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A Day Without Immigrants- April 10, 2006

1465 Views 28 Replies 16 Participants Last post by  ihathi
A DAY WITHOUT IMMIGRANTS
MONDAY APRIL 10 2006


UNION HISPANA DE TELLURIDE
325 Coonskin Court Suite F12, P.O.Box 3278 Telluride, Co. 81435.
Phone: (970)-417-9634.

MORE THAN 12 MILLION ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS IN THE U.S.A. DESERVE DIGNITY, RESPECT, AND SHOULD BE RECOGNIZED FOR THEIR HARD WORK, EFFORT AND THEIR PARTICIPATION IN THE U.S. ECONOMIC GROWTH.

UNION HISPANA , UNION HISPANA DE TELLURIDE, AND SEVERAL CIVIC GROUPS IN FAVOR OF A COMPREHENSIVE IMMIGRATION REFORM ARE CALLING YOU TO JOIN AND SUPPORT:

A GENERAL STOPPAGE AND ECONOMIC BOYCOTT IN PROTEST OF THOSE ANTI-IMMIGRANT BILLS THAT, IN CASE OF BEING APPROVED, WILL AFFECT MORE THAN 12 MILLION UNDOCUMENTED IMMIGRANTS AND THEIR FAMILIES.


MONDAY APRIL 10 2006

YOU CAN PARTICIPATE BY:
-DRESSING IN WHITE.
-HANG A WHITE SHEET ON YOUR DOOR
-PINNING A WHITE RIBBON ON YOUR CHEST.
-NOT GOING TO SCHOOL THAT DAY.
-COPY, PRINT AND SHARE THIS FLYER WITH FRIENDS, FAMILY, REALTIVES & NEIGHBORS
-JOIN WITH AN ORGANIZATION OF A WALK-OUT IN YOUR CITY
-NOT GOING TO WORK THAT DAY. (SPEND THAT DAY WITH YOUR FAMILY)
-NOT USING PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION (BUSES, TAXIS, SUBWAYS, TRAINS, ETC. )
-NOT GOING TO PUBLIC PLACES (MOVIE THEATERS, RESTAURANTS, BARS, ETC.)
-NOT BUYING GASOLINE.
-NOT GOING TO SUPERMARKETS (WAL-MART, CITY MARKETS, PRICE, COSTCO, ETC.)
-NOT SHOPPING AT ALL.
-CONTACTING YOUR SENATORS AND/OR CONGRESSMEN, ASKING THEM TO SUPPORT A COMPREHENSIVE IMMIGRATION REFORM .

PLEASE SHARE THIS INFORMATION WITH YOUR FAMILY, RELATIVES, FRIENDS, NEIGHBORS, AND CO-WORKERS

For more information on the rallies in your area, or if you would like a copy of the actual flyer to print and hand out, please email me at: [email protected]
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1 - 20 of 29 Posts
last year a day with out mexicans meant that the taqueria was closed......................wahhhhhhhhh
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i appreciate your effort but the term hispanics is offensive. we are very many cultures..........mexican, nicaraguan,honduran, dr, peruvian.............
i appreciate your effort but the term hispanics is offensive. we are very many cultures..........mexican, nicaraguan,honduran, dr, peruvian.............
i appreciate your effort but the term hispanics is offensive. we are very many cultures..........mexican, nicaraguan,honduran, dr, peruvian.............
i appreciate your effort but the term hispanics is offensive. we are very many cultures..........mexican, nicaraguan,honduran, dr, peruvian.............
Quote:

Originally Posted by jannan
i appreciate your effort but the term hispanics is offensive. we are very many cultures..........mexican, nicaraguan,honduran, dr, peruvian.............
I thought Mexican was offensive and Hispanic was more PC?
Quote:

Originally Posted by jannan
i appreciate your effort but the term hispanics is offensive. we are very many cultures..........mexican, nicaraguan,honduran, dr, peruvian.............
well, i know lots of mexicans that don't mind being grouped as hispanics....I just don't think you can claim it is fffensive across the board, she was talkign about a group larger thatn just the mexicans, I think.
i'm just saying hispanics was a term put on the people of latin america when the europeans came. mexicans here means someone from mexico
Actually, I went to try and edit it and couldn't because the message wasn't posted for days.

I am not the one who wrote the flyer, it came from Union Hispana.

They have however made a different flyer up that says " A Day Without Imigrants" sot includes people outside the hispanic culture, since this effects everyone.

