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Gabriel Schivone

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Latinos Won't Be Fooled by AZ's New Pro-Israel Bill

Posted: 03/26/2012 7:19 am

Arizona's recent pro-Israel legislation exposes the rightwing, anti-immigrant hypocrisy of many white "liberal" allies in the Immigrant Rights Movement


On its surface, the recent resolution bill, "Supporting the Nation of Israel", unanimously passed by the AZ House of Representatives recently, raised no eyebrows.

A bi-partisan consensus supporting Israel is nothing new. However, upon closer inspection of the bill, it is unclear to whom the enacted legislation is appealing, based on its language surrounding Arizona and US border security policies.

The AZ-Israel support bill (HR2008) is essentially an interstate, cross-border solidarity statement. The bill begins by recognizing "the Jewish people...in their homeland." It later hails Arizona and Israel as eclectic "trade partners, a relationship we seek to enhance," according to the bill's authors.

So one might presume the largely Republican bill speaks to Israel supporters. A sound assumption, since the chief issue of agreement among liberal and conservative groups (whether Jewish or not) surrounds Israel's 45-year military occupation of Palestinian Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Here, Israel's border security language is approximately that of the US Border Patrol, whose "priority mission" is "preventing terrorists and terrorists' weapons, including weapons of mass destruction, from entering the United States."

In regards to maintaining Israel's ethnic Jewish majority, American bipartisan support likely also resounds in agreement (like most of Israeli society) around Israeli immigration policies that prompted the government's current construction of a $1.5 billion "border fence"--across Israel's own southern desert borderlands--to keep out "illegal" migrants, mostly from North Africa. After all, as Prime Minister Netanyahu warns, the invading "flood" represents "a concrete threat to the Jewish and democratic character of Israel."

Generally, The Democratic and Republican parties and their constituents are in uninterrupted harmony on the issue of Israeli border security and preserving Israel's predominant Jewish character. But when it comes to American liberals of various stripes, many are firmly rooted in the immigrant rights movement.

The majority of Jewish-American groups, especially in Arizona, for example, passionately support migrant rights and immigration reform, defend outlawed Mexican-American Studies programs, and rail at the thousands of migrant deaths in the US/Mexico desert borderlands resulting from the 20-year US militarization of its southern border.

Meanwhile, the Republican-led AZ-Israel bill gloats that "Israel receives vital military and security assistance from the United States, much of which, in turn, is spent here in Arizona with its defense contractors"--no doubt along the border, where a big military-style "defense" business booms.

So for whom is this bill written? Who are the authors fooling? If anything, the bill is a political liability for a prominent array of Israel's American supporters whose unshakable support for Israeli policies--in light of the AZ-Israel bill--now appears irreconcilably rightwing to their cherished Latino allies, particularly in Arizona.

In other words, this bill forces one of the most powerful US-based Israel constituencies to have a lot of explaining to do. They'll likely have to exert significant time and energy trying to convince Latino allies that Israeli anti-immigrant and border militarization policies are justified against migrants and Palestinians by Israel because those migrant and border issues are indescribably different than those in Arizona.

The argument is a Catch-22 loss. Because whichever way one may try to spin it, the AZ-Israel bill runs contrary to migrant and Palestinian rights.

According to the House spokesperson, the AZ-Israel bill was remitted to the US Secretary of State the same day (Feb. 27) of its unanimous adoption on the House floor.

American liberals now face uneasy questions. The challenge now will be to apply standards equally across the board--across borders and states where situations may be different in the details but fundamental human rights issues remain stubborn and constant.


A version of this article appeared in The Arizona Republic on March 25.

 

Follow Gabriel Schivone on Twitter: www.twitter.com/@GSchivone

 
 
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10:45 PM on 03/26/2012
Gabriel Schivone has a major credibility problem that is well known in Tucson and the University of Arizona.

In his byline, Scchivone is listed as "Chicano-Jewish". When dealing with Schivone at the University of Arizona, supporters of Israel will constantly hear him mention his Jewish heritage.

