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Monday, July 7, 2014

The Lost Children; and the Band Plays While the Ship Sinks


~Isadora Duncan

In 2014 alone, Border Patrol agents across the Southwest have detained more than 52,000 unaccompanied minors, with a particular concentration along the Rio Grande border in Texas according to federal records. It is clear that this issue needs to be addressed because there are only so many detention facilities available and limited resources, and the American public is becoming more outraged.
My wish, admittedly probably unrealistic given the lack of any consensus of the issues, is that instead of the constant inflow and outflow of undocumented immigrants through a system that is clearly broken, that we could somehow erase the image and stories that families are getting in their home countries about streets paved with gold, an abundance of jobs, and easy upward mobility in the United States. The truth is, we as a country have been struggling economically for many years. There are people here who have been unemployed for so long, they literally have quit looking for jobs, resigned to getting as many part-time jobs as they can find simply to survive.
 Every year, we have thousands of kids graduating with college degrees (once thought to be the punch ticket to paradise) only to find that there are no jobs for them, and those jobs that are available barely pay the rent, much less the enormous student loan debt that a great number of kids have the day they finish college. Also, even though recent job statistics appear to show that the unemployment rate could be dropping, it must be noted that those who have become frustrated and given up are not counted as unemployed if they have not searched for work in the four weeks prior to when the most recent census was taken by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Moreover, the number of involuntary part-time workers (those working part time because their hours have been cut back or because they are unable to find a full-time job) has increased by 275,000 in June 2014 for a total of 7.5 million. So as you can see, labor statistics are easily manipulated for political benefit and actually not very impressive when you read the fine print.
As of this month, more than 77.4 million people live in highly concentrated areas of poverty according to the United States Census Bureau. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services defines the poverty line as $23,850 a year in income for a family of four.  This is definitely not a life of luxury and ease that many imagine exist in this country. And these numbers are for people who already live here.
I understand in concept that many families are willing to allow their children to travel illegally to the United States because the countries where they live are corrupt, violent, and dangerous. However, these parents should know that simply making it to the United States is an uphill battle, with many children being physically and sexually abused, abandoned by those who transport them, or simply getting lost and dying in some godforsaken desert. For those who make it here after such an arduous journey, the likelihood is high that they will be stuck doing some sort of back breaking labor for years of their life, never knowing when they are going to get that knock on the door sending them back to where they came from regardless of how established their life may be here.
Maybe it is naïve of me, but if we could really communicate the truth, that the streets aren’t paved with gold, and that many Americans live at or close to the poverty line already here in the United States, perhaps some of the parents so willing to let their children come to the United States would understand that it is an illusion and a life of toiling, worry, and misery that lies at the end of the rainbow. Again, I recognize that these are hopes and wishes on my part, not likely to ever take place given our inept government.
I read this weekend about a city in California where the mayor encouraged protesters to go out and block buses that were dropping off illegal immigrants in temporary housing facilities because detention centers in Texas are now overcrowded. Approximately 200 to 300 people surrounded the buses forcing them to turn around and travel to another Border Patrol station located in another California city. The detainees are primarily children, with few accompanied by other family members. According to the Los Angeles Times, the mayor said that the blockade was needed because the “federal government is not properly enforcing immigration laws that require immediate deportation of undocumented immigrants.”
In a more ominous tone, Texas Governor Rick Perry has accused the Obama Administration of a cover up for failing to return undocumented children. He also indicated that non-Mexicans crossing the border are coming from Middle Eastern countries such as Syria. According to journalist Eric Pfeiffer, Perry stated that “These people that are coming from states like Syria that have substantial connections back to terrorist regimes.” According to Politifact Texas, Perry’s Syria claims are “ridiculous” and “not accurate.” Perry indicates that he plans to run again for President, so you may want to file away some of the more unusual concepts he spews out to compare to what his story is in 2016.
Thousands of unaccompanied minors cross the U.S. Southern border each year in hopes of gaining the American dream according to CNN.  Many are trying to reunite with parents, family members and escape violence, gangs are poverty.  CNN also reports that “The number of children making these journeys by themselves has doubled each year since 2010. U.S. authorities estimate that between 60,000 and 80,000 children will seek safe haven this year.”  This seems like an astronomical number of minors to be crossing the United States southern border.  
            CNN also reports that from Honduras alone, 4,500 unaccompanied minors have been captured in Mexico and deported back.  This number does not include those who were lost along the way in other countries, those who were kidnapped, killed, or left for dead in the desert somewhere.  Even more astounding is that some of the children are reported as being as young as four years old with notes pinned to their clothing with information regarding who should be contacted upon the child’s arrival into the United States
