Arizona: For Whites Only?

May 17th, 2010 - By TheEditor

Dr. Dumi Lewisby R. L’Heureux Lewis

Recently, I penned a piece discussing the need for Black folks to join in with the fight against Arizona’s racist immigration bill SB 1070. My goal was to challenge Black folks, to think beyond the immediate immigration bill to the larger injustices that are taking root in Arizona. In the past few weeks, Arizona has continued to make their intentions clear. Whether you agree with SB 1070 or not, the state of Arizona has begun a march towards making the state free, open and inhabitable to Whites and closed to people of color, particularly Latinos.

Arizona is now pushing a package of policies that serve to malign, discriminate against, and reduce the freedoms of non-Whites, citizens and non-citizens alike. The signing of SB 1070 into law has increased the legal discretion and support for thinly veiled racial profiling. This week, the governor signed into law a bill that eliminated Ethnic Studies at the primary and secondary grade levels. Arizona’s Department of Education has been lobbying for the removal of teachers with strong accents or whose grammatical structure is found to be unacceptable. It would be naïve to suggest that these policies are simply about the safety, quality, and fairness as they’ve been pitched; instead they represent a concerted attempt to cleanse Arizona of ethnic influence.

The recent law banning ethnic studies was targeted at a program in Tucson. The legislation prohibits courses that “advocate ethnic solidarity instead of the treatment of pupils as individuals.” The course at which the bill was targeted concentrated on the experiences of Chicanos and history from the perspective of Mexican and indigenous people who had land stolen and experienced heinous oppression as “America expanded.”

Unfortunately, grounded and authentic discussion of national expansion and race is illegal in the Arizona’s legislature’s view. If we are interested in teaching youth history from the ground up and not just from the perspective of “the victors” we need ethnic studies. It’s hard to instill the significance of the Civil Rights Movement, the Chicano Civil Rights Movement or the Women’s Suffrage Movement without the voices of these groups. By erasing their voices and their group interests, we are erasing their true contribution to the mosaic that is the present. The more you erase the past, the more you can meld the present.

Eliminating Ethnic Studies is not the only move that Arizona’s legislature is making; they are making headway in removing teachers with accents or whom they define as lacking sufficient English proficiency. In the 1990s, Arizona hired a cadre of teachers who would work in bilingual education in their public schools. However, in 2000 Arizona moved to an English-only model of education and is now in the process of trying to purge these teachers. Through these statutes, Arizona is relying on highly subjective and pejorative classifications, which makes them all the more dangerous.

In a just society, the laws protect not only the interests of a few, but the whole. Each bill, law and policy that is being floated now is sloppily constructed and ushers in hazardous conditions for adults and children of color. This is no longer (if it ever was) about immigration, crime, or labor. Arizona is continuing to Brown and in 2005, the Census projected it will be one of the next states to be majority-minority, meaning there will be more non-Whites than Whites.

The current Arizona legislature is wasting no time in installing discriminatory laws and policies towards communities of color, which ultimately serve to secure the place and rights of Whites. The sad reality is that too many of us see these laws passing and think “good” without realizing the slippery slope to which they’re attached. Targeting ethnic communities is not new, as the African-American community knows, but Arizona is continuing and expanding this tragic trend. We cannot afford to sit idly as human rights are violated and cultures are erased.

R. L’Heureux Lewis is an Assistant Professor of Sociology and Black Studies at the City College of New York – CUNY. His research concentrates on issues of educational inequality, the role of race in contemporary society, and mental health well-being.

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  • adivanai

    Arizona is straight up for whites ONLY!!!! Trust me I live in AZ and experience racism everyday….

  • Teck

    I just could not continue to read your story without making a comment Mr. Lewis….

    1. You do not live in Arizona and see what we see everyday.
    Let me tell you a story. After the law was placed they had the Pinal County sheriff on the radio about the Law and he was very happy this passed. He was afraid for his officers that they normally have problems with illegal's causing major problems when they know for a fact they are not here legally they would call ICE and were told that they will not do anything and have to let them go…And later they commit a crime. It makes them sick…And he says the reason Pinal county is the Key is it is the major path for all illegals coming from Mexico …And he says that his county is a war with Mexico and the FED's are doing nothing.
    So what happens that afternoon….
    A Pinal county officer pulls over a truck and a illegal pulls a AK47 out and shoots the officer…
    Just want the sheriff was SAYING…
    This is not a racial issue this is a WAR by illegal's
    I live in the area and see this everyday….come live here for a while and see how bad the problem is before you judge us.
    And have you read the Law ….Oh it is the same law as the FED law.