As uncovered by Ha'aretz last fall, this seems to be a cynical ploy. It appears to be simply untrue. For details, see the link below, or google around the internet.

http://www.camera.org/index.asp?x_print=1&x_context=2&x_outlet=55&x_article=2093
01:50 PM on 05/17/2012
I posted a long piece about Gabe Schivone and his fraudulent history in Tucson and the Gaza Flotilla. They refused to print it.
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inthedesert
Those who never question will fall for anything.
07:58 PM on 03/26/2012
Wow...a major "stretch" of the imagination to connect support for Israel to anti-latino thoughts. LOL. I swear, is there no end to the connections immigrants from Mexico can make to things that have absolutely nothing to do with them to show how anti-immigrant Arizona is?
07:55 PM on 03/26/2012
Bad, Bad Karma. Why is a state the size of New Jersey in the news every single day? It's too much.
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SamSeven
You're either with Humanity or you're not.
06:11 PM on 03/26/2012
Will California pledge their alligance to israel next?
03:09 PM on 03/26/2012
I do support my Latino allies here in Arizona, as well as the Israeli border fence. There's no conflict at all.
Israel's fence was hardly built "to keep out North Africans".
Murderers with bombs attached should be kept out of Israel, the primary function of that barrier.

Most Arizona illegal immigrants have been looking for a job or better life - much different in my estimation.
Steven Oscherwitz
Phoenix, AZ
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Hacim Obmed
02:24 PM on 03/26/2012
This is truly strange. Why should a bill passed unanimously have any relevance to a matter like the way AZ handles its illegal immigration issue. As far as I know, Israel has some problems with Illegal immigration as do most countries in the developed world. Actually the AZ law, is quite mild compared to the law in France or England or Germany or any European country. The law in Israel is also quite harsh. Certainly all Israeli citizens and citizens of the EU are required to have identification papers on them at all times and are required to show those papers whenever they transact any sort of serious business or whenever the police ask them for identification. It is quite standard and no one thinks twice about it.
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Cynthia Rays
peace in the valley seeker
01:13 PM on 03/26/2012
Why are states making foreign policy statements?
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inthedesert
Those who never question will fall for anything.
07:59 PM on 03/26/2012
I think states can make "statements" of support on anything. Get over it.
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Hoodooman
Non-Aggression Principle
01:13 PM on 03/26/2012
"Arizona's recent pro-Israel legislation exposes the rightwing, anti-immigrant hypocrisy of many white "liberal" allies in the Immigrant Rights Movement"


First; What does someone's skin color have to do with their stance on Middle Eastern issues?
And second; Illegal immigration is not an issue specific to a skin color or ancestral origins.
Lastly, I would point out that it was the British who not only carved out "Palistine" from the area, but (as all crumbling empires do) leave a vacuum for the refugees of other nations (as the ancestors of the so called "Palestinians" were) to settle in these "disputed areas". I am not defending either side in the matter, but we should keep historical accuracy when discussing the tragedy that is happening in that part of the world.
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Vlady
Better Late
12:29 PM on 03/26/2012
The post is one more convenient occasion to chastise Israel and her supporters in the US
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Seawolf56
Truth should never be censored
10:20 AM on 03/26/2012
Shows America and the world who is running the show in the USA! Time to cut all ties with any nations that murder women and children!
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Hacim Obmed
02:27 PM on 03/26/2012
But that would include all the countries where we get our oil.
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inthedesert
Those who never question will fall for anything.
07:59 PM on 03/26/2012
YOU MEAN LIKE MEXICO?
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Gui Montag
Former Palestinian Supporter
09:37 AM on 03/26/2012
Israel isn't America. There's no comparing the two situations, they are completely different.
07:56 PM on 03/26/2012
Unequivocally CORRECT.
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Viper1st
multi quasi faceted
09:07 AM on 03/26/2012
The AZ-Israel support bill (HR2008) , is "presuned:" by the AZ Legislature that the Israleas will honor the U-S-A's Sovereign Laws pertaining to ir's legal immigration of allowing 1 legal innigrant into the U-S-A every 30 seconds since 2001.

Unlike the 7.5 million illegal Mexican Nationals unauthorized to be in the U-S-A

That's the difference in AZ HR 2008 and AZ SB 1070
08:09 AM on 03/26/2012
why do you keep saying "occupation". the phrase sets a picture that closes off discussion. is it possible, just possible, that another reality is in this picture. was the land part of israel historically, was it part of israel by league of nation law. are you going to falsify history that this land is not israel. read this link with an open mind.
http://www.cufi.org/PDF/Israel101.pdf
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lbsaltzman
Permaculture and Sustainability
12:41 PM on 03/26/2012
The West Bank was never part of the Bronze Age Canaanite state of Israel. The area around Jerusalem was barely populated when Israel thrived. And what happened 2-3000 thousand years ago does not justify anything that Zionism has done to re-establish the state of Israel based on Biblical myths, and at the expense and suffering of the Palestinians. Palestinians, by the way, are also descended from the Bronze Age Israelis and Iron Age Judeans.
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Gui Montag
Former Palestinian Supporter
01:29 PM on 03/26/2012
Hamas won't spare you, Larry. Don't delude yourself into thinking they will.