat to national security, is one example. During this
time, the Bush-like enumeration of “Seditious Acts” was linked
to the elite need to control the populace, and militarize
the society in times of profound instability. Another example
is the period of the Red Scare of 1919, when millions of mostly-immigrant-led
strikers provided the political impetus leading to the creation
of the domestic policing bureaucracy known as the Federal
Bureau of Investigation (FBI).15
History
has shown that, in times of extraordinary instability, governments
go to extraordinary lengths and spend extraordinary amounts
of money to create and reinforce the ramparts of their policing
apparatus and of nationhood itself. Current efforts by the
U.S. government to instrumentalize immigrants as a means of
buttressing itself in times of domestic and geopolitical crisis
follows a logic tried and true since the establishment of
the country amidst the global and internal turbulence around
the turn of the 18th century.
IV
Immigrants and the Establishment of the National Security
State
Like
many of the newly established countries suffering some of
the political and economic shocks of economic and political
modernization in the late eighteenth century, the fledgling
United States and its leaders needed to simultaneously consolidate
the nation state established constitutionally in 1787 while
also maneuvering for a position on a global map dominated
by the warring powers of France and England. Central to accomplishing
this were immigrants who provided both a means of rallying
and aligning segments of the populace while also legitimating
massive expenditures towards the construction of the militarized
bureaucracies meant to defend against domestic threats to
“national” security which linked external enemies real and
perceived.
At
the turn of the 18th century, the United States was much weaker
than and still very vulnerable to the power of Britain and
France, which were engaged in a war that defined political
positions inside and outside the new country. Like many of
their elite and more imperially inclined Federalist peers,
Alexander Hamilton and President John Adams were fearful of
the French revolution. Developments in the revolutionary republic
pushed people and states around the Atlantic world to take
positions for and against the revolution at that time. In
addition, some Federalists like Hamilton also wanted to push
out the French and conquer Florida, Louisiana, and South America.16
Immigrants
and immigration policy of the post-revolutionary period became
ensnared in the battle for power between Federalists, who
advocated a more urban and mercantile route to nationhood,
and the anti-Federalist Republicans led by Thomas Jefferson,
whose romantic proto-capitalist path to consolidation of the
nation was paved by agrarian expansion. The battles between
the Federalists and anti-Federalists played themselves out
in relation to France and the ideals of the French revolution,
as elites tried to cope with the instability wrought by capitalist
expansion on the rural majority.
The
political, economic and geopolitical crises inherent in the
modernization process had a profound impact on how elites
and the state viewed the large immigrant population in the
United States. In response to the devastating effects of economic
transformation, thousands of French, German, Irish and other
immigrants led uprisings like the Whiskey Rebellion and Shay’s
Rebellion, which were viewed as threats by elites, especially
the Federalists.
In the face of both popular unrest and Republican competition
for political power, and in their efforts to consolidate the
state and the globally oriented mercantile and pre-industrial
capitalist economy, Hamilton and then-President Adams did
what has, since their time, become a standard operating procedure
in the art of U.S. statecraft: build the state and insert
its control apparatus in the larger populace by scapegoating
immigrants as threats to national security.
In
the words of historian John Morton Smith, “The internal
security program adopted by the Federalists during the Administration
of John Adams was designed not only to deal with potential
dangers from foreign invasion growing out of the “Half
War” with France, but also to repress domestic political
opposition.”17 In this context, immigrants became the
domestic expression of the threat represented by the French
Jacobins, the proto-communist and al Qaeda-like subversive
threat of the early nineteenth century. Commenting on this
threat, Samuel Sitgreaves, a Federalist Congressman from Pennsylvania,
made the connection between internal immigrant threats and
external big power threats when he said in May 1798 “….the
business of defence would be very imperfectly done, if Congress
confined their operations of defence to land and naval forces,
and neglected to destroy the cankerworm which is corroding
the heart of the country…there are a great number of aliens
in this country from that nation [France] with whom we have
at present alarming differences….there are emissaries amongst
us, who have not only fomented our differences with that country,
but who have also endeavored to create divisions amongst our
own citizens.”18
Also
considered a threat were the free and unfree blacks who elites
feared might form a “domestic army of ten thousand blacks.”