            It is shocking to think that any parent would send over their young child to make such a dangerous and long trip.  So what motivates parents to allow and encourage this and minors to attempt it?  CNN describes that most are trying to escape “thuggery.”  They are fed up with the violence and poverty they encounter on a daily basis in their hometowns.  They see the United States as a safe haven; a place founded on equality and access to the American Dream.  According to CNN, one 17 year old girl who fled from Honduras says, "My grandmother is the one who told me to leave. She said: 'If you don't join, the gang will shoot you. If you do, the rival gang will shoot you, or the cops. But if you leave, no one will shoot you.'"
 I only wish that grandmother knew that the United States averages approximately 32,000 gun deaths per year. According to the Center for Disease Control, approximately 80% of gun deaths are gang related. The annual rate of gun deaths for every 100 thousand people hovers at approximately between 10-11 percent per year according to statistics kept by GunPolicy.org. There are 88 guns for every 100 people in the United States according to ABC News.  So while parents may want their kids to escape gangs and violence, these children are not exactly traveling to the most peaceful destination on earth.
According to the Washington Post, the United States has way more gun deaths that any other developed country in the world. Admittedly, Mexico and other countries in the midst of raging drug gang wars have higher gun-related deaths, but if the dream is to move to a nice, quiet, and safe place, the United States may not be the place to go to avoid being caught in a cross fire.
       These minors run into many problems throughout this harrowing journey.  Many encounter human traffickers, who kidnap and take advantage of the minors who are lost during the trip.  Human traffickers often abandon the minors, or they are caught.  Those that are caught are detained and then deported back to their country of citizenship where they await someone to come and claim them.  Many are kidnapped and held for ransom in Mexico by gangs, before being returned to their families, if ever.
       Others do arrive in the United States, but die in the Texas desert before ever experiencing what they set out to accomplish here in the United States.  The Corpus Christi Caller Times reports that 52 graves were discovered in June 2014, located in the Sacred Heart Burial Park in Falfurrias, Texas.  Last year 110 bodies were discovered, and researches expect to find more as time goes on.  According to the newspaper, it is likely that the deceased traveled in that direction in order to avoid a known Border Patrol checkpoint, which ended up costing them their lives.  
         CNN reports that recently, a young teen named Daniel Penado Savala, told his traumatic story of his trip to the United States.  He swam through a dirty alligator infested river in an attempt to make it to the U.S., which he eventually did.  His human trafficker abandoned him in the desert where he searched for food and water.  He said he continued walking through the desert with his 13-year-old sister in mind who remained in El Salvador.  One of his motivations for making the journey was to be able to send her money.  After two days of wandering in the desert in Texas, Daniel found a house. The occupants fed him before calling border patrol.  He was given a health screening and sent to a shelter.
       The American Psychological Association reports that there are one million undocumented immigrants under the age of 18 currently living in the United States.  Although many of these unaccompanied minors do not make it to the United States, others do, which is creating a whole separate set of concerns and questions.  CNN describes that U.S. Border Patrol agents are in a tough spot trying to take care of kids while at the same time enforcing the law.  Even more worrying, is the fact that the immigration reform is at a stalemate. 
This makes it even more frustrating for those dealing with the problem directly on the border.  They’ve had to open temporary shelters to place the children because existing shelters are completely full.  Different and complex repatriation policies apply to various countries and scenarios.  Undocumented minors found here from Mexico and Canada are repatriated and sent back.  Minors from other countries such as Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador often remain here for much longer in detention centers. 
            Besides the fact that new shelters are being opened, due to overcrowding, children and teens being housed there have begun making claims of neglect.  CNN states that the American Civil Liberties Union along with four other immigrations rights groups, filed a complaint listing accusations varying from extremely cold conditions to being held by Border Patrol far in excess than the statutory limits mandate. 
            The unaccompanied minors who take the risk of being smuggled into the United States yearn to accomplish the American Dream.  Upon their arrival, many realize that the American Dream is not as close in their reach as they had imagined.  According to the Center for Immigration Studies, 31.2% of all Hispanic immigrants with their families, live in poverty already in the United States.  If we include those who live close to the poverty line, the number increases to an astounding 46.4%.  This number accounts for almost half of all Hispanic immigrants.
 So people and more surprisingly, unaccompanied minors, are taking life-threatening risks to make it to the United States, and those who don’t die or get kidnapped along the way are most likely going to live in poverty and dangerous conditions here as well.
Clearly, the immigration problems of this country are a major problem and to repair the system is not going to be easy, especially with the political gridlock and lack of any movement by members of Congress to get anything meaningful accomplished. Now it is fighting for the sake of it in our Congress, with the people of this country being left out in the cold on not only immigration issues, but many other problems that need to be addressed immediately.
I only wish that someone could tell the parents of these children, who suffer and die in the pursuit of the American Dream, that it is an illusion, a mirage in the desert heat that gives hope of life, only to leave you to die alone when you find that the oasis is nothing but empty desert sand.


