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I just heard on the local news that some of the people rounded up yesterday were taken to detention centers as far away as Texas. This case is going to be a test of many of the immigration issues we saw touted by the GOP last fall. Detention centers, anchor babies, illegals working at jobs "Americans won't do", etc.
BTW, many Americans do these jobs in this area. This is a community that used to be filled with mills and mill workers. Granted, this company was a leather works, but there are other leather works here as well, just not as large as this organization was.
New Bedford and Fall River were always large mill towns. Most of the mills have disappeared and outlet shops now fill those spaces instead. Some mills have also been taken over by the real estate crowd and are being converted into high priced condos or senior assisted care facilities.
But I digress.
The Social Security Administration had notified them twice that some of the numbers they had submitted were either assigned to dead people or minors, yet they kept getting government contracts in increasingly larger amounts.
Can anyone else ever remember a business that was busted with this number of illegals before? They are testing the detention system as well as the buildings built by Halliburton with this. I predict there will be an increase in these types of raids to further test the system. Not unlike what happened to LaLa's cousin this fall, these were mostly women, many single mothers (bringing up the anchor baby issues) who were rounded up yesterday and bused off to who knows where.
The relatives of those rounded up yesterday (I assume they are legal relatives) are waiting on the street in front of the factory for buses to bring back some of their relations. What about those that have no one waiting for them? Could they be "disappeared" completely? Pregnant women and single mothers were released quickly, yet some children were still not claimed today. One has to assume that Dad doesn't want to come forward and get nabbed himself too. What happens to these kids then?
Local radio call in show today was brutal. I didn't listen long, but the part that I heard had callers calling for the children (whether born here or not) to be deported with their parents, that schools should refuse to service them in the system (kick them out of school if their parents are illegals), and "cleanse" the area.
Frankly, it scared the hell out of me how little compassion they had for these people even on a human level. What have we become when we are fighting over a job that pays $7.50 and hour and docks you $20 if you take longer than 2 minutes in a bathroom that has no toilet paper?
This once productive area is almost dead. Fishing is drying up as an industry as the fish disappear, the mills are becoming places for people to live ... but who will be left to live there as $7.50 an hour is not enough to pay the rents for these spaces. Manufacturing has left skeletons (their buildings) behind as well as the families that used to work in these spaces.
It's a double edged sword. This factory also did leather work for some high end companies like Coach. If they close the factory or lose all the other contracts they have with these over-priced companies, we will see not only the illegals lose their jobs, but those that were not illegal as well. With little left in the industry to absorb these lost employees, what is going to happen to them?
I don't have an answer to the immigration question. I do see both sides of the coin in this case though. The owners exploited these workers, kept them in sweat shop conditions, both the illegal workers as well as the legal ones. They were all in it together, just trying to support their families. And yes, legal residents and citizens were exploited in that very same shop as well, yet, the GOP wants to kill the unions so we all can experience the same treatment where ever we work.
Sorry to ramble on and even more sorry not to have a solution to propose. I hope someone does soon, but I also hope that they keep in mind that, at least in this case, they were all in it together.
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