Alabama Hispanic Alabama Schoolchildren Face Bullying in the Wake of Anti-Immigrant Law

In a sadly predictable development, Hispanic public school students in Alabama — some of whom are United States citizens — are now facing racially motivated bullying in the wake of the state’s unconstitutional attack on undocumented school children:

It was just another schoolyard basketball game until a group of Hispanic seventh-graders defeated a group of boys from Alabama. . . . “They told them, `You shouldn’t be winning. You should go back to Mexico‘” . . . .

Machine shop manager Hector Conde said his family has seen the problem firsthand. Conde, whose family lives in Autauga County north of Montgomery, was appalled when his 12-year-old daughter, Monica Torres, told him a schoolmate called her a “damn Mexican” during a school bus ride.

“She is a citizen. She doesn’t even speak Spanish,” said Conde, a U.S. citizen originally from Puerto Rico. “The culture being created (by the law) is that this sort of thing is OK.”

A Hispanic woman said her 13-year-old niece was called a “stupid Mexican” and told to “go back to Mexico” by a classmate in Walker County.

For the time being, the provision of the Alabama law requiring public schools to check the students’ immigration status cannot be enforced due to a federal court order. But these bullying incidents are further proof that the law does not need to be upheld by the judiciary in order to succeed in its goal of making Alabama inhospitable to certain kinds of people. When the state government places its official sanction on anti-immigrant bullying, it shouldn’t be surprised when people take matters into their own hands.

Nor is this kind of activity limited to children. After a Birmingham, Alabama restaurant owner complained that some of his legal immigrant workers were quitting their jobs in part because they no longer feel welcome in Alabama, his restaurant faced a boycott campaign and a rush of hate mail attacking him for “suporting [sic] those dam [sic] wetback [sic] that are ruining our country.”

Thousands of immigrant schoolchildren stopped going to school when the anti-immigrant law briefly went into effect, even though the Constitution guarantees their right to an education. Local businesses face harassment because they dared to employ fully legal workers who happen to be Hispanic — and they are struggling to replace the many workers who have fled the state. Crops are rotting in the state’s fields because the states farm workers are being driven out of the state. Alabama’s immigration law isn’t just a cruel attack on the undocumented, it is an indirect assault on the state’s economy and on countless Alabama residents who are in the state legally.

Link to article on ThinkProgress Justice


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Nuns on the Bus

Nuns on the Bus

As some of you might know already, Nuns on the Bus will be making a pass through the south in June. Below are the dates in our states: 6/3 - Orlando, FL, 3pm - Daniel Webster - lobby visit 6/4 - Tallahassee, FL, 10 am - Marco Rubio - lobby visit 6/5 - Birmingham, AL - civil rights rally 6/5 - Atlanta, GA - Chambliss - lobby visit To give you some background: Sister Simone, who runs NETWORK (a Catholic social justice lobby in DC), and other nuns will be taking a bus tour along...

Edward Savela 14 May 2013 Hits:104 Alabama

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Labor Council and Plumbers’ Local in Gadsden, Alabama, Endorse HR 676

On April 15, 2013, the Northeast Alabama Labor Council in Gadsden endorsed HR 676, national single payer health care legislation sponsored by Congressman John Conyers. President Garry "Gabby" Frost brought the resolution before the council in response to an appeal from the All Unions Committee for Single Payer Health Care--HR 676 and from Pippa Abston, MD, Ph D, a board member of Physicians for a National Health Program and a Huntsville, Alabama, pediatrician. "Health care is a necessity not a privilege," said President Frost after the adoption of the resolution for HR...

Kay Tillow 22 Apr 2013 Hits:216 Alabama

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Anniversary, significance of King's "Letter from Birmingham Jail" observed on House floor

Anniversary, significance of King's

The 50th anniversary of Martin Luther King's "Letter from Birmingham Jail" was observed with events throughout the city and extended to Washington D.C. where Rep. Terri Sewell marked today by reading an excerpt of the famous treatise. Sewell, D-Birmingham, used her time on the House of Representatives floor to read a portion of the letter. "The letter became one of the most preeminent documents of the civil rights era," Sewell told her colleagues. "Letter from a Birmingham Jail stands as a reminder of how far we have come in our nation in...

