You can’t deport this problem

Latest

 

West Virginians tell Senator Joe Manchin to support refugees.
PHOTO/CHAD CARPENTER

 
Editor’s note: Below we print with permission excerpts from an article which appeared in the journal Facing South: A Voice for a Changing South in March 2017.
What a nightmare.
[In March 2017], U.S. Immigration and Customs enforcement busted into a taco place in Raleigh County, West Virginia, as if this were Nazi Germany. Three men were arrested and face deportation, one of whom is married to a West Virginia resident and has been in the state for 20 years — and more importantly, each of whom is a human being who was simply trying to make it through the workday.
Perhaps this quote from “a local resident” represents the mentality of folks who think that sending brown people away will solve their economic problems:
“[I]t needs to be done, a lot of young folks need a job and why can’t they get that job.”
Raleigh County is about 1 percent Hispanic or Latino. According to the American Community Survey, there are 502 individuals who self-identify as “Hispanic/Latino” and are of “Mexican” descent in all of Raleigh County. If every one of those 502 non-“folks” was A) a working-age adult, B) employed, C) employed at a place where a “folk” could go work, D) undocumented, E) rounded up and deported at taxpayer expense, and then F) a young person “from Raleigh County” walked right into that job, it would impact the unemployment rate by less than 1 percentage point.
Kids in Raleigh County can’t get a job because most of West Virginia’s politicians have treated coal like a religious idol.
The coal industry has eliminated half its jobs in less than a decade for West Virginia counties in Central Appalachia. That isn’t because of workers of a particular descent, but because the coal seams are deeper, thinner, and of a worse quality — and the jobs are increasingly mechanized.
Life expectancy in Raleigh County is five years less than the national average. About one in five adults over 25 in the Beckley, West Virginia area don’t have a high school diploma.
There is real economic anxiety in our region and country, but we cannot and should not racism our way out of the problems that our country faces. You can’t deport this problem.
I am grateful to know and follow the lives of so many amazing people across Appalachia working to solve many of the problems that are inherent in America, but also many of the problems specific to our region which has never really gotten back from the coal industry what we put in.
Here is to a better future for our home.
J.W. Randolph is a husband and father who grew up in the hills of East Tennessee.

+ Articles by this author

The People’s Tribune opens its pages to voices of the movement for change. Our articles are written by individuals or organizations, along with our own reporting. Bylined articles reflect the views of the authors. Articles entitled “From the Editors” reflect the views of the editorial board. Please credit the source when sharing: peoplestribune.orgPlease donate to help us keep bringing you voices of the movement for change. Click here. We’re all volunteer, no paid staff. The People’s Tribune is a 501C4 organization.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Featured

Mayor, Evanston, IL: ‘My Community Is Under Invasion from Our Own Federal Gov’t’

Amid federal ICE raids in Chicagoland, the mayor of one Chicago suburb is on the frontlines of the anti-ICE protest movement, saying ICE agents have invaded his city and are beating people up for no reason.

Chicagoans Call Out ICE and Home Depot in Defense of Day Laborers

Community residents, union members, and elected officials gathered outside a Home Depot in Chicago to ask for solidarity with Day Laborers facing daily threats of ICE raids, and for Home Depot to take a stand against the raids.

Trump’s Federal Cuts Hit Texas Food Banks Hard

One in six Texans faces food insecurity; hunger touches every community. "It’s not just somebody else’s problem. The loss of public funding is larger than a food bank can bring in," says a Texas food bank CEO.

Day of the Dead Vigils Pay Tribute to Those Who have Died in ICE Custody

Día de los Muertos (Day of the Dead), a respected Mexican tradition celebrated on November 1 and 2, honors those who have passed away. In recent years, Day of the Dead celebrations have honored those who have died in ICE custody.

‘Jesus Is Being Tear Gassed At Broadview’

The struggle to close the Broadview ICE facility in Chicago includes clergy who are part of a movement of religious leaders opposed to the assault on immigrants.

More from the People's Tribune