Other fears of subversion by domestic interests linked to
external enemies were stoked by rampant rumors of a French-influenced
“Illuminati” conspiracy, an “internal invasion” to create
a godless, global “new world order” allegedly
led by emigrants from France and St. Domingue. The modern
use of the word “terror” first enters the language when Sir
Edmund Burke gazed across the English Channel and applied
it to the actions of the Jacobin state in France. Burke’s
conservative American cousins then adopted the term and applied
it to French-influenced immigrants and others considered subversive.19
Such
a climate aided Federalists in their efforts to centralize
and consolidate both power and nationhood. Hamilton and then-President
John Adams undertook several legal and other institutional
initiatives designed to enhance their and the state’s power
while also putting their Republican critics and other opposition
in check. Laws facilitating press censorship were coupled
with calls to unify the nation in preparation for war with
France.After Hamilton and the Federalists raised taxes to
pay for their expansionist expenditures to consolidate their
version of the new country, a group of people who refused
to pay taxes unleashed Fries’ Rebellion. In response,
Adams, Hamilton and the Federalists seized on the unrest to
unleash heretofore unrealized state powers and nation-reinforcing
state bureaucracy.20 At the core of the moves was the infamous
Alien and Sedition Acts proposed by Adams and passed in 1798.
The law targeted the immigrant threat by making it easier
to put them in jail for subverting the government.
At
the same time that they passed the Alien and Sedition Acts,
Adams, Hamilton and the Federalists also implemented the first
major reorganization of government bureaucracy. Central to
this reorganization was the establishment of the Department
of the Navy, a revived U.S. Marine Corps and a “New
Army” in the 1798. In the same session in which it passed
the Alien and Sedition acts, the Federalist-dominated fifth
congress passed in its first session a bill authorizing $454,000
on defense, which, at that time represented a large expenditure.
During its second session it authorized $3,887,971.81, an
amount equal to “more than the entire 1rst congress
had appropriated for all government expenditures”. During
its third session it authorized $6 million for a total of
over $10 million.21
The
end result of the anti-immigrant expenditures Federalists
created what some call the first national security state.
V
Immigrants, the Red Scare, and the Birth of the FBI Bureaucracy
A
similar situation in which a crisis sparking immigrant activism
led to a major build-up of the government policing apparatus
took place during the Red Scare of 1919. The U.S. government
faced several economic and political pressures including the
end of World War I, the demobilization of the Army, returning
troops, joblessness, depression, unemployment and growing
inflation.
The
precarious situation gave rise to increased elite fear of
Jewish, Italian and other immigrant workers in the era of
the Bolshevik revolution and an increasingly powerful –and
militant – labor movement. Socialists, Wobblies, and other
activists like Emma Goldman, who were against the war and
demonstrated high levels of labor militancy, staged historic
labor actions in 1919. That year saw 3,600 labor strikes involving
four million workers, many of whom were led by and were immigrants.
Government and big business had to watch as a full one-fifth
of the manufacturing workforce staged actions.22 Massive organizing
by Jamaican immigrant Marcus Garvey’s United Negro Improvement
Association and race riots in northern cities further stoked
elite fears and gave birth to the institutional response to
what became known as the Red Scare.
Like
other national governments of the period, the United States
had begun intensifying the centralization of functions formerly
carried out by the private sector, including keeping labor
and other dissidents in check. In the words of Regin Schmidt,
author of The FBI and the Origins of Anti-Communism in the
United States, “In response to social problems caused by industrialization,
urbanization and immigration and the potential political threats
to the existing order posed by the Socialist Party, the IWW
and, in 1919, the Communist parties, industrial and political
leaders began to look to the federal government, with its
growing and powerful bureaucratic organizations to monitor
and control political opposition.”23
Major
expansion of the state via the building of new bureaucracies
(Bureau of Corporations, Department of Labor, Federal Trade
Commission, etc.) and bureaucratic infighting for government
resources and legal jurisdiction between the Bureau of Investigation,
the precursor of the FBI, the Department of Labor and other
agencies turned the largely immigrant-led unrest into an unprecedented
opportunity for A. Mitchell Palmer and his lieutenant, J.