Jseoph D. Bryant | AL.com 21 Apr 2013 Hits:274 Alabama

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Alabama gunman kills bus driver, seizes boy

Alabama gunman kills bus driver, seizes boy

MIDLAND CITY, Ala. (AP) — Police SWAT teams and hostage negotiators were locked in a standoff Wednesday with a gunman authorities say intercepted a school bus, killed the driver, snatched a 6-year-old boy and retreated into a bunker at his home. The gunman, identified by neighbors as Jimmy Lee Dykes, a 65-year-old retired truck driver, was known as “the crazy man” of the neighborhood, a paranoid and menacing figure who once beat a dog to death with a lead pipe, threatened to shoot children...

Phillip Rawls | Associated Press 30 Jan 2013 Hits:342 Alabama

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Alabama Abortion Clinic Struggles; Mississippi’s Forges On

Alabama Abortion Clinic Struggles; Mississippi’s Forges On

When Diane Derzis shut the doors of the New Woman All Women Health Care clinic in Birmingham, Ala., last May, she did not expect the clinic to be shut for good. Derzis, known as the “Abortion Queen” by both her opponents and her supporters in the Deep South, was under investigation by the Alabama Department of Public Health after two of her patients were given an improper dosage of medication. Though Derzis self-reported the incident, which resulted in transporting the two women to a hospital via ambulance but no...

by Lauren Barbato | Ms Blog 22 Sep 2012 Hits:529 Alabama

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Former governor Don Siegelman lobbies for presidential pardon at DNC

Former governor Don Siegelman lobbies for presidential pardon at DNC

The former Alabama governor was perhaps the highest profile victim of Karl Rove's political machine, sentenced to six years for bribery. Now his last hope for freedom is a presidential pardon Don Siegelman, the former governor of Alabama, has a particular reason to be lobbying for Barack Obama's re-election at this week's Democratic national convention. Siegelman is in Charlotte at the pleasure of a federal judge, and is just days away from resuming a six-and-a-half-year prison sentence, following a widely publicised conviction on bribery charges stemming from...

Andrew Gumbel | The Guardian UK 10 Sep 2012 Hits:827 Alabama

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Alabama immigration law protestors picket on Federal Courthouse steps in Tuscaloosa

Alabama immigration law protestors picket on Federal Courthouse steps in Tuscaloosa

Protestors from Tuscaloosa and as far as California gathered in front of the Federal Courthouse Building on University Boulevard to sound off over the Alabama anti-immigration law on Monday afternoon. The demonstrators included several undocumented Hispanic immigrants, who said so via megaphone on the courthouse steps as they called the Alabama law an injustice to immigrants living in the state. The U.S. 11th Circuit Court of Appeals today ordered a lower court to block enforcement of a section of Alabama's immigration law that required ...

Ben Flanagan | Blog AL.com 21 Aug 2012 Hits:548 Alabama

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FEDERAL COURT STRIKES DOWN KEY PROVISIONS OF ALABAMA’S IMMIGRATION LAW

NEWSFLASH: A federal appeals court struck down key sections of Alabama’s immigration law in a ruling released today, including a provision mandating that school officials check the immigration status of newly enrolled students. And the 11th Circuit ruled that Alabama and Georgia cannot punish people for harboring or transporting an undocumented immigrant. Following the Supreme Court’s ruling that allowed a somewhat narrowed version of Arizona’s “Show-Me-Your-Papers” provision to go into effect, the appeals court letAlabama and Georgia to begin enforcing a law allowing state and local police to investigate the...

Amanda Peterson Beadle | Think Progress 20 Aug 2012 Hits:439 Alabama

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Don Siegelman, Persecution not Prosecution

Don Siegelman, Persecution not Prosecution

I guess most people know that I have been working with Governor Siegelman for over seven years. I'm very proud that we have a very close friendship. I was with him when he was being investigated. I was there when he was indicted. I attended every hearing, every day of the trial, and was an eye witness to everything that has happened since. This phase of Don's long battle ended Friday, so I think this is a good time to correct a few things people...