~Leonardo G. Renaud

Monday, June 9, 2014

Sacred Rule of "No Man Left Behind" Put to the Test






War often brings us many dilemmas.  We are often faced with the question of is the cause just and are the sacrifices worth it? The United States has been involved in a seemingly unending “war” on terrorism in Iraq, Afghanistan, and neighboring countries for a number of years.  Other than telling us that we are safer from terrorism because of ongoing military action, there appears to be no clear victories or end in sight. The only thing these ongoing battles seem to guarantee is nonstop controversy.
Most recently, the head of the Veterans Administration resigned after reports of widespread ineptitude, waste, and fraud. The congressional hearings and investigations are going full steam ahead in the hope that “heads will roll,” although it seems that the often outraged and upset congressmen responsible for the ultimate decisions never really suffer any consequences or get called to task. Their heads always seem to stay intact.  
If Congress was a board of directors and the United States was a company it runs, the members would all have been fired a long time ago—and rightfully sued by the shareholders (the American people) for gross negligence and breach of their fiduciary duty. Lucky for them, like a fungus, once they become entrenched in Washington, they never go away---no matter how awful and out of step with the wants and needs of the public they truly are.
They seem to linger for years growing older each year, making the same empty promises and no doubt getting special treatment and contributions from all of the special interest groups and corporations they “help” out.  Nothing new there in American politics, or anywhere else for that matter, but sometimes even the bizarre can get downright surreal.
We now have the curious case of Bowe Bergdahl.  Is he a hero? Or, should he be arrested and imprisoned for treason? It isn’t often that you have those same questions arise from a single event, but Bergdahl’s story is still unfolding and we are just going to have to wait for either: A. the hero’s parade; or, B. the military indictment for treason.
On May 31st, 2014, the news was abuzz with stories that, an American Army Sergeant whom was stationed in Afghanistan, Bergdahl was released from the Taliban after five years of captivity.  The United States Government surprisingly negotiated with the Taliban and met their demands, releasing five detainees from Guantanamo Bay according to CNN.   
           Bergdahl has always been sort of an odd guy, even after joining the military according to NBC News.  The Huffington Post explains how Bergdahl was raised in Idaho, and comes from a conservative Christian family.  He was home-schooled, studied ballet, and went on to spend much of his time studying Buddhism.  During his training and while in Afghanistan, Bergdahl refused to drink alcohol and socialize with his colleagues.  He was known for hanging out at Barnes and Noble and ordering Rosetta Stone while in Afghanistan, apparently learning three new languages. 
Bergdahl’s release has unleashed an enormous amount of controversy.  His hometown in Idaho is ecstatic calling him a hero and planning a parade for him when he arrives home from Germany. But, former soldiers that served alongside him are furious at what happened, calling for an investigation.  According to their accounts from CNN, Bergdahl apparently deserted his station on the night that he went missing leaving all of his gear behind.  He was allegedly fed up with the Army and the ongoing fight in Afghanistan.
ABC News reports that Bergdahl allegedly left a note on his bunk discussing his disappointment with the United States’ military efforts in Afghanistan and often shared his thoughts on how the issues could be better solved.  Actions such as his normally call for a military investigation and prosecution for desertion, which falls under treason according to military code.  There are also reports that Bergdahl was fed up with the war and simply wandered off, but these accounts have yet to be verified.
According to NBC News, the Army is taking the position that Bergdahl is in no condition to be interrogated or charged for that matter at this time.  They have stated that if there needs to be an investigation, an investigation will take place, but their main focus as of right now is to ensure that Bergdahl receives all of the medical treatment he needs.  They also state that if Bergdahl deserves any punishment at all for his actions, he has already served his sentence by being held captive for five years by the Taliban.