Edgar Hoover. Both men saw in the domestic crisis an opportunity
to build and expand personal fortunes and what would eventually
become the Federal Bureau of Investigation. FBI historian
John A. Noakes concluded that “The domestic unrest during
this period presented the Bureau of Investigation the opportunity
to expand its domain and increase its power.”24
Illustrating
the budgetary effects of the Bureau’s power grab, he continues,
“Following the armistice, but before the Bureau’s decision
to join the Red Scare hysteria, the Bureau had requested an
appropriation of $1,500,000. When the Department of Justice
declared the nation in imminent danger of a radical uprising,
however, Congress immediately increased the appropriation
by $500,000; by the end of the fiscal year the Bureau had
a budget of $2,750,000.”25
Thousands
of immigrants were surveilled, rounded up, and deported during
the Red Scare. Just five years after the Scare, Hoover went
on to found the FBI and became the most powerful non-elected
official in U.S. history. In what sounds like a precursor
to the current ICE raids, local police and federal agents
collaborated around immigration. FBI historian Kenneth D.
Ackerman states, “Backed by local police and volunteer vigilantes,
federal agents hit in dozens of cities and arrested more than
10,000 suspected communists and fellow travelers. They burst
into homes, classrooms and meeting halls, seizing everyone
in sight, breaking doors and heads with abandon. The agents
ignored legal niceties such as search warrants or arrest warrants.
They questioned suspects in secret, imposed prohibitive bail
and kept them locked up for months in foul, overcrowded, makeshift
prisons.” Close to none of these immigrant prisoners had anything
to do with radical violence. And, according to Ackerman, “Palmer’s
grand crackdown was one big exercise in guilt by association,
based primarily on bogus fears of immigrants being connected
to vilified radical groups such as the recently formed American
Communist Party.” Drawing parallels between the Red Scare
and the current “War on Terror,” Ackerman concludes, “Almost
90 years later, today’s war on terror exists in an echo
chamber of the 1919 Red scare.”26
VI
Conclusion
As
shown in the examples from U.S. history, immigrants provide
the state with ample excuse to expand, especially in times
of geopolitical and domestic crisis. During the post-revolutionary
period, the pursuit of alleged immigrant subversives led to
the massive funding of the Department of the Navy and to the
expansion of state power through laws like the Alien and Seditions
Acts. Similarly, the crisis following then end of World War
I led to the creation of the FBI and to unprecedented government
repression and expansion embodied by the Palmer Raids. “In
eliminating the Wobblies, government officials passed legislation,
evolved techniques, and learned lessons that shaped later
course of conduct.”27 Viewed from a historical perspective,
it is no surprise that the government should respond to the
geopolitical and domestic crisis in the United States with
expanded government power and bureaucracy. Rather than view
the placement of ICE under DHS as solely about controlling
immigrant labor or about political (and electoral) opportunism
disguised as government policy (both are, in fact, part of
the equation), it is important to connect the creation of
ICE and its placement under DHS to the perpetual drive of
government to expand its powers, especially its repressive
apparatus and other mechanisms of social control.
From
this perspective, the current framing of the issue of immigration
as a “national security” concern – one requiring the bureaucratic
shift towards “Homeland Security” – fits well within historical
practices that extend government power to control not just
immigrants, but those born here, most of whom don’t see immigration
policy affecting them.
One
of the things that makes the current politico-bureaucratic
moment different, however, is the fluidity and increasing
precariousness of the state itself. Like other nation states,
the United States suffers from strains wrought by the free
hand of global corporations that have abandoned large segments
of its workforce. Such a situation necessitates the institutionalization
of the war on immigrants in order to get as many armed government
agents into a society that may be teetering on even more serious
collapse as seen in the recession and economic crisis devastating
core components of the American Dream such as education, healthcare
and home ownership. Unlike the previous periods, the creation
of massive bureaucracies superseded the need to surveil, arrest
and deport migrants. Today, there appears to be a move to
make permanent the capacity of the state to pursue, jail and
deport migrants in order to sustain what some call a kind
of migration-military-industrial complex.28
Several
indicators make clear that we are well on our way to making
the war on immigrants a permanent feature of a government
in crisis. In addition to being the largest, most-militarized
component of DHS, ICE, spends more than one fifth of the multibillion
dollar DHS budget and is also its largest investigative arm.
