Public Terror: Escalating the War on Migrants 
by Juan Santos and Leslie Radford 

"War is nothing but a continuation of politics by other means." – von Clausewitz
_______________
"Politics is war without bloodshed, while war is politics with bloodshed." – Mao
_______________
(LOS ANGELES) Immigration activist Roberto Lovato was there when the Los 
Angeles Police Department launched its brutal assault on a park full of migrant 
families with children last week in LA, and this is what he saw and understood. 
"I saw the LAPD," he wrote "dragging the immigrants and the entire country into 
dangerous terrain, a new threshold in the immigration war raging around the 
country." 
What he saw was more than an Iraq-style surge; this was an all out escalation, 
a new strategic plateau in the U.S. government’s War on Migrants.
Javier Rodriguez, an immigration activist with L.A’s March 25th Coalition, 
called it a "political decision" to "dismantle this [immigrant rights] 
movement."
Last year, in 2006, millions of migrant and their allies – their familia – took 
the streets, giving birth to the most powerful mass movement in the U.S. since 
the Civil Rights and Black Power movements of the 1960s and 70s.
The new movement stunned the US ruling class, drove the deepest of wedges 
straight into the heart of a seemingly unstoppable neo–con drive toward 
fascism, exposed the essential brutality and racism at the core of the 
Republican, neo–con agenda, began the public unraveling of the Bush regime, and 
opened the door to the stunning exposure, repudiation and defeat of the 
neo-cons in the House and Senate, who had led the racist charge to make felons 
of all undocumented migrants – and of anyone who so much as gave a ride to 
someone undocumented.
And like their counterparts in the 60s era, the reactionaries of today saw the 
unmistakable outlines of the threat presented by brown resistance to their 
power and their drive toward a fascistic state. Like the reactionaries of that 
era, they moved to kill the movement with mass arrests and state intimidation. 
Only this time, it wasn’t the FBI, COINTELPRO, the murders or imprisonment of 
Black leaders, or the mass incarceration of Black and other peoples of color 
that the State relied on. This time, it was the department of Homeland 
Security, ICE, and a strategy of direct vengeance – the deliberate 
terrorization of the millions who had taken the streets and who had 
precipitated the collapse of the neo-fascist juggernaut.
The methodology was not the one the reactionaries used to crush AIM on the Pine 
Ridge Lakota Reservation in the 70s, or in Guatemala and El Salvador, nations 
from which many of today’s migrants fled – no death squads yet this year. 
Now, rather, the weapons include mass raids on meat packing plants, pre-dawn 
raids by ICE agents on people’s homes, incarceration in prisons thousands of 
miles away from lawyers, families and friends, and the terrorization of small 
children whose parents had been locked away, or who were themselves taken into 
custody and locked up like felons in federal prisons with their mothers and 
fathers. 
That this year’s pro-migrant demonstrations were dramatically smaller than 
those last year came as no surprise to the movement’s leadership.  Shortly 
before the pro-migrant demonstrations on May Day this year, Panama Alba, an 
immigrants’ rights activist with New York’s May 1st Coalition, spoke plainly of 
the impact of the government’s effort to crush the new movement.  "In light of 
the raids, any migrant who steps into the streets is a hero or heroine," he 
said.
But the signal-sending, intimidation and terrorization didn’t stop with 
secretive raids on people’s homes in the dead of night or on isolated factories 
and packing plants.  Chicago, the city that set the pace for last year’s 
massive protests, faced a new reality this year, when, a week before the 
scheduled mass protests of May 1, ICE carried out its first mass raid in a 
public place, a shopping mall  in the heart of the Mexican American district La 
Villita, marching into the mall with bullet proof vests and carrying M-16 
military assault rifles, shutting down the mall, and holding brown employees 
and customers alike for questioning at gunpoint, while letting whites go free. 
A Chicago immigrants rights activist said, "They sat people down on the ground 
and busted down bathroom doors . . . Only 12 people were arrested in Chicago, 
but there were 250 people being held. But people didn’t run away. They were 
furious and we started protesting immediately.'
And, in Los Angeles, the storm center of the national struggle for migrant’s 
rights, the LAPD, under the leadership of the nation’s "top cop," Republican 
police chief William Bratton, made another strategic intervention aimed at 
nationwide intimidation of the new movement; a brutal, no holds barred,  
clearly premeditated, tight and highly disciplined police assault on an 
entirely peaceful gathering of migrant families with children – hundreds of 
children – in MacArthur Park – an assault involving some 600 cops who struck 
pedestrians with moving motorcycles, and who, while marching in close 
formation, fired uncounted volumes of tear gas and volley after volley of 
rubber bullets from "less lethal weapons," shooting indiscriminately into the 
crowd, waiting on cue and in unison for the crowd before them to retreat, while 
viciously clubbing journalists, smashing cameras, and striking anyone else they 
could strike with repeated blows from batons. Seventy people were injured and 
sent to hospitals. Despite LAPD claims that the attack was in reaction to 
having been pelted with plastic water bottles and rocks by young "agitators", 
and despite the hundreds of police present, not a single arrest was made. While 
the young people did, very bravely, hold a protective line between the cops and 
the families under attack – taking the brunt of police violence on their own 
bodies, the assault on the migrant families was in no way "provoked," any more 
than the ICE raid in the Chicago mall was provoked.
The LAPD assault has been compared to the infamous and racist repression 
unleashed by police chief Bull Conner of Birmingham, Alabama against the Civil 
Rights movement when the Old South was still the Old South.  African American 
writer <http://www.eurweb.com/story/eur33383.cfm>Anthony Abdullah Samad says of 
Bratton, "He'll never be able to explain away the rubber bullets hitting women 
and children. No more than Bull Connor could justify turning fire hoses and 
dogs on women and children in Birmingham in 1963."