CNN reports that six fellow soldiers of died searching for Bergdahl weeks and even months after he vanished.  The six men that died in search of Bergdahl were Staff Sergeant Clayton Patrick Bowen, 2nd Lt. Darryn Deen Andrews, Staff Sergeant Kurt Robert Curtiss, Pfc. Matthew Michael Martinek, Staff Sergeant Michael Chance Murphrey, and Pfc. Morris Lewis Walker. Fellow members from Bergdahl’s platoon claim that the Army should prosecute him for the desertion of his troop and for causing the deaths of those who searched for him.  Those angry at Bergdahl argue that the deaths of these men were senseless and could have been avoided if he had not deserted his station that night.
 Others say that handing over five Guantanamo Bay mid-to-high level detainees to the Taliban is too high of a price to pay for one soldier, especially considering the circumstances under which Bergdahl allegedly was captured by the Taliban. 
According to NBC News, President Obama is also now under scrutiny for his decision to swap five detainees from Guantanamo Bay in order to recover a U.S. soldier.  www.economist.com explains how Obama violated a law mandating him to give Congress a 30-day warning before releasing any detainees from Guantanamo Bay, something that The President failed to do.  In his defense, he cites the “sacred rule”; that no American soldier should be left behind regardless of how he/she fell into captivity.  
Apparently, there are those who believe if a soldier is left behind due to questionable circumstances, then perhaps he should be left behind period. Again, the moral dilemma rears its ugly head.  Even assuming that Bergdahl had some sort of psychological break down to the extent that he abandoned the war effort (who in their right mind would simply walk away from an Army base and think everything was going to turn out fine), is it the “right” call to leave him in the hands of the Taliban after he was imprisoned by them for five years?
  President Obama states that he was not able to give the mandatory thirty day warning to Congress due to the necessary secretively of the affair demanded by the Taliban.  He claims that his actions were in the best interest of keeping Bergdahl alive. Naysayers say that this is another example of Obama ruling by decree and making unilateral executive decisions that may be in violation of the law and not in accordance with the policy and procedures concerning the exchange of prisoners.
According to Polifact.com, John McCain reportedly states that the five detainees are “the hardest of the hardcore.  These are the highest high-risk people.”  This source also claims to have reviewed documentation concerning the now freed detainees, which apparently supports McCain’s statement.  They were labeled as high-risk and recommended for continued incarceration. 
The five detainees released are Mullah Mohammed Fazl, (possibly the most dangerous), Mullah Norullah Noori, Mullah Khairullah Khairkhwa, Abdul Haq Wasiq, and Mohammed Nabi Omari.  This documentation reveals that some of the men, if not all, were in close connection with Osama Bin Laden, were high ranking members of the Taliban, and were involved in various massacres responsible for the deaths of many.  Surprisingly, two of the detainees were apprehended while claiming to provide information to the United States that would be helpful.  The United States decided to apprehend these men due to its skepticism of their claims. 
After Obama’s secretive decision to make the swap, a helicopter flew in and met Bergdahl who was being held by Taliban members.  A few men emerged from the helicopter and carried him away.  According to Business Insider, it has been very crucial and necessary to keep all information surrounding the negotiations private.  The Taliban threatened to harm Bergdahl during the negotiations if any information was released.  Obama and all others involved in the trade off remain reluctant to speak about any specifics as to how the negotiations took place and their only comment is that they had to negotiate in order to save the soldier’s life. 
ABC News states that Bergdahl is currently located in Germany receiving medical treatment for his mental and physical state. It is too early to begin asking questions and even his own family has been cautioned to hold back communication with the rescued soldier. 
Obama has stuck to his position saying that no American soldier should be left behind regardless of the actions that got him there.  NBC News also reports that John Boener, the House Speaker, has demanded congressional hearings surrounding the topic.  Wow, didn’t see that one coming. I’m sure someone’s head is going to roll down the road, but it is never going to be the President or any member of Congress.  Bet on it.