Chip Hill 05 Aug 2012 Hits:813 Alabama

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Don Siegelman, Former Alabama Governor, Going Back To Prison For Bribery

Don Siegelman, Former Alabama Governor, Going Back To Prison For Bribery

Following years of appeals and a vocal campaign by supporters, ex-Alabama Gov. Don Siegelman is heading back to prison after being sentenced Friday to more than six years for bribery and other convictions. Siegelman and former HealthSouth chief Richard Scrushy were convicted in 2006. They arranged $500,000 in contributions to Siegelman's campaign for a state lottery to fund education programs in exchange for the governor appointing Scrushy to an important hospital regulatory board. Before his sentencing that his lawyer called "cruel and unusual," the...

Bob Johnson | Huffington Post 04 Aug 2012 Hits:641 Alabama

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Forced to Work on a Broken Ankle? Workers Defy Abusive Supervisors for Big Union Win

Forced to Work on a Broken Ankle? Workers Defy Abusive Supervisors for Big Union Win

In December of 2004, while working at a massive poultry plant in Alabama, Delores Smith slipped on the greasy floor and collapsed into a heap. In considerable pain, she limped over to the nurse’s office. The company nurse, however, didn’t even bother to look at the injury, instead sending Smith home with ibuprofen. When she got to her car, Smith looked down and noticed that pieces of bone were poking out through her sock. She had broken her ankle in three places. That episode stirred Smith...

Gabriel Thompson | AlterNet 02 Aug 2012 Hits:593 Alabama

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Alabama Defeats Communism with Anti-Sustainability Law

Alabama Defeats Communism with Anti-Sustainability Law

Thanks to the John Birch Society, "environmentalism" is no longer an issue in Alabama -- by state law. Who knew fixing it all would be that easy? With chronic budget shortfalls, dangerously overcrowded prisons and the nation’s biggest municipal bankruptcy filing, we here in Alabama have a lot on our minds. But at least we can cross one worry off the list: Our property cannot be confiscated by the United Nations or any of its myriad stealth agents in the name of “sustainability,” “smart growth” or “environmentalism.” For that, we...

Leah Nelson | SPLC Hate Watch 21 Jun 2012 Hits:753 Alabama

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Immigrants Languishing Away in Alabama Detention Center at Tax-Payers' Expense

Immigrants Languishing Away in Alabama Detention Center at Tax-Payers' Expense

Immigration violations are civil, not criminal infractions. But for many non-criminal immigrant detainees living alongside criminal inmates at the Etowah County Detention Center in Alabama, that distinction carries little meaning. Far removed from families and legal orientation programs, many of the 350 immigrant detainees housed at the Etowah Detention Center have received deportation orders, but for various reasons cannot be deported. Many are serving the maximum allowable time in detention, and are doing so under poor living conditions at a great ...

Travis Wentworth | Sourced from Immigration Impact 17 Apr 2012 Hits:576 Alabama

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Alabama Anti-Choice Group Wants "Meth Mom" Battle To Backdoor in Personhood

When is an anti-choice group actually for abortion?  When it comes to defending a law that could help them in their endless quest to give full legal rights to fertilized eggs. The Liberty Counsel is taking up the "chemical endangerment of children" law, usually meant for prosecuting those who cook meth in areas where children live. But the anti-choice legal group is hoping that an extension of the law could be applied to pregnant women who use the drug, essentially classifying the embryo...

Robin Marty | Sourced from RH Reality Check 02 Apr 2012 Hits:505 Alabama

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"Right to Professional Medical Judgment Act," Crafted by Doctor, Introduced in Alabama

AL Senator Linda Coleman A little over a week ago, Alabama pediatrician Pippa Abston had enough. In response to Alabama's forced vaginal ultrasound bill, Abston posted a video expressing her outrage, as a doctor and woman, over the power grab by GOP extremists to act as elected physicians. I wrote a piece on her video at RH Reality Check shortly after the video posted.  During an initial phone conversation with Abston she mentioned in passing that she was working on a piece of legislation that could potentially be taken...