But the whole point was to incite widespread terror and intimidation - that’s 
precisely why no one – not children, not journalists, not pregnant women, was 
spared from the onslaught. Far from the LAPD being once again "exposed" as the 
nation’s most brutal pigs, the worldwide media coverage, especially and 
intensely concentrated on Spanish language TV in the U.S., was a public 
relations coup of a high order for those bent on striking fear and crushing any 
further resistance to pre-dawn raids, the plans for massive construction of new 
immigration prisons, the further incarceration of children in a Texas-style 
Guantanamo, or the even more massive raids and mass deportations to come. 
The powers that be could not have picked a more chilling place from which to 
have signaled their brutal message to the pro migrant movement.  LA has the 
largest population of migrants in the nation, and a Chican@ mayor and political 
establishment with a level of power unrivalled by Brown people anywhere in the 
nation – no where else in the U.S. can migrant populations expect the kind of 
sympathy and support that is ostensibly available in LA. But LA mayor Antonio 
Villaraigosa, a "rising star" of the Democratic Party, rode last year in a 
Pacific Palisades parade that included in its official entourage a contingent 
from the "Minuteman Project," and kept his political distance as police stormed 
the South Central Farm, brutally uprooting supporters of the many migrant 
families who had grown their food there until faced with eviction in a shady 
deal that involved secret deals and City Council improprieties.
The Mayor, after facing intense criticism for his appearance at last year’s 
million- plus march in downtown LA, arranged to be out of town for this year’s 
march.
This year, it was only after criticism of the LAPD reached a red hot crescendo 
that the Mayor returned from a trip abroad on "city business" to denounce the 
LAPD attack as a human rights violation, and to attempt to quell any mass 
"unrest" that might be brewing.
LAPD Chief Bill Bratton, in the meantime, is having none of the Mayor's human 
rights rhetoric. Two high ranking LAPD officers have been reassigned, while 
Bratton has pointed to "tactical errors," falsely implying the cops were "out 
of control" rather than fulfilling a strategic political imperative of the Bush 
regime. But the cops were not out of control, this was no police riot; the 
police were acting with discipline on direct orders from Bratton’s Deputy 
Chiefs, making it clear that the planning for the police assault occurred at 
the highest levels, in all probability in meetings with Bratton himself, who 
has strong ties to the Department of "Homeland Security," and who has been 
mentioned as a potential candidate to head the DHS under George W. Bush.
Were Bratton to land that post, he would not only head up the government’s 
internal spying program, but would be the ultimate head of ICE, and responsible 
for carrying out Homeland Security’s 
"<http://www.fas.org/irp/agency/dhs/endgame.pdf>Operation Endgame," with its 
objective of raiding, rounding up, imprisoning and deporting millions of 
migrants.
On May 1, at MacArthur Park, Bratton may have proven himself "fit" for just 
such a vile job.
In the meantime, if legislation now before Congress is approved, local police, 
including the LAPD, would have the authority, and funding from the Department 
of Homeland Security to carry out public raids in areas where migrants 
concentrate; to act as local enforcers of national laws on immigration, to help 
carry out the mass deportations of brown people that Operation Endgame implies. 
That’s the plan. That’s the trajectory. Conversely, if no legislation is passed 
this year, and no moratorium on raids is declared, Operation Endgame remains 
the official policy of the DHS and ICE. In the absence of any other plan, 
Bush’s raids can only intensify, and do so with the aim of fulfilling the goals 
of Endgame; it will be the only policy on the books.
The attacks in LA and Chicago were by no means random, and by no means local in 
their meaning or impact. The neo-con powers that be brought forth their latest 
"surge" in the War on Migrants and the Chican@ community, and signaled with 
unmistakable clarity their intent to crush the movement that has cost them so 
much and that has threatened the stability of their rule. 
The Bush escalation of the War on Migrants, and the plan to bring police into 
the battle at a national level – a move backed by Republicans and Democrats 
alike – means that from the standpoint of the white power elite of the U.S. – 
despite the rhetoric of one wing of the pro migrant movement – "we are not 
America – que "NO somos America." It means that the white power elite views 
migrants as a dangerous force for political instability and for undermining the 
white cultural dominance of the U.S.. It means that migrants and the pro 
migrant movement are the targets of America, no matter how many US flags are 
waved, how much English is spoken, or how much profit is provided for the 
exploiters.
And the vulnerability of the system – its open embarrassment at being  exposed 
for it brutal machinations, its efforts to cover its tracks, means that it is 
only resistance and exposure that the system fears, and that only resistance 
and exposure will cause it to back down from draconian measures, just as it 
sought to distance itself from the openly fascistic Sensenbrenner bill in 2006.
The resistance can take many forms – barrio Migra Watch/ Ojo a la Migra 
committees, the continuing establishment of Sanctuary cities and Sanctuary 
churches, the planning of escape routes and the setting up of defense 
committees in factories and other workplaces – and marches, many more marches, 
to demand the end of raids and deportations, the firing of LAPD Chief Bratton, 
full legalization of all, and the end to the exploitation of Latin American and 
other third world economies by US finance capital. Without such open and 
defiant resistance, the system will concede nothing, and the future will hold 
nothing other than more brutality, more raids, more vigilantes like the 
Minutemen, more destroyed families, and a more openly racist culture ruled with 
the iron fist from the Right.
Juan Santos is Los Angeles based writer and editor. His work can be read at 
<http://the-fourth-world.blogspot.com/>The Fourth World. He can be reached at 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Leslie Radford is a correspondent for Aztlan Electronic News and L.A. 
Indymedia. She can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED]


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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