-Leonardo G. Renaud





Thursday, May 1, 2014

Dumb and Dumber: The Immigrant Country that Loves Deportation

            


I am going to be right up front about this, which usually doesn’t come natural for a lawyer. I hate Justin Bieber. Maybe hate is too strong a word, let me try and be more diplomatic. I recognize that he has musical talent of some form, but I do not like the way he looks, sings, acts, dances, talks, performs or any of his songs at all.
 To me, he is everything that is wrong about music. A pre-packaged tough boy Canadian “urbanized” look and sound that appeals to suburban teenage girls. Five years from now, if he falls in line with the usual path of those of his type,  he will be a has been appearing on Dancing with the Stars or some other pathetic reality show about the often told story of going from rags to riches, and back to rags.  
His mean boy stares and saggy thousand dollar pants basically make me want to puke. And, if one of the paparazzi, who he despises, even though being a musical superstar naturally depends on your fans seeing constant images of you everywhere, were to give him a nice ass whipping which he is long overdue for, I would welcome the sight of it. What a great laugh that would be. He has a huge ego and unrealistic sense of his “tough” self in a 115 pound body surrounded by 315 pound bodyguards and vampire groupies and “friends” who hang out probably to get free drugs and a chance to party with a celebrity. It is sad in a way that none of his “friends” has the guts or concern to give him any advice or ever tell him that he is acting stupid.
I just can’t stand these whiny stars who have everything at their disposal and could feed hundreds of families for generations bitch and moan how hard their life is and how they can’t get any privacy. Hello? If you want privacy go be a file clerk or be a janitor on the midnight shift. Nobody will be “harassing” you then and trying to take your photograph if you are camera shy and just want people to leave you alone.
         That being said, I thought I would be candid and honest about how my personal opinions definitely impact my thought process up front in writing this article. In his defense, albeit I make this concession with a reluctant since of fairness, he is a very young kid (and I don’t sense the sharpest pencil in the box) who has been thrust into a world of money, fame, and adoration that would, to be perfectly honest, probably have a negative affect on just about anybody who comes from a rags to riches sort of background like him. He did not grow up in a family whose background and life experience prepared him in any way for the surreal life he now finds himself in.
            In short, I do not necessarily want him to go away mad, I just want him to go away. 
Why is a 46 year old expressing opinions about a teenage pop star you ask? There is more to this than just being a music and character critic.  I am not “a hater” for the sake of it because Bieber is rich and famous as the more urban, hip, youth will most likely accuse me of. I have some valid reasons and others appear to think the same way I do.  Read on and let’s meet these people.
            Turns out, Bieber is simply a “menace to society” (Ironic, because that is actually a good movie, with good actors and music.) He has gained a tremendous amount of media attention recently with all of his legal scandals, including his arrest for an alleged DUI in Miami, the accusation that he assaulted a limo driver, his alleged involvement in an egging incident near his Los Angeles home, his reported stay in a brothel while in Brazil, and his bodyguards theft charge for allegedly stealing a paparrazzo’s camera.
            After Bieber’s bodyguard was arrested for the alleged theft of photographer Joseph Binion’s camera in June of last year, Binion sued Bieber in Miami’s civil court claiming that Bieber ordered his bodyguard to steal the camera. 
            Although Bieber’s dream team of lawyers fought to prevent him from being deposed, they lost this battle and Bieber was forced to attend a deposition regarding the matter, where he was questioned for hours until becoming extremely upset at the nerve anyone would dare to question him.  During his deposition, which is an internet must see, he objects to questions asked by opposing counsel (instead of his lawyer), winks and fixes his techno colored shirt for the camera, and gallantly states “Don’t ask me about her again,” repeatedly, while shaking his finger when questioned regarding his ex-girlfriend (a real winner picker) Selena Gomez. 
            When asked by opposing counsel if Usher was instrumental to Bieber’s career, he responds saying, “I was found on YouTube, I think that I was detrimental to my own career.”   See reference to sharpest pencil above.