  • PHX LUV

    I TO LIVE IN ARIZONA SINCE ,1983.THE YEAR I WAS BORN .PEOPLE HAVE IT ALL WRONG THE BILL WAS NOT SET OUT TO BE RACIST, AND BECAUSE THATS WHAT MY 10-9YR OLD THINKS I CAN NO LONGER (NOT) SPEAK ON IT.U KNW THEY DO HAVE CHILDERN BY THE #'s,AND GUESS WHAT THAT SAME HEALTH CARE BILL AND COVERAGE WE, AND WHEN I SAY WE I MEAN US AMERICANS ARE FIGHTING FOR IS NOT A PROBLEM FOR THEM.THROUGHT THE LOCAL GOVERMENT PROGRAMS THEY GET FOOD STAMPS(SNAPS),HEALTH CARE,CASH ASST,DENTAL CARE AND LETS NOT FORGET THAT BIG AMERICAN DREAM FREE EDUCATION!THEPAST GOVENER IS THIER WITH THE PRESIDENT AND NOWS ABOUT THIS PROBLEM FIRST HAND.JANE BREWER JUS ACTED ON IT.UNTIL THOSE OF YOU WHO ARE NOT FRM HERE DNT HAVE TO SIGN AFFIDAVITS SAYIN I DIDNT USES MY SSCorBIRTH CERTIF AND GETTING BAD CREDIT BCUZ SOME1 STOLE YOUR!!IDENTIY.AND HOW DO WE KNW HOW MUCH MONEY THEY GENARATE IF THEY ARE DNT HAVE THE PROPER PAPERWRK TO BE HERE, LIKE WHO'S DOING THIER TAXES JUS WONDERING CUZ I SHOW PAY MINE. OH YA AND THIER FREE EVERYTHING.

  • Leo C

    Great article. What people don't get, however, is that Hispanics are not simply upset that the law reiterates that undocumented workers are not wanted. The real issue is that this law will allow the police to stop and ask people who they "suspect" are illegal, even if no crime has been committed. People always says that if one is supposed to be here, they should not have any problem producing documentation. Under this premise, people should not be bothered by being audited by the IRS. After all, if they filed their taxes, why worry? Can you think of one person who wants to be audited?

  • Yasmeen

    It is always easier to blame other working or poor people for the lack of work or decent wages than the power structure that loves to hire and exploit them.

    "I support citizenship cards personally, but thats probably racist and I am working towards a white America based on your logic."

    And Shane, I hope you will do some research so you know which groups were against the national i.d. cards.

  • Yasmeen

    People must look closely at the suite of laws Arizona has recently passed before defending Arizona's actions as necessary to address their issues with illegal immigration. Is banning ethnic studies (some programs mandated by court order to address segregation in AZ. schools) and teachers with accents necessary to address immigration? And what constitutes a reasonable suspicion that someone might be an immigrant? Most of my friend's families in NM. have been here for 4-500 years minimum, have brown skin, native blood and speak with accents. They are the true native people of this continent – not me. If they are called on to prove their citizenship because of how they look, why shouldn't everyone else? But when a national id card is suggested, the Libertarians and Repubs are up in arms that this violates our freedoms and vote it down?? White people don't think this is a problem because they have not and probably will not experience being pulled over and searched by the border patrol or other police as many U.S. born Native Americans, Chicanos and African Americans have. Brown and black men outnumber white men in prisons 10 to 1, most are not immigrants, which should tell us something about the potential of laws like these. Before you dismiss the concerns, please read some Southwestern U.S. history and the broken treaties of our government to provide education to Mexican and Native Americans in their own languages. There are historical reasons these cultural studies and bi-lingual programs were implemented – even mandated by law. Let's be fair if we want to complain about lack of or selective enforcement of laws.

  • AliciaF.

    I agree with the author. While we have to control the numbers of illegal immigrants in this country, this is not the way to do it. No matter how one looks at it, this is an attempt at subtle discrimination. This law is wrong regardless of it is in reference to illegal aliens or not it is still wrong. If that were the case, everyone should be kicked out of Arizona because everyone is an "illegal alien" other than the Native Americans….

  • Terence Chambers

    The illegals crossing the border is the problem. Of course, many people of color commit other crimes besides illegal entry into a sovereign country. Most cops only bust criminals. AZ is trying to take care of a bad problem. DON'T LIKE IT? Don't live there. Vote with your feet. This author is a bonifide racist, and damages the credibility of all black people.

    Economists and wise Americans know that too many immigrants at a time damages everyones wages and destroys fiscal healing. Why do mexicans not revolt and repair their own country? America may have to invoke many forms of repair if the govco does not quickly help. AZ is just trying to repair its problems.

  • Liz

    Bravo Lasaundra. I totally agree. We can't just sit back and not fight this law. I understand the need for people to be legalized. However, the thing that bothers me about the law is that who's policing the police? It'll end up being their word against the word of a person of color who is here illegally. Who will the majority of folks believe? The policeman who swears this person was doing something wrong.

    We've seen this happen without this type of law being passed so why wear rose-colored glasses and pretend it's not going to occur?

    As a black person, I can say "welcome to our world" to my brown brothers and sisters. Most certainly we've dealt with this tyep of legalized racism before. But where does it end? And it is beyond time for it to end.

    I agree the federal government is inordinately slow about processing people to become legalized citizens. They are years behind. But, how do you tell people who are only wanting to provide a better life for their families to put their dreams on hold? If anything, we need to figure out a way to release the bureaucratic chockhold existing in the immigration department and allow people to move on with their lives.