As to the term Hispanic being offensive, I have never came across that from any of the people we deal with.. including my dh and his family, and the people we deal with in the different groups we belong to.

Sorry if it offended you, but I didn't write it. You might want to check at the Univision Foros, I know the guy who runs the Hispanic Union of Telluride posts there, you can take it up with him.
Quote:

Originally Posted by CallMeMommy
I thought Mexican was offensive and Hispanic was more PC?
Why on earth would Mexican be offensive? That's like saying Italian or Chinese is offensive. Someone from Korea is Korean, someone from Mexico is Mexican.
Quote:

Originally Posted by griffin2004
Why on earth would Mexican be offensive? That's like saying Italian or Chinese is offensive. Someone from Korea is Korean, someone from Mexico is Mexican.
I think she was referring to how some ppl tend to lump all spanish speaking ppl together as "mexicans" not that the term mexican was offensive when meaning a person from mexico or of mexican descent.
Mexican is offensive when it is applied as a blanket term to anyone with brown skin who speaks Spanish.

Last I heard about the term "hispanic" was that it referred to Spanish speaking people, which would include Spaniards. This is why the silly forms that ask race/ethnicity often have a box dedicated to X-Hispanic (non-white), which always makes me snicker, because it illustrates how silly the little boxes are.
Quote:

Originally Posted by mthomas
I think she was referring to how some ppl tend to lump all spanish speaking ppl together as "mexicans" not that the term mexican was offensive when meaning a person from mexico or of mexican descent.
Exactly, thank you.
This last month and a half has been a very important time for undocumented immigrants to really unite and actively seek recognition for the positive contribution they make in the U.S. The primary focus has been on pulling together with friends, families and neighbors to make an impact on the legislation being debated in Congress. There has been a lot of public discussion about how an anti-immigrant bill (as was passed in the House) would truly devastate millions of families.

It has been a time for coming together, not getting caught up in debates over terminology.

Whether you say "latinos", "hispanos", or "immigrants", the important thing is that we recognize that we would all lose if our most vital immigrant communities were just "sent home." I don't think Americans would have the heart to watch the suffering that some sort of mass forced-deportation would bring (not to mention the economic chaos that would ensue...)
I sent out a message to some friends here in Houston about a march on Monday, and one friend who is half Mexican replied that marching undermines the cause and makes people look dumb. I replied that marching is our only way to really speak out and if we don't, we are sending the message that all is okay. What do yall think?
Quote:

Originally Posted by ihathi
Tthe important thing is that we recognize that we would all lose if our most vital immigrant communities were just "sent home." I don't think Americans would have the heart to watch the suffering that some sort of mass forced-deportation would bring (not to mention the economic chaos that would ensue...)
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Can we disagree on here? I think Immigrants are the fabric of this country, Legal ones. As a daughter of an immigrant I know how important being in this country is for other people. Even my father would agree all are welcome here but become a citizen. Give these people the chance to make it legal. There is nothing wrong with that.
A woman I know, an amazing woman, has lived here since she was 5 years old. She gradutated highschool magna cum laude and has full scholarship to Sacramento State College, she's about to be deported because she's an illegal immigrant. She's working full time AND going to school full time. All of the money from her job is going to an immigration attorney. She's going to graduate from junior college this spring before going on to state college in the fall. She's obviously not a "terrorist" or a "drain" and niether is anyone in her family. Her younger siblings are citizens because they were born here.....for a country that pays lip service to family values we sure do break up a lot of families.
The bottom line is that there is no legal means by which poor, undereducated latin americans can get work visas in the U.S. (much less citizenship). And yet there have always been jobs for them here.

For decades, we have had administrations that pay lip-service to "securing our southern border," but then fail to enforce any laws that would keep employers from taking advantage of the undocumented immigrant's labor. (I read somewhere that President Bush's personal chef came here illegally...) Some want to blame these immigrants for settling here, but the fact is that they have been allowed to settle for decades now. And imagine: if you had to choose between living in extreme povery in Guatemala or working in a job in L.A. that could support you and your whole extended family, what would you choose?

The following is from a letter written by Cardinal Archibishop Roger Mahony of L.A. (published in the NY Times on March 22):

"The unspoken truth of the immigration debate is that at the same time our nation benefits economically from the presence of undocumented workers, we turn a blind eye when they are exploited by employers. They work in industries that are vital to our economy yet they have little legal protection and no opportunity to contribute fully to our nation... While we gladly accept their taxes and sweat, we do not acknowledge or uphold their basic labor rights..."
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