They Got Walter

when you think about it 

it’s very easy for us to express opinions and write columns and argue the

‘immigration issue’

it’s another to live it-

my friend sent me this and asked me to put it up on my blog, so here it is.

amm

macbr37.jpg 

 

      My daughter told me when I dropped her off at work at Market Basket last week: “They got Walter.” The police, or ICE, had come to the supermarket and picked up “Walter”. He was a young Latino who had worked his way up to full-time. Nobody on the job knew where he was taken, and nobody knew why he was taken. In the following days it was said the he had a false social security number. The large-scale raids were supposed to be aimed at the MS-13 gang, but others, including a union organizer, were caught up, and terror spread through the “New Immigrant” communities like thunderstorm across the Kansas plains.

      White neighborhoods didn’t even know about the raids. But the Latino neighborhoods were deserted. Around the corner from my union hall in Lynn, Ma., Union St. has been transformed in the last 20 years from an abandoned district inhabited largely by drug dealers into a bustling commercial center of Latino businesses. When news of the raids was spread by the Spanish radio stations, a weird silence spread over Union St. and other Spanish neighborhoods down into East Boston. The little store selling religious icons of Jesus and Mary was empty. White employers complained that their workers disappeared. Parents kept their children home from school, behind locked doors.

      Legal residents were affected as well as those who had crossed the border illegally or overstayed their legal welcome. People knew from the workplace raids in New Bedford, Ma. earlier this year that you could be arguing your case from a jail cell in Texas with little access to legal help and far from your children and even prescription medicines. Better to miss pay and risk discipline on the job, and stay home with your children.

      The night before I heard about Walter from my daughter, I had met with a group of Lynn Guatemalans who wanted to organize a union. Their story is important to anyone who thinks a massive crackdown on illegal workers will improve conditions for the rest of us. I’ll call the company Avaricious, Inc. 

      The day after word spread of the raids, sixty percent of the workers did not show. So Avaricious called a temp agency. They paid less than the regular employees—top rate after 10 years was about $14–and of course, no benefits. Now the workers expect Avaricious to lay many of them off and use the temp agency permanently.

      Avaricious thus saves money, but more importantly, is protected from ICE. They are no longer responsible for the “illegals” since they are not the employer of record. ICE would be faced with chasing ever more desperate and impoverished workers through shifting, shadowy scab temp agencies that make Avaricious look like a model employer. 

      So fear reigns over millions of workers and their families in the United States, making them less likely to stick their heads up and organize unions or file complaints with government agencies. Just this week a Guatemalan construction worker from Lynn fell off a roof and was killed—it turned out his age was 17. The problem only gets worse–wages and benefits at the low end of the labor market drop, and are a downward pressure on all wages. This is where we are headed.

      Will this stop undocumented workers like Lynn’s Guatemalans from coming? No. We really need to correct our willful ignorance of our own history if we are going figure out what to do about immigration. 

      In 1950 Guatemalans elected the mildly reformist President Arbenz. Arbenz wanted to give plantations workers rights to the land under their company houses. This would mean the workers could organize unions without being thrown out of their homes. This pissed off the Boston-based United Fruit company, which had enjoyed the unrestricted right to exploit Guatemala at their whim. So in 1954 United Fruit and the CIA organized an invasion from Honduras and expelled Arbenz to Mexico, replacing him with pro-corporate military leaders.

      Many Guatemalans reasonably concluded that the United States would kill them if they challenged the domination of the corporations, and headed to the mountains. A 30 year civil war cost 300,000 lives. The State Department reported to then-President Reagan that US funded and trained government soldiers committed atrocities like throwing babies down wells, in the course of defending “democracy”. More than 400,000 people fled the country, largely to the US.

      Most Guatemalans in Lynn come from San Marcos, which was hit hard by the civil war. Since the guerrillas signed a peace agreement in 1996, “free trade” has continued to devastate San Marcos. Foreign power and mining interests have driven people from their homes to make way for “mega-project” development. Since the neoliberal model mandates that development is for export, 25% of the homes in the countryside still have no electricity, while power is shipped North. There is no work for displaced farmers. Villages are emptied, especially of men. Indigenous protesters have been harassed, even killed, and the area is becoming increasingly militarized. 

      Until conditions improve, immigrants will keep coming. Duh. And it is a desperate journey. You leave your families. You pay a smuggler $5-10,000 to get across the border. Thousands have died during the trip. US Border Patrol funding had already multiplied by six since 1990 to $1.6 billion annually before the wall-builders got their hands in our pockets—to no avail. All so you can send a little over $300 a month to feed hungry mouths at home. You could say that Lynn’s Guatemalans are just making informed market choices, joining the hundreds of millions of workers who search the desolate neoliberal global landscape for work. Simply to eat. Simply to live.

      ICE raids will make things worse for immigrants and other workers here in the US.

      There is of course, another, better choice. Workers at Avaricous could be granted the basic human right to organize a union. Wages and benefits would stabilize and improve. A path to citizenship would bring these workers and their families out from the shadows. Guatemalans already have the highest rate of labor market participation and work the longest hours of any group in Lynn. They could participate civic life. Businesses on Union St. and even Avaricious would have steady customers and workers. The growing chasm between rich and poor would begin to shrink for the first time in decades as a major downward pressure on wages was eliminated.

      These are our choices, at a turning point in our movement’s history. The right choice means fighting not only the haters and their apologists on the right, including the simplistic and intellectually facile harangues of Lou Dobbs. It also means insisting that brothers and sisters in our movement among US born workers think this through and act accordingly.

      A couple of cliches seem appropriate as a conclusion to this column. We need to ask our members to be careful of what they wish for—because we reap what we sow.

      That’s how “They got Walter.”

 

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for your consideration- read HERE to see how another community

has been affected by Anti-Mexican Hysteria

6 thoughts on “They Got Walter

  1. How very different it is up your way. I am not aware of such raids happening down here, at least not in the city. My guess is that the Latino population is large and vocal and such raids would not be tolerated.

  2. Living in the South Park neighborhood, I’ve become all to familiar with the raids. It’s easy to tell days when folks think a raid is imminent, nobody leaves home and all the cars in the ‘hood stay put.

    It’s not that the Latino population is loud and vocal that you aren’t hearing about the raids. It’s that too many people are too afraid. Even those of us whose families have been in Seattle for multiple generations fear ICE’s ability to pick and choose who to pick up. You don’t have to be an undocumented worker to be picked up, they can simply accuse you of rendering aid to the undocumented. Proof is irrelevant.

    Now on a positive note, the SPD has a policy to not check the immigration status of crime victims. Too often it’s the undocumented that suffer the worst atrocities at the hands of criminals, who know that these folks fear speaking to ANY authority.

  3. Thank you Michelle, what you said is exactly right- and it’s a great ‘snapshot’ of the situation as is.

    Much as it is with the SPD, the Mountlake Terrace Police do the same.

    Again, thank you for stopping by and for speaking up.

    Anita Marie

  4. Last year, Greeley, Colorado, maybe two hours from here, got raided – it has meat-packing plants. The raid happened during the day, while children were at school and baby-sitters and daycares. The children found out when their parents didn’t come to pick them up; quite a few children were left abandoned by the system due to the raids. It was a disgrace, and a nightmare for the poor kids.

  5. I belive it is time for us to organize a clear sactuary movement – using our business, religious and state leaders to find every way to exclude the vile behavior of an administration that has declared war on the American People in the guise of security – the immigrantion issue is nothing more than a ruse to keep the general population engaged in a debate that has no influence on the ever increasing errosiion of civil and human rights in the country. This is a country of immigrants – time to treat all people with the rights our laws provide.

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