What does a criminal deportee have to do with a family seeking asylum, or an undocumented migrant or a Muslim post-9/11 detainee? In the expanded security system that deals with crime, immigration, asylum, borders and migration, all these people are treated as threats to national security. This same system disproportionately punishes noncitizens. If they commit a crime, they not only serve the sentence but then are exiled for life from the country. Any mistake becomes cause for detention and deportation, the loss of livelihoods and uprooting of families. Race, religion and national origin all dictate the terms upon which a person or a community is deemed suspect, monitored and regulated.
 Within suspect communities, the profiling and policing done in the name of anti-terrorism or immigration enforcement leads to remarkably similar results as the policing and imprisonment that African-American communities have faced under the war on drugs. These policies have turned up scant terrorism leads, no arrests related to the September 11 attacks and instead have netted thousands of people mostly for administrative violations and petty crime.
The post-9/11 crisis was but one part of a continuum of conflict surrounding communities targeted by the war on terror at home. Most crucial in overcoming the discriminatory policies of the war on terror is exposing the implicit question in the phrases "national security" or "homeland security." That question is: "security for whom?" Thus far the answer has not included communities of color.
Excerpted from We Are All Suspects Now: Untold Stories from Immigrant Communities After 9/11 by Tram Nguyen
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The First Network of Arab American Service Providers, by Karen Rignall. Last spring, Nahla Kayali and her mother had a simple question for a supermarket manager after noting that they hadn’t received a coupon discount. “Could you reimburse us for the coupon amount?” Full article available on ColorLines here. |
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By Ronald Pineda. Donita Ganzon and Jiffy Javanella, the Los Angeles couple who filed a lawsuit last November against the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) for failing to recognize their marriage and denying Javanella his green card, recently won a reprieve. Full article available on ColorLines here. |
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By Megan Izen. Following the devastating earthquake that shook Pakistan, Kashmir and India in early October, legislators and community groups are hoping to get temporary asylum for Pakistanis in the U.S. Full article available on ColorLines here. |
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