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Laura W. Murphy

Laura W. Murphy

Posted: May 11, 2010 04:08 PM

The New Jim Crow

What's Your Reaction:

By now, most everyone has heard about Arizona's new law requiring police to demand to see documentation from anyone they stop whom they suspect is in the country illegally. What this really means is that people in Arizona will be forced to "show their papers" simply for looking or sounding "foreign." These draconian police tactics are more than just offensive and discriminatory — they're unconstitutional. The law will result in harassment based on race, appearance, and language, carrying an echo of the Jim Crow South. America has fought too hard against racially divisive policies to allow this law to go forward.

The American Civil Liberties Union plans to challenge the constitutionality of the law in court, believing it is state-sanctioned racial profiling. The law will only make the rampant racial profiling of Latinos in Arizona worse than ever.

We are hardly the only group to raise concerns about the situation in Arizona — nor will we be the last. But in all the controversy and outrage over the political implications of this law, it's important to remember the human toll that it will have on real people every day who will be its victims.

The racial profiling sure to result from the Arizona law will mean that people — citizens and noncitizens alike — will be harassed and discriminated against as they simply try to live their lives and take care of their families. People will be wrongfully detained and deported. And as we have seen with other local law enforcement of immigration laws, once someone is caught up in the web of law enforcement, it's hard to find one's way out — even if someone is in the country legally. Families sometimes never find out what has become of their loved ones, and those who are detained often are quickly forced or pressured to leave the U.S. Whether they are 85 or 13, they can be jailed for days, weeks, months, sometimes years, put on a prison bus and dropped off across the border. This is not how we should treat human beings.

The Arizona law will also alienate law enforcement from the communities they serve, eroding the trust necessary for police to keep neighborhoods safe. It will discourage people from turning to the police when they need to, even to report crimes. It will undermine public safety by diverting scarce security resources away from legitimate law enforcement and focus them on false threats from people who look or sound "suspicious." It will lead to mass incarceration, racial profiling and deportations. The ACLU has heard too many stories of brown-skinned U.S. citizens and legal residents who have been locked up for months or illegally deported for no valid reason.

Once we get past all the political controversy, what we are looking at is a human tragedy. This is not what America's about, and we must do better.

 
 
 
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01:52 PM on 05/12/2010
The reaction by many to this law (that will never stand up in court) ignores the real problems, the criminal trespassers who decided to willfully break the laws of the USA to come here and their corrupt, financially unequal homelands. They didn't wake up one morning suddenly transported to Arizona (gee, how did that happen?), they went there on purpose, knowing it was against our laws. The USA has the right to a secure border. As long as the USA is the pressure valve for the corrupt and financially unequal homelands of these criminal trespassers, their homelands will never be fixed.
01:46 PM on 05/12/2010
".....Families sometimes never find out what has become of their loved ones, and those who are detained often are quickly forced or pressured to leave the U.S. Whether they are 85 or 13, they can be jailed for days, weeks, months, sometimes years, put on a prison bus and dropped off across the border. This is not how we should treat human beings...."

Seems your bothered by US Federal Customs Laws regarding immigration than AZ 's newest law.
01:01 PM on 05/12/2010
Read US Code Title 8 Chapter 12 Subchapter II Part VIII 1304(c)....it requires all aliens over 18 to carry alien registration cards at all times.

They are enforcing current federal statutes. You don't like it, elect people who will change it.
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hjo4
you can go with this or you can go with that
12:47 PM on 05/12/2010
This is no where near or like the Jim Crow laws that African Americans lived thru in their Homeland America. I believe this author failed to do her research and also insulted African Americans by attempting to trivialize my ancestors suffering. Like the Holocaust , the Jim Crow laws showed the ugliness of how America treated her own citizens and legalized their atrocities. Arizona's law is designed and targets those people who knowingly and willingly violated our immigration laws aka illegal aliens. They are lawbreakers, American Black were citizens, a huge difference.
Furthermore all immigrants are suppose to carry their "Green cards" at all times and present them to authorities when requested. How is this unconstitutional.
01:49 PM on 05/12/2010
Even though your indignation is bit high for my taste I do tend to agree with you hjo4. Jim Crow era was a damn site harsher than this AZ law. The authors words are misplaced.
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12:15 PM on 05/12/2010
The ACLU is a joke.

The law very clearly says that police are not allowed to stop anyone or question anyone solely on the basis of race.

Only a far left loon organization could possibly have a problem with that.

Maybe the ACLU should refocus back on the protection of pedophiles rights?
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Don Solomon
10:07 PM on 05/11/2010
I can't wait till this law gets to the Supreme Court, so all these people will shut up about this.
12:29 PM on 05/12/2010
Now is the time to voice an opinion before the activist kangaroos of the neo-Confederate court serve up a "ruling".
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Don Solomon
09:53 PM on 05/11/2010
Everyone has to show "papers" when they get pulled over, should illegals be exempt from that too, because it might hurt their feelings or give the appearance of profiling, welcome to AMERICA. Call me crazy, but if I am a cop and pull someone over, they don't have a DL, don't speak English, act nervous, there are 8 people in car with no IDs in 4 seat car, that is kind of suspicious.
06:31 PM on 05/12/2010
When was the last time you had to prove you were a citizen, outside of airports and border crossings? Showing ID such as drivers license does not prove your citizenship.
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frankg3400
12:51 PM on 05/15/2010
Well, the last time I was checked for my citizenship was when I was in Europe last year. I needed to show my citizenship at Logan airport in Boston when I was leaving the US, at customs when I landed in Europe, then at every hotel in Europe and then when I returned to the US, I had to show and prove my citizenship at US customs. Now at border crossings, you need a passport going to both Canada and Mexico which proves citizenship. I had no problem proving my citizenship when asked.
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frankg3400
01:00 PM on 05/15/2010
Misread your question
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Romulus
06:42 PM on 05/11/2010
Ok, Ms. Murphy, what's your solution to the problem of illegal aliens?
01:50 PM on 05/12/2010
Let me speak for Ms Murphy ".....AMNESTY..." on your dime.
06:24 PM on 05/11/2010
It's not suspect, what officers have to have is reasonable suspicion. Reasonable suspicion is made up of articulable facts. Being Hispanic, speaking Spanish, and having a dark skin complexion is not enough for a spot. Any ambulance chaser can turn a stopped based on those three facts into a payday!