Arizona Worsens Issue of Immigration
for Playing Enforcer of Federal Matters
After the passage of SB 1070 into law, the United States and other countries have awaken to a reality
Arizona residents have endured and fought for years.
Phoenix, Arizona. April 27, 2010. Some people from Arizona, or those who have lived here for quite a
while, may be appalled but not surprised about the dramatic turn the volatile issue of immigration has
taken in this state during the last few days.
The passage of Senate Bill 1070, signed into law on Friday, April 23, 2010 by Governor Janice Brewer,
could be only considered the straw that broke the camel's back, since Arizona’s legislators have been
implementing similar laws for at least the last 15 years.
From laws regarding driver licenses, public assistance programs, education, smuggling of people and
many others, Arizona has taken their own initiative to supposedly fight illegal immigration in the state.
SB 1070 is considered the most strict immigration law at the state level, and is targeted to immigrants
who lack legal status in the United States. The law makes it a crime to be in Arizona without legal
papers, and allows local police agencies to enforce federal immigration law. The passage of SB 1070
makes Arizona the first state that criminalizes immigrants who entered without permit.
Arizona has taken immigration law into its own hands for the last decade and a half, and in such an
aggressive way anyone would think immigrants without documents are a thing of the past, that the
problem of immigration has been solved thanks to strong legislation, and that this state could be a model
on how to tackle such a polarizing and complicated issue. Nothing could be so far from the truth.
Instead, Arizona was dubbed “immigration ground” zero when a series of volatile street protests burst in
Phoenix in the fall of 2007, and now with the passage of 1070, it has also become the epicenter of sharp
criticism and mockery around the nation and the world in 2010.
Arizona has also become a failed and shameful laboratory where immigrants from Latin America are a
demographic experiment for politicians who have decided to play enforcing immigration law at the
expense of brown people, legally in the country or not.
According to a 2008 report by the Southern Poverty Law Center, Arizona is now home to 19 documented
hate groups, 10 of them Neo-Nazi, which thrive thanks to politicians like Senator Russell Pearce who
promote so-called immigration state laws targeted to specific ethnic groups.
A revealing National Geographic Channel documentary titled "American Skinheads" that aired on
Wednesday, March 19, 2008, included a segment about Arizona's growing and violent racist activities by
white supremacists, neo-nazis, skinheads and others. The documentary affirmed that "racist skinheads
and white supremacists are flooding into Arizona and heading toward the U.S.-Mexico border..."
Seeking to fix a problem beyond its reach and resources, Arizona has earned a dumb reputation, brewed
hate and racism, and become the subject of understandable mockery across the nation and other
countries. Arizona has also proven that it has forgotten a fundamental economic lesson, when the state
refused to adopt Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day as a paid holiday years ago.
With the new 1070 law, Arizona is clearly determined to continue on the path of failure not only as an
enforcer of immigration law, but also of economic collapse. Arizona’s quest to become the national
laboratory of local immigration laws has positioned it to become another laboratory, one for likely
successful economic boycotts.
After the passage of this new law, the United States and other countries have awaken to a reality that
Arizona residents have endured and fought for years. The reaction of people who live outside the state
against SB 1070 has intensified the daily struggle Arizonans who oppose this type of legislation, as well
as increasing the level of support. This would surely strengthen a movement that many of us embraced
from the beginning, and hopefully persuade some locals who are still in disbelief.
SEN. PEARCE The author of Senate
Bill 1070 that directs Arizona's law
enforcement agencies to arrest
those who look like they are in the
country without papers.
Photo by Eduardo Barraza/Barriozona
GOV. BREWER Seeking to be
elected as governor, the former
Arizona Secretary of State replaced
Janet Napolitano in January 2009.
She signed SB 1070 into law on
Friday, April 23, 2010.
Photo by Eduardo Barraza/Barriozona
Published by the Hispanic Institute of Social Issues in Phoenix, Arizona
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