            Apparently, Bieber’s Los Angeles neighbors were not too happy after his alleged egging of a neighbor’s house. Perhaps understanding that his welcome has worn out, he has recently sold his home to Khloe Kardashian according to Zillow.  According to nydailynews.com, neighbors are extremely pleased that they will have a Kardashian (i.e. family known for porn videos, prostituting themselves out to sell anything, failed marriages and relationships, and the bizarre transformation of Bruce Jenner into someone who looks like an old transvestite with bad plastic surgery) as a neighbor instead of the Bieb (one of Justin’s many cool urban nicknames).  Imagine that, the Kardashian’s are more respectful and desired neighbors than Bieber? On the least desired scale, that puts him slightly below a toenail fungus (like, the Bieb, it just won’t go away).
            The public has been so outraged that over 270,000 so called “non-Beliebers” (referring to those who don’t “beliebe” in Justin) signed a petition to have Bieber deported back to Canada.  Although the government is not forced to reply directly to the matter at hand, once a petition reaches 100,000 signatures, it is the government’s responsibility to articulate some form of response.  This petition was submitted to the White House, who initially declined to comment, but then went on to comment anyway. 
            In a rambling statement, The White House commented on immigration in general stating “we need a smart effective immigration system…”  They also reference Bieber’s earnings from concerts and albums in their explanation of how much immigration reform will grow our economy and reduce our deficit.  What a solid, well thought out, direct answer. As my text savvy friends often communicate to me, WTF?
            While it looks like Bieber won’t be leaving the United States anytime soon due to a green card revocation, deportation rates have significantly increased in the time that Barack Obama has been President.  Although many immigrants were especially hopeful for less deportations once Obama was re-elected (due to his promises to give certain youth a temporary solution to gain legal status), there have been more deportations under Obama’s reign than any other U.S. President.  Does this surprise you; it certainly caught me off guard?  I, like a whole bunch of other people, thought we were moving toward a more logical and humanistic approach to immigration in this country.  Well, as a great band once said, “don’t believe the hype.”
            So far, Obama has deported roughly 2 Million people, which is more than any other U.S. President thus far according to an article by www.thenation.com. 
       CNN states that a whopping 71% of Hispanics voted for Barak Obama in 2012 (remember the frenzied “Si Se Puede” chants at the political rallies all across the United States, and especially in those states with high Hispanic populations, used to win the support of Hispanics for Democratic elections).  44% of Latinos voted Republican in 2004 for George W. Bush and 31% voted for Mitt Romney in 2008. 
            Sadly, but not surpisingly,  as things have turned out, Obama gained many votes with his promises to improve immigration proceedings within the first year of being elected, something that was never done.  According to The Huffington Post, Obama has not presented a single immigration bill to Congress since being re-elected.  Apparently “Si se puede” should be changed to “No puedo por que no me conviene en este momento.”
            Many immigrants come to the United States in search of equal opportunities and a better life, but the sad part is that a staggering number, who attempt to arrive, never make it.  According to an article written by Jacob Silverman titled How Stuff Works, around 12 million people die annually pursuing their hopes of the American Dream.
            Other factors have been researched to determine if there is anything else that could be causing the escalation of deportations, including possibilities of increased amounts of undocumented immigrants, and it seems that there are no definitive explanations, according to www.polifact.com
          Undocumented parents are often deported, leaving children and other family members stranded and left behind.  According to a story written by Cindy Y. Rodriguez and Adriana Hauser for CNN, the Soza families’ life has been changed forever.  Marisela and Ronald were immigrants from Nicaragua and had two children who were living here in the United States
