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Alabama recently enacted “Arizona-style” immigration legislation designed to be the harshest in the nation, giving police the authority to stop and detain any person who they suspect of being in the state illegally.  Undocumented immigrants are barred from receiving any public benefits, including the most basic necessities.  Public schools will also be allowed to ascertain immigration status before admitting pupils. The bill also places a penalty on all lawful residents of the state who have any helpful contact with undocumented residents:

“Alabama’s new law will require schools, businesses, and landlords to verify the immigration status of their students, employees and tenants, respectively,” Caroline May writes. “Police will be allowed to detain people on suspicion of being in the country illegally and it will be unlawful to give a ride to an undocumented immigrant.”

The bill is scheduled to take effect on September 1st, and is already drawing fire from the ACLU and Southern Poverty Law Center, who have vowed to challenge the law in court, saying that the “unconstitutional” law will “perpetuate bigotry” and “set back years of civil rights progress in the state and have devastating economic consequences.”  The Roman Catholic, Lutheran and Methodist churches, among others, have all voiced opposition to the new law.

And of course, as Paragould, AR’s Miguel Perez notes, this legislation is not far from the bigotry at its core, and brings the proverbial “Bigotry title” back to the Deep South, again:

Just when we thought no other state could beat Arizona as the champion of hatred, xenophobia and immigrant-bashing legislation, the Deep South reclaimed its title as the all-time champion of discrimination.  Imagine how the bigots in Georgia and Alabama must have felt when they saw bigots in Arizona grabbing all the headlines. They had to do something to prove they still can discriminate better than anyone…
With the re-emergence of institutionalized bigotry in the Deep South, a new civil rights movement also is beginning to emerge. And as African-Americans prevailed in the 1960s, today’s immigrants also will overcome this new wave of racism in America.

And may they overcome.  For all of our sakes.  Que no existan las diferencias entre nosotros…Americanos.

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Poor social conservatives.

I can’t imagine what it must be like to live one’s entire life with a clear hold on the societal status quo, clearly seeing one’s will reflected in every forum, clearly belonging to and securing the rights of the group in power — only to have one’s proverbial rug swept from under them with a seemingly neverending barrage of life-changing legislation.

Today, the battleground is New York, and the battle lines have been drawn over same-sex marriage.  Of course, debates like this bring out the usual suspects (the Family Research Council’s call to prayer, The American Family Association’s Bryan Fischer, National Organization for Marriage buying ad time on TV, et al.), but it seems like same-sex marriage brings the right-wing out of the woodwork like no other issue.

To wit, now we have David Tyree, former NY Giants Super Bowl star, coming out saying that same-sex marriage will lead to “anarchy”:
[click to continue…]

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Voters: Economy More Important Than “Family Values”

June 13, 2011

Finally, we social progressives seem to be winning in the opinion polls.
A new poll released by CNN yesterday shows a shift in the mind of the voting public — for the first time since CNN began asking the question in 1993, the percentage of voters who say that government should promote “traditional values” has fallen [...]

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Catching Up With Y-Love

June 13, 2011

I wanted to take this post to apologize for being out of commission for the past few months.  These past few months have seen a lot of activity on the hip-hop side of things.
First, my new EP “See Me” was released on Shemspeed Records last month, celebrated with a fantastic release party at The Mint [...]

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The Year of Revolution: 2011

January 28, 2011

These past few weeks have seen nothing but unrest from the most varied of places.  From Tunisia to Albania and beyond – the world’s economic unrest is producing a tornado of popular uprisings and a kaleidoscope of power dynamics is emerging that may shape the next decade.  As I write this article, all eyes are [...]

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Why Every School Should Have A White Students Union

December 5, 2010

Pennsylvania’s West Chester University has become the center of a racism controversy this week, following the appearance of some “White Students’ Union” fliers around campus, The Philadelphia Inquirer reported. Accusations of racism and suspicion of white supremacist activity began to fly around campus, with some students suspecting the group had been created to “mock” or [...]

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SPLC Calls Out Religious Right’s Hate Groups: Telling It Like It Is

November 29, 2010

The Southern Poverty Law Center, the civil rights organization dedicated to tracking hate-based organizations and hate speech in media, recently revised its list of hate groups.
In addition to tracking organizations like the National Knights of the Ku Klux Klan and the more tamely-named White nationalist “Council of Conservative Citizens”, the SPLC has taken on a new [...]

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Fears of Rising Tea: Pre-Election Thoughts

November 2, 2010

Today is Election Day 2010: the much-anticipated midterm elections both the left and the right have been talking about virtually since 2008.  America has seen the fringe enter the mainstream, the “mainstream” become fringe, and a host of otherwise unelectable candidates take center stage in an election The Weekly Standard’s Jay Cost calls a venture into [...]

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Preschool Battleground: Advancing the Radical Christianist Agenda

October 26, 2010

Religion Dispatches’ Candace Chellew-Hodge wrote today about SC gubernatorial candidate Nikki Haley’s vision for South Carolina public preschools and pre-K classes.
Abolish them.  In Haley’s words, public early childhood education should be replaced by “creative” alternatives “that don’t cost government dollars.”
And what type of creative alternatives should be sought?  Faith-based ones, she says, and as Candace [...]

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Tea Party Roundup: “Specific” Bigotry

October 22, 2010

In North Carolina’s Senate debate, Sen. Richard Burr (R) and Secretary of State Elaine Marshall (D), exchanged views on “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell”, but after the moderator asked if the candidates believed sexual orientation was “biological” or a “choice.”  Burr said that the evidence was “inconclusive”.  Marshall “glared” back at Burr, replying with what most [...]

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