As mentioned previously, multibillion dollar contracts for
border security from DHS have become an important new market
to aerospace companies like General Electric, Lockheed and
Boeing, which secured a $2.5 billion contract for the Secure
Borders Initiative, a DHS program to build surveillance and
other technological capabilities.29 That some saw in 9/11
an opportunity to expand and grow government technological
capabilities - and private sector patronage – through such
contracts, can bee seen in the fact that DHS was created with
what the national security documents say is a priority to
“Establish a national laboratory for homeland security” that
would “solicit independent and private analysis for science
and technology research.”30
Like
its predecessor, the “military-industrial complex”, the migrant-military
industrial complex tries to integrate federal and state economic
interests through a kind of Homeland Security Keynesianism
in which increasing numbers of companies are bidding for,
and dependent on, big contracts like the Boeing contract or
the $385 million DHS contract for the construction of immigrant
prisons.31 Also like its military-industrial cousin, the migrant
military industrial complex has its own web of relationships
between corporations, government contracts and elected officials.
Nowhere is this connection clearer than in the case of James
Sensenbrenner, the anti-immigrant godfather who sponsored
HR 4437 which criminalized immigrants and those who would
help them.32 According to his 2005 financial disclosure statement,
Sensenbrenner held $86,500 in Halliburton stocks, $563,536
in General Electric and Boeing is among the top contributors
to the Congressman’s PAC (Sensenbrenner also owns stocks in
companies like Olive Garden restaurants, which hire undocumented
workers.)33
In
conclusion, the current war on immigrants is grounded in the
history of statecraft and big government bureaucracy. While
critical, the almost exclusive focus of the immigrant rights
movement on the laws and employment of workers fails to take
into consideration the need for a war on immigrants to build
and maintain massive policing bureaucracies like ICE and DHS.
In their search for solutions to the continuing crisis of
immigration policy, activists might consider focusing at least
some energy on the reasons of the federal state rather than
solely on state legislatures, white voters, elections and
the immigrants.
Roberto Lovato is a contributing
Associate Editor with New America Media. He is also a frequent
contributor to The Nation and his work has
appeared in the Los Angeles Times,
Salon, Der Spiegel, Utne Magazine, La Opinion, and other
national and international media outlets. Prior to becoming
a writer, Roberto was the Executive Director of the Central
American Resource Center (CARECEN), then the country’s
largest immigrant rights organization. Click
here to contact him or via his Of América
blog.
- Alec
MacGillis, “Minutemen Assail Amnesty Idea,” Washington
Post, May 13, 2006
-
“SPECIAL REPORT: Homeland Security Appropriations for FY
2005 (House & Senate) and California Implications,”
The California Institute for Federal Policy Research,
September 16, 2004
-
“DHS Announces $12.14 Billion for Border Security &
Immigration Enforcement Efforts,” Department for Homeland
Security, January 31, 2008
- “Militarizing
the Border: Bush Calls for 6,000 National Guard Troops to
Deploy to U.S. – Mexican Border,” Democracy Now, May
16, 2006
- Wikipedia
profile of Military Commissions Act of 2006
- “The
American Dream Survey 2006,” Lake Partners Research, August
28, 2006
- “ICE
Most Wanted Fugitives,” U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement,
Accessed March 19, 2008
- N.C.
Aizenman and Spencer S. Hsu, “Activist’s Arrest Highlights
Key Immigrant Issue,” Washington Post, August 21,
2007
- “National
Strategy for Homeland Security,” Office of Homeland Security,
July, 2002
- “The
National Security Strategy of the United States of America,”
The White House, September, 2002
- “National
Strategy for Homeland Security”
- “Information
Sharing and Analysis” The Department of Homeland Security,
Accessed March 19, 2008
- “National
Strategy for Homeland Security”
- Wikipedia
profile of Alien and Sedition Acts
- Regin
Schmidt, Red Scare: FBI and the Origins of Anticommunism
in the United States, (Copenhagen, Denmark: Museum Tusculanum
Press, 2000).
- Walter
R. Borneman, 1812: The War That Forged a Nation,
(New York, NY: Harper Collins, 2004), 13.
- John
Morton Smith, “President John Adams, Thomas Cooper, and
Sedition: A Case Study in Suppression”, The Mississippi
Valley Historical Review 42.3 (December, 1955): 438-465
- Samuel
Sitgreaves, Speech Can be found in Abridgement of the
Debates of Congress From 1789 to 1856, (New York, NY:
D. Appleton and Company), 253-260
- Edmund
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