Andy Kopsa | RH Reality Check 20 Mar 2012 Hits:1011 Alabama

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How the "Pro-Life" Movement Puts Women Behind Bars

How the

Numerous organizations and leaders who identify themselves as pro-life have assured the public that their efforts to re-criminalize abortion and establish the unborn as separate legal persons will not result in the prosecution and imprisonment of women. Yet, in Alabama alone, the claim that eggs, embryos and fetuses have separate legal rights has provided the basis for arresting approximately 60 women. These women are being prosecuted under Alabama’s 2006 law designed to provide special penalties for people who bring children into methamphetamine ...

Lynn Paltrow | AlterNet 18 Mar 2012 Hits:862 Alabama

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Inmate Labor Used In Alabama Primary Election

Inmate Labor Used In Alabama Primary Election

TV images are searing reminder of disenfranchisement of African American felons. CNN’s Dana Bash stirred Twitter election watchers Tuesday when she tweeted, “something u (sic) don’t see every day. Inmates will help bring ballots here in (Jefferson) county Alabama…” Early evening video, pouring into the network’s Alabama and Mississippi presidential primary broadcast, showed two local jail inmates, one black and one white, seated on folding chairs and staring miserably into space. The two waited to assist county election officials with carrying bags of paper ballots and electronic memory...

Aaron Morrison | Loop21 17 Mar 2012 Hits:791 Alabama

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Federal Court Blocks Two Key Pieces of Alabama’s Immigration Law

Federal Court Blocks Two Key Pieces of Alabama’s Immigration Law

Previously, the Eleventh Circuit court of appeals blocked several parts of Alabama’s immigration law, including a provision requiring teachers or principals to determine the immigration status of their students. Today, a Federal appeals court blocked two more sections of the law, known as H.B. 56: A federal appeals court on Thursday temporarily blocked two sections of Alabama’s tough new law targeting illegal immigration pending the outcome of legal challenges. The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals issued an order blocking a section that says courts can’t enforce contracts involving...

Annie-Rose Strasser | ThinkProgress 12 Mar 2012 Hits:595 Alabama

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Alabama: Voting Rights, Workers’ Rights Top Today’s Selma to Montgomery March

Alabama: Voting Rights, Workers’ Rights Top Today’s Selma to Montgomery March

More than 1,000 participants in the five-day Selma to Montgomery, Ala., march are carrying on their journey today, focusing on the renewed threat to workers’ rights and voting rights around the nation. The crowd began its march at the Viola Liuzzo memorial, some 24 miles outside Selma. Liuzzo was a Unitarian Universalist civil rights activist from Michigan, who was murdered by Ku Klux Klan members after the 1965 Selma to Montgomery marches. The march is more than a re-enactment of the historic Selma to Montgomery march carried out 47...

Tula Connell | AFL-CIO Blog 07 Mar 2012 Hits:684 Alabama

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Alabama Agriculture Department Advances Plan to Replace Immigrant Workers With Prisoners

Alabama Agriculture Department Advances Plan to Replace Immigrant Workers With Prisoners

ThinkProgress has been reporting on the catastrophic economic consequences of Alabama’s harshest-in-the-nation immigration law. Undocumented workers are the backbone of Alabama’s agriculture industry, and their exodus has already created a labor shortage in the state. Farmers say crops are rotting in the field and they are in danger of losing their farms by next season. GOP politicians have crowed that driving immigrants out of the state will reduce unemployment by letting native citizens fill those jobs. But they’ve quickly discovered that Americans are simply unwilling to do the back-breaking...

Marie Diamond, ThinkProgress | Report 05 Feb 2012 Hits:986 Alabama

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The scandal of the Alabama Poor Cut off from Water

The scandal of the Alabama Poor Cut off from Water

Banks stand to lose millions of dollars in debt repayments if the biggest municipal bankruptcy in American history is allowed to proceed. But the real victims of the financial collapse in the US state of Alabama's most populous county are its poorest residents - forced to bathe in bottled water and use portable toilets after being cut off from the mains supply. And there is widespread anger in Jefferson County that swingeing sewerage rate hikes could have been avoided but for the greed, corruption and...

Brian Wheeler | BBC News Alabama 18 Dec 2011 Hits:7144 Alabama

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