  • lasaundra

    I am reading these comments and while I am not surprised at how some think I am most surprised at my black brothers and sisters. Our country is one of the few countries who children do not speak another language. To move forward and become successful in life this is something we need. I agree that those hear illegal should have consequences. But remember these same people who are signing the bill are having those care for their house and children for less pay. Whites has always been told they are superior and their lives have been paved with chances and oppurtunites. Minorities wake up this is the way they are getting rid of minorities as a whole. We hate each other because this is what was put in our head. I would hope in the future that we take heed.

  • brad bennett

    Illegal immigration is out of control. They should have done this a long time ago. It's not about race – it's about the law. But hey, people make money of playing the race card and get good ratings… too bad it has many more negative effects.
    Wake up and get over yourselves. GOOD JOB AZ – STAY STRONG.

  • we

    Do you not feel weird when you spread this racial propaganda, and have you read the Mexican immigration laws?

    "Under the Mexican law, illegal immigration is a felony, punishable by up to two years in prison. Immigrants who are deported and attempt to re-enter can be imprisoned for 10 years. Visa violators can be sentenced to six-year terms. Mexicans who help illegal immigrants are considered criminals."

    So, what is your point man? All white people are racist?

    Thanks.

  • Darrick

    The amount of ignorance in our nation seriously makes me want to expatriate sometimes as I question whether or not it is worth fighting for. In 1963, 80% of WHITE PEOPLE in the south believed that blacks had no cause for beef and that race relations were just fine. Sound familiar?

    It is time for the poor WHITE masses in this country to get their heads out of their asses and to stop electing people like the Republicans in the AZ state house, whom I scolded when they first proposed SB1070 and Gov. Brewer. If WHITE PEOPLE had their way then John McCain would be President and would be enacting this new Jim Crow nationwide.

    It is time for WHITE PEOPLE in America to snap out of it before it is too late. Your beginning to piss off the future majority just when you had them right where you wanted them. Wake up and save yourselves for the Mexicans in AZ will have you showing your papers as soon as they take over that piece of crap state. Go ahead and call me racist, but I really hate stupid people who vote against their own best interests the most of all.

  • John Doe

    This article is wholly without merit. There is nothing racist about enforcing what is already a federal law.
    The banning ethnic studies was written because the "ethnic studies" was a curriculum that was teaching the violent over-through of the United States — on tax payer dollars.
    Please read and understand the bills before writing about them.

  • running hawk

    we of all colors need to stop az from becoming a races state the whites that want this bill are scared hitlers dead

  • Please

    Not our fight! We have our own problems: Chicago, poor schools, prison, too many baby mamas and the list goes on……………

    • Perry

      Exactly! And they're not helping us with that just as they did not help with the civil rights movement, but instead came over in droves like leeches to reap the benefits after the hardest work was done and many lives lost.

  • otrora

    The problem with the immigration law in AZ is the use of the word 'suspicious' to check if you are here legally or not. Simply make it MANDATORY for police to check that all are legally in the country, and that will remove the racial problem being created.

    I'm appalled not more people are noticing this simple aspect…

  • hippups

    If 1070 is not racist, all you in favor of it, let AZ change the law so they have to ask everybody, even YOU, for your papers proving you have a right to be here. And if you don't happen to have documentation with you, you go to jail. Appalled yet? Indignant yet? No?

    Okay, let's assume most cops will not abuse this law. But some fraction of them will. So say those cops bust into YOUR home in the middle of the night and demand your papers, and those of your spouse and your kids. You cool with that?

    The problem is the law hurts people, — lawful residents, citizens, and undocumented alike, based on how they look and speak. It doesn't bother you only because you believe it won't happen to you. I hope someday, somehow it will.

    "I got mine. Eff you." Nice philosophy. You don't like brown people, don't live in Arizona. Or Texas. Or California. I'd personally like to require all racists to carry papers just to make life hell for them.

  • Shawn

    Honestly i have had it. Enough is enough, finding ways to make minorities feel unwelcome is becoming the norm for some white people. Civil rights act was passed a while ago but by taking actions like this we go back to the past. Some people do not want to move forward. Minorities are now being punished collectivly. The media by whites have created such a level of fear and paranoia that it is turning a lot of those people ignorant, desensitized, and crearing an impairment of culture and diversity. I am not black but I am a minority of the Muslim faith and I support all blacks in their conquest for equality as I do for other minorities that will accept my hand in support. It's time to come together and organize a big nationwide effort to work together to get our people in office. Vote for our candidates as one together! By joining together we will have larger numbers to help in all of this and more! This is becoming a neverending cycle of segregation, racism, discrimination, out offear, lies, proaganda, paranoia by at least half of the population inside the U.S. It's a big big shame.

  • http://liferequiresmorechocolate.com Tiffany

    I think people are taking this article too seriously. Yes there are some people who are willing to cut AZ loose and never enter it again and then there are those that defend the law and believe it is the only solution to the problem. Both sides are wrong. The government as a whole for decades has been ignoring this problem and we need to find a better solution than this. As for the ban on ethnic studies, I am against the ban. We should be learned about all history that is relevant to American history which includes that of Mexican history, African history, Asian history as well as European history.