Go to Work, Go to Jail

Recently, more than 100 workers in Pascagoula, Mississippi walked off the job at a Mississippi shipyard to protest conditions similar to slavery. The workers, were protesting the conditions they have been living and working in since being hired from India after Hurricane Katrina. According to the lawsuit filed in the workers’ behalf, the workers were offered jobs, green cards and permanent residency in exchange for as much as $20,000 each that they paid to recruiters working for a Northrop Grumman subsidiary in Bombay. One of the organizers of the march was quoted in a press release put out by the New Orleans Worker Justice Coalition, saying “They promised us green cards and permanent residency, and instead gave us 10-month visas and made us live like animals in company trailers, 24 to a room. We were trapped between an ocean of debt at home and constant threats of deportation from our bosses in Mississippi.” When workers attempted to organize against these conditions the organizers were fired.

This is but the tip of the iceberg. In what can only be termed circumstances similar to those of foreign workers hired by US and British companies to work on the ill-fated reconstruction of Iraq, the litany of abuses against those—both US-born and foreign—hired by various corporations to work in the reconstruction of New Orleans and the rest of the US southern coast hit by Hurricane Katrina in 2005. A recently released report by the New Orleans Worker Justice Coalition is an ongoing litany of corporate corruption, worker abuse and outright illegal and immoral violation of human rights.

Also in Mississippi, beginning July 1st, 2008 it will become a felony for an undocumented worker to hold a job. Anyone caught working without papers “shall be subject to imprisonment in the custody of the Department of Corrections for not less than one (1) year nor more than five (5) years, a fine of not less than one thousand dollars ($1000) nor more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) or both.” Furthermore, anyone charged with the crime of working without papers will not be eligible for bail. In Iowa, federal ICE agents arrested hundreds of workers at the Agriprocessors, Inc. meat packing plant. The reason given by law enforcement was that the workers were using false social security numbers. Of course, the facts are that people can’t work without a social security number and cannot get one unless they have been given some kind of legal status by the government—a status becoming more difficult to acquire by the day. This is but one more Catch-22 in the life of an immigrant in the US.

Meanwhile, in Danbury, CT a court upheld the use of undercover police acting as day-labor employers to arrest men and women looking for work in that city. The workers were then deported. In San Diego County, plans are underway to build two large detention centers that will hold immigrants without papers for indeterminate amounts of time. Haliburton hopes to get the contract. In South Carolina, Georgia and some other states, legislators have introduced laws forbidding the use of any language but English in the workplace.

Take a moment and imagine a country where some residents have more rights than others. These residents can hold almost any job they desire. They live in neighborhoods away from those of darker skin and lesser means. The latter cannot hold any job they desire. Part of the reason for this is because of the law and part of the reason is because of the nature of their education and social status. Everyone must have identification that also signifies their social status, even though that status is primarily determined by the color of one’s skin. If one does not have such identification (especially if they are not white), they are arrested. If they or their relatives can not produce identification, the arrestees once released are doomed to a life living in the shadows, always wondering if they will be turned in by their employer or enemies.

The country I am talking about was apartheid South Africa. Now, since the advent of NAFTA and other so-called free trade agreements, the national boundaries between North and South America have been economically erased. If one stretches their imagination just a bit, it is possible to perceive the southern lands of Mexico and Central America as the equivalent of bantustans with the United States as their Capetown. Furthermore, the identification legal immigrants to the United States are required to carry can be compared to the passes blacks in South Africa needed to get into different parts of the white-ruled South Africa. If those passes were not in order or nonexistent, blacks were subject to arrest. Likewise, if the various documents that the US government requires immigrants to carry and produce at will are not in order or nonexistent, those immigrants will be arrested. Those immigrants without papers must live their lives in the shadows, always wondering if they will be turned in by their employer or enemies. If they live in some parts of the United States, the discovery of their lack of documents might occur as the result of a roadblock set up by police to check people’s identification.

Of course, there are a multitude of ways that these historical instances are not similar, but it is the underlying consciousness of fear is distressingly similar. It is questionable whether or not most US citizens agree with the efforts listed above that target immigrants. However, the lack of outcry by those who disagree with these attempts to dehumanize undocumented immigrants provides those invested in destroying immigrants’ lives with a voice hopefully well beyond their numbers. So does the willingness of the US public to ignore the family-shattering raids and imprisonment of thousands of immigrants for no other reason than not having the approved documents. Implicit in this willingness is a sense that those being picked up and thrown in detention centers are not as human as “real Americans.” If the lessons of authoritarian states have taught us anything, they should have taught us that we should be wary of those who would define a human being in ever-narrowing terms.

Ron Jacobs is the author of The Way The Wind Blew: A History of the Weather Underground and Tripping Through the American Night, and the novels Short Order Frame Up and The Co-Conspirator's Tale. His third novel All the Sinners, Saints is a companion to the previous two and was published early in 2013. Read other articles by Ron.

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  1. Lloyd Rowsey said on May 16th, 2008 at 6:01am #

    “American Apartheid: Segregation and the Making of the Underclass,” by Douglass Massey and Nancy Denton (1998) —

    This book is more painful to read than Eichmann in Jerusalem, Germinal, or the pornographic The Rehnquist Choice by John Dean. But everyone should try. The book first describes how white Americans have kept their residential neighborhoods white since about 1920. Initially, by simply murdering African-Americans trying to move in. Then with widespread restrictive deed covenants. More recently, with loan institution redlining, and low-income public housing under-funding and ripoffs. Most recently, add, with pervasive real estate agent ruses, misdirection, and discouragement. This history needed telling clearly and succinctly. Subsequently, the book defines “apartheid” rigorously and identifies it in sixteen urban areas in the country, urban areas containing a substantial percentage of all African-Americans. The book then looks at the living conditions of the most isolated, homeless and hopeless, drug-and-violence-obsessed African-Americans, and identifies apartheid as a cause, if not the cause, of these conditions.