The childrens’ mother Marisela was deported back to Nicaragua and the father was allowed to stay to watch over the kids, but only to be deported as well five years later leaving the children parentless, homeless, and completely at the mercy of those who stepped up to care for them. The children are legal US residents. Situations such as these show the unjust, arbitrary and nonsensical system we have when it comes to immigration and deportation. Does it really make sense to kick someone out of this country who has been here for years, sometimes even decades, leaving children behind who now are left to fend for themselves? Is there any quantifiable and statistical correlation that these types of deportations, such as with Marisela and Ronald, lead to economic or social betterment of a country whose very foundation was the genesis of persons looking for a better life someplace else? I have yet to see any proof in terms of numbers and studies, other than the same old unsubstantiated arguments that immigrants take jobs and cost money. Didn’t Hitler rely on this same exact argument at one point to blame the economic problems of Germany on those who were powerless to defend themselves?  In fact, if one reads some history, almost every time economic times are difficult, the first people to get blamed are the poor and immigrants who make easy targets to spew hatred and racism upon.
            Many claim that those deported are violent offenders convicted of horrendous crimes. Again, there is no proof of this.  Families are broken apart due to deportations and it is reported that in 2012, according to an article written by wwww.thenation.com, less than one percent of those deported are done so for crimes such as murder.  So much for the theory that we are ridding our country of undesirables based on criminal statistics.
             Although many individuals feel outraged and upset claiming that immigrants take jobs away, this is simply untrue.  Many immigrants are forced to work picking strawberries, oranges, or doing grueling and tiring construction jobs below minimum wage and without any insurance if they get hurt doing these often dangerous, and body withering manual labor jobs---things that the average “American” would never do. How many times have you see Waspy-looking  people picking strawberries, oranges, or cotton? 
 It is a not so well hidden and dirty secret that many large companies rely on the cheap labor of immigrants to run smoothly. Do you think these businesses want to bow down to unions and get stuck “complying” with federal labor and wage laws when they have a ready, willing, and able labor pool that is literally dying to try and work in the U.S. ? Do you think these companies really care about Americans and their jobs, as they hire more and more workers from the Philippines and India and other places to outsource for cheap labor?  It has been said that if one were to do a psychological profile of a company, what they would find is the values and lack of any empathy, or care for the pain of others---makes them very similar in personality to sociopaths (whose single focus is the seeking of immediate self-gratification and reward, and in the company’s case, profits above any sense of morality, i.e. Wall Street Crash, Widespread Mortgage Fraud by Banks, etc.). 
Even though they may not pay income taxes when working their low paying and often dangerous jobs (which their employers particularly enjoy because they pay no employment taxes or insurance), they do pay sales tax, something that they will likely see little to no benefit from due to their undocumented status.  It is interesting that one hardly ever sees these numbers quantified or statistics about all of the sales taxes an immigrant pays versus how much they will never see in their lifetime when they are deported. Nor does anyone talk much about how sales tax is a regressive tax, meaning that if an immigrant pays 7 or 8 percent in sales tax for the essentials such as food, clothing and shelter; this is a much higher portion of their income than another person who earns ten times what they do---thus, actually contributing much less of an average per purchase for items that are necessary simply to live.
            What does all of the above basically amount to? Well, one, I still would love to see Justin Bieber deported and/or punched by a paparazzo. Second, if we can’t deport him, why are we so hell bent on kicking out people who have been here for years, have children who are born here, and otherwise contribute to society in a positive way by trying to make a better life for their family? Third, I think that people should not blindly follow one political party or the other based on the same rhetoric we hear every time there is an election. Bottom line, politicians will do and say anything to get elected.  They raise taxes when they say they aren’t, they continue to fight unwinnable wars when they say they aren’t, and they do whatever is going to get them elected----regardless of any “promises” they ever made in the past.
In a sense, by the very nature of being politicians, they have to be liars because in order to have a job they have to trick as many people as possible into voting for them so that they can continue to have a career. There is a similar organism that depends on and uses others, and causes harm, to survive and grow, it is called a virus. 

~Leonardo G. Renaud