Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Guest Voz: Linda Greenhhouse, NY Times "Breathing While Undocumented" SB1070 - Boycott Arizona!

Guest Voz: Linda Greenhouse - Linda Greenhouse, the winner of the 1998 Pulitzer Prize, writes on alternate Fridays about the Supreme Court and the law. She reported on the Supreme Court for The New York Times from 1978 to 2008. She teaches at Yale Law School and is the author of a biography of Justice Harry A. Blackmun, "Becoming Justice Blackmun."
I’m glad I’ve already seen the Grand Canyon. Because I’m not going back to Arizona as long as it remains a police state, which is what the appalling anti-immigrant bill that Gov. Jan Brewer signed into law last week has turned it into.

What would Arizona’s revered libertarian icon, Barry Goldwater, say about a law that requires the police to demand proof of legal residency from any person with whom they have made “any lawful contact” and about whom they have “reasonable suspicion” that “the person is an alien who is unlawfully present in the United States?” Wasn’t the system of internal passports one of the most distasteful features of life in the Soviet Union and apartheid-era South Africa?

And in case the phrase “lawful contact” makes it appear as if the police are authorized to act only if they observe an undocumented-looking person actually committing a crime, another section strips the statute of even that fig leaf of reassurance. “A person is guilty of trespassing,” the law provides, by being “present on any public or private land in this state” while lacking authorization to be in the United States — a new crime of breathing while undocumented. The intent, according to the State Legislature, is “attrition through enforcement.” read entire article
Note: Linda points out the "attrition through enforcement" intent of the bill. As we all know, attrition through enforcement = MASS DEPORTATION of all those here.

2 comments:

MMPete said...

"Lawful contact" means that (a law that already exists on the books) LE cannot stop someone purely based on their looks. They can only be stopped and questioned during the commission of or suspicion of a crime.

LE always ask for I.D. under those circumstances nothing new there. But if the person cannot provide valid I.D. only then can they be questioned about their status in this country. Makes sense to me unless you have an agenda to keep illegals in this country by screaming racial profiling which isn't true. Hispanic Americans should support this bill as law abiding, loyal Americans.

Dee said...

Linda is right. As she said:

And in case the phrase “lawful contact” makes it appear as if the police are authorized to act only if they observe an undocumented-looking person actually committing a crime, another section strips the statute of even that fig leaf of reassurance. “A person is guilty of trespassing,” the law provides, by being “present on any public or private land in this state” while lacking authorization to be in the United States — a new crime of breathing while undocumented.

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