    John Dean’s book says that Nixon in the early 1970’s required his three Supreme Court appointees, the most important of whom was Chief Justice William Rehnquist, to be “right” on the race-residential question and, essentially, to look with disfavor on federal efforts to enforce the Fair Housing Act with respect to single-family homes. Consequently, American residential neighborhoods — already less integrated in 1970 than in 1920 — are less integrated now than in 1970. Between 1920 and 1970 the racial prejudice of individuals probably could be blamed. In the thirty…years since Rehnquist commenced to “put his stamp” on the United States Supreme Court, it’s been the snowballing insanity of our electoral system and its deformed progenies, based on money and gerrymandering undisturbed by Court rulings, that get the credit.

    (October 27, 2004)

  2. evie said on May 16th, 2008 at 7:41am #

    Two possible solutions.

    1. We get that North American Union and erase the borders – eventually we might erase all borders. But it could make the “redistribution of wealth” more out of reach as there will be so many more to share it with.

    2. We encourage immigrants to return home and overthrow their own economically oppressive governments and maybe the US peeple can copy that.

    Having to present valid identification applies to anyone in the US, has for many decades. If you have no ID you risk being charged with loitering, vacrancy, etc. Or maybe white folks were never subject to this law?

    And how/where do these poor immigrants get $20,000 to buy a job, and why would they even want to come to the US – doesn’t the whole world hate us?

    And also, how many black men around New Orleans were denied jobs b/c workers were imported?

  3. ron said on May 16th, 2008 at 7:52am #

    Having to present valid identification applies to anyone in the US, has for many decades. If you have no ID you risk being charged with loitering, vacrancy, etc. Or maybe white folks were never subject to this law?

    It has not always been a law. I also bet that there are millions of white folks who have never been asked for their ID. Furthermore, the idea of roadblocks merely to check people’s IDs smacks of totalitarianism. Just because it has happened and may be a law does not mean it is okay or should be accepted. The fact that this practice is now widely accepted and has been validated by the courts does not make it right, it only means that the courts represent a certain part of society–many who never have to show ID. It’s not a mechanism to make people safe, it’s a mecahinsimto keep the unwanted out of places they are not wanted.

    And how/where do these poor immigrants get $20,000 to buy a job, and why would they even want to come to the US – doesn’t the whole world hate us?
    They don’t get the $20, 000–they have to either borrow it or they get it taken out of their first year’s worth of paychecks.

    And also, how many black men around New Orleans were denied jobs b/c workers were imported?
    This is part of the reason companies imported workers–so they wouldn’t have to thire black Americans. The developers want the black folk out!

  4. evie said on May 16th, 2008 at 8:44am #

    However “wrong” the courts and the racket are, I’m hard pressed for sympathy to workers who aid and abet the depraved ruling class.

    One year ago 7,000 (IBEW) Local 733 shipyard workers in Pascagoula went on strike over wages. It may be that Northrop is bringing in scab labor from India to gradually replace union workers.

  5. Garrett said on May 16th, 2008 at 12:42pm #

    “Take a moment and imagine a country where some residents have more rights than others.”

    Try imagining a country where that’s not the case.

    Thanks for the book review, Lloyd. I’ll have to check it out.

    evie wrote: “However “wrong” the courts and the racket are, I’m hard pressed for sympathy to workers who aid and abet the depraved ruling class.”

    Of course, their intent is to survive and for their loved ones to survive. Aiding and abetting the depraved ruling class is an unfortunate side effect. Sadly, most all of us are aiding the depraved ruling class…some more than others, I suppose. I don’t have a TV, I recycle, yada, yada, yada…but I’m not raising hell the way I should. Am I too scared to disrupt my life as is? Perhaps I am.

  6. John Wilkinson said on May 16th, 2008 at 12:46pm #

    “However “wrong” the courts and the racket are, I’m hard pressed for sympathy to workers who aid and abet the depraved ruling class. ”

    that’s right, people whose whole life is spinning upside down out of control, who are walking around in a daze and don’t know what hit them, who can’t keep their heads above water financially and in all other ways, who have their dignity and rights stomped on on a daily basis, those people are to blame for everything. they are abetting the ruling class, as if they had a choice. blame the victim.

    those people don’t have time to read/comment on theories.

    while you sit in your armchair and pontificate. and deal your wisdom.

    who the hell cares about your sympathies.

  7. ron said on May 16th, 2008 at 1:11pm #

    “Take a moment and imagine a country where some residents have more rights than others.”

    Try imagining a country where that’s not the case.

    of course, but this particular sentence is only one part of the picture I am drawing–out of context it sounds maive…in context of the paragraph it makes psense…

  8. evie said on May 16th, 2008 at 1:19pm #

    John, John,
    Try to stay on topic and not personal attacks on other posters. It makes you look like an asshole.

    Garrett -“Try imagining a country where that’s not the case.” Ain’t that the truth.

  9. john a said on May 17th, 2008 at 3:04am #

    Don’t forget the reason why desperate people have to leave their homes and families in the first place – because their own countries are destroyed by the empire builders, either through their gangster economies or their ‘shock and awe’. One of the spin-off benefits for the empire builders is the surplus of slave labour their actions inevitably produce.

  10. Edwin Pell said on May 18th, 2008 at 5:54pm #

    Let end all immigration then this could not happen. I you want an employee in America you will have to hire an American. My son just graduated from a good college he is working as a check-out clerk at the grocery. This is class warfare the owning class versus the working class.