So familiar have we become with stories like that of Michael Brown that even the response begins to feel repetitive. Protesters demand justice, details of the incident are slowly made public, new hashtags are created. We most certainly can expect the public defamation of this young man’s character, as if that in any way justifies his fate. If a trial happens, we’ll approach it with cautious hope tempered by our past disappointments.
We know the drill, because Michael Brown is not the first. But are we fed up enough to fight like we really want him to be the last?
Several Latino and immigrant rights organizations issued statements of solidarity last week, and supported the call for justice. My organization was one of them. This is an important step, but Latino and immigrant communities can and should go beyond hollowed statements of solidarity, and towards a genuine compañerismo, we must be concrete in our contributions and actively battle the narratives that make excuses for this crisis.
Within Latino and immigrant communities, we have been fighting a monster. With record-breaking deportations and a dramatic expansion of the detention system from the border to our backyards, the immigration enforcement system has grown out of control. Couple that development with regressive rhetoric of hate that dehumanizes both those who speak it and who hear it.
The federal government now spends more on immigration enforcement than all other federal enforcement agencies combined. The merging of local law enforcement with immigration enforcement has damaged the already tenuous relationship between the community and police.
We have said no more poli-migra, we have demanded not one more deportation.
So when Latino and immigrant constituencies see the case of Michael Brown, we should recognize this problem well. The criminalization of the black community is thorough in its cruelty. Politicians have created an extensive set of laws in their crusade to be tough on crime and wage a war on drugs, often times enforced disproportionately on black people. The massive incarceration rate and subsequent disenfranchisement shackles millions from pursuing a life with dignity. To boot, we have the militarization of police and the unchecked use of violence we have seen manifest in the streets of Ferguson, Missouri virtually since Brown was killed nearly two weeks ago.
These issues are distinct. However they leave in their wake destruction that is woven from the same cloth. And they are justified by a politic of fear. Fear is literally killing us. We cannot afford to continue to look the other way, put our head down, present differently, be silent, or put our hands up because we are finding in the most painful of ways, it doesn’t always work.









