Let�s 
              start out by saying that Arizona�s 
              new anti-immigrant law is unconstitutional and cannot stand in any 
              reasonable society. The worst in the nation, the law allows police 
              to stop anyone suspected of being undocumented, and demand proof 
              of citizenship. Those unable to produce documents showing they are 
              �legal� can be arrested, fined $2,500 and locked up for up to 6 
              months. The law makes it a crime under 
              state law to be in the U.S. 
              illegally, whatever illegal means. 
            It 
              is a wretched and regressive piece of legislation, to be sure, in 
              a state that will become majority of color in ten to fifteen years, 
              and in a nation that is browning by the day. After all, the reality 
              that a majority of the babies born in this nation will soon be of 
              a darker hue unsettles some people. 
              
            No 
              doubt, Gov. Jan Brewer has scored some points among the shrinking 
              base that remains the party faithful, not to mention the anti-immigrant 
              hate 
              groups such as the nativist Minutemen that harass and beat �suspected� 
              immigrants, a.k.a. Latinos. Just looking at it from a purely common 
              sense point of view, it is utter political suicide to spit in the 
              face of a soon-to-be majority of your state, in order to garner 
              the support of an increasingly unhinged, extremist base. And yet, 
              apparently this is what it takes to shine in the GOP these days. 
            The 
              governor has assured us that there will be no racial profiling permitted 
              under this law. That assertion is utter foolishness. This law is 
              nothing more and nothing less than an expression of hate, a codification 
              of xenophobia and the legalization of racial profiling. Taking it 
              a step further, this is the criminalization of Latinos and presumed 
              Latinos. To take the racial profiling out of a racial profiling 
              law is to accomplish the impossible. That�s like trying to take 
              the racial profiling out of the internment of Japanese-Americans 
              during WWII, or extract the �unequal� from Jim Crow laws. That�s 
              the whole point of it, after all. You can�t have it both ways when 
              you dabble in racist policies. Someone, apparently a supporter of 
              the new law, decorated the Arizona capitol steps with a swastika 
              made of refried beans. And South 
              Carolina�s lieutenant governor blamed a 
              lazy workforce for allowing illegal immigrants to thrive in 
              his state. That is what you�d expect in this environment. This is 
              what we�re dealing here. 
             I 
              don�t know what it is exactly about Arizona, 
              but I do know that the state needs to be boycotted like a Montgomery 
              bus. That state must realize that you cannot treat any group of 
              people as lesser than the rest, nor can you disrespect the country�s 
              largest minority group and expect to emerge unscathed. There must 
              be a price to pay this time, and what better place to start than 
              with the Arizona economy? When an Arizona 
              lawmaker wants to boycott his own state, you know how bad it 
              is. 
            I 
              had to google my brain to retrieve some information on another controversial, 
              racially-tinged episode in Arizona 
              political history. I came up with the 1980s and the Martin Luther 
              King, Jr. national holiday. In 1987, then-newly elected Arizona Governor Evan Mecham 
              - who defended his use of the term �pickaninnies� for blacks - rescinded 
              the King holiday in Arizona. 
              John McCain, who himself had voted 
              against the holiday in 1983, 
              defended the governor�s decision to rescind the holiday on the grounds 
              that it was an imposition on states� rights. Not unlike today with 
              his support of the horrid immigration law, McCain was dabbling in 
              racial politics and shoring up his mavericky rightwing bonafides. 
            I 
              wonder what Dr. King would have said about Arizona�s 
              racial profiling law. Certainly, he would have called it an unjust 
              law, one which is �out of harmony with the moral law,� and �degrades 
              human personality�. As King articulated in Letter 
              from Birmingham Jail, �One has not only a legal but a moral 
              responsibility to obey just laws. Conversely, one has a moral responsibility 
              to disobey unjust laws. I would agree with St. 
              Augustine that �an unjust law is no law at all.�� 
             And 
              indeed, the Arizona law is an unjust law not even worth the 
              paper on which it was written. Certainly, this is not the first 
              anti-immigration law, and sadly it likely won�t be the last, in 
              this nation with a long history of thriving on both immigrants and 
              jingoism. But we must not participate in the madness, and we must 
              not let the promulgators of such junk think they can get away with 
              it. 
            BlackCommentator.com Executive Editor, David A. Love, 
              JD is a journalist and human rights advocate based in Philadelphia, 
              and a contributor to 
              The Huffington 
              Post, theGrio, The 
              Progressive Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune News Service, In These Times 
              and Philadelphia 
              Independent Media Center. He also blogs at davidalove.com, 
              NewsOne, 
              Daily Kos, 
              and Open 
              Salon. Click here 
              to contact Mr. Love. 
             
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