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Forces Align Against Arizona: 4 Major Cities Threaten Boycotts,
Baseball Flexes Its Muscles, Citizens in Uproar



By Liliana Segura, AlterNet

Posted on May 3, 2010, Printed on May 5, 2010

http://www.alternet.org/story/146712/



Editor's note: Sign the petition -- Ask the Department of Justice to
block Arizona's racist law, the greatest threat to civil rights in
America in a generation.



Immediately after Arizona Governor Jan Brewer signed the racist new
anti-immigration law, calls for a boycott of her state arose, from La
Opinión, the nation's largest Spanish-language newspaper, to
Democratic Representative Raúl Grijalva, who called for targeted
economic sanctions of his own state, saying that "good" and "decent"
organizations "should refrain from bringing their business" to
Arizona. Colombian pop star Shakira traveled to Phoenix last week,
appearing on CNN to condemn the law; meanwhile local politicians from
at least four major cities are weighing whether or not to issue
resolutions to stop doing business with Arizona.

With calls to boycott Arizona continuing to grow over the weekend, and
May Day protesters marching in cities across the country, perhaps one
of the most visible -- and potentially influential -- is the campaign
to move Major League Baseball's 2011 All-Star Game out of the state.
With the percentage of Latinos who play professional baseball
comparable to the percentage of Latino U.S. citizens who live in
Arizona, players and politicians are speaking out.

"Major League Baseball needs to revisit the issue of whether the
All-Star Game, one of America's greatest televised exports to Latin
America, should be played in a state that doesn't show any respect to
Latinos," Democratic Rep. Jose Serrano, who represents the Bronx, home
of the New York Yankees, told the NY Daily News last week. The 2011
All-Star Game is currently scheduled to take place in Phoenix.

Adrian Gonzalez, first baseman for the San Diego Padres, and a
two-time All-Star player, has vowed to skip the All-Star Game if the
law stands. "If they leave it up to the players and the law is still
there, I'll probably not play in the All-Star Game," he said in an
interview this weekend. "Because it's a discriminating law."



Last week, Major League Baseball Players Association executive
director Michael Weiner issued a statement in opposition of Arizona's
new law, warning that it "could have a negative impact on hundreds of
major league players who are citizens of countries other than the
United States. These international players are very much a part of our
national pastime and are important members of our Association."

"If the current law goes into effect," he warned, "the MLBPA will
consider additional steps necessary to protect the rights and
interests of our members."

Many have drawn parallels to the National Football League's boycott of
Arizona following its opposition to Martin Luther King Day. Under
pressure from its own players, the NFL was forced to move the 1993
Super Bowl from Phoenix to Los Angeles. "I urge the Major Leaguers
playing today to follow the lead of their NFL counterparts in taking a
strong stand against racism," Rep. Serrano said.

Efforts to boycott Arizona go beyond the sports realm. In cities
across the country, local politicians are weighing resolutions to
impose sanctions on Arizona. In Los Angeles, calls from city council
members to boycott Arizona were joined by Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa
last week. "What we want to do is make sure we understand and review
every monetary transaction, any kind of funding that comes from Los
Angeles [to Arizona], evaluate it, refrain from conducting business
with them and make them aware that their actions have real
consequences from a monetary view," Councilman Ed Reyes said.

Reyes, along with Councilwoman Janice Hahn, have introduced
legislation that calls for L.A. to "refrain from conducting business
with the state of Arizona including participating in any conventions
or other business that requires city resources, unless SB 1070
[Support Our Law Enforcement and Safe Neighborhoods Act] is repealed."

In Milwaukee, WI, where thousands took part in May Day protests this
weekend, Alderman Jim Witowiak reportedly plans to announce
legislation to boycott Arizona-based companies. "If the resolution
passes, city workers would also not be allowed to go to Arizona for
any meetings or conferences," reports a local ABC affiliate.



In Boston on Monday, city council members Michael Ross and Felix
Arroyo Jr. announced they are "crafting a resolution asking city
officials to find out what investments the city has with Arizona and
Arizona-based companies, and pull that money immediately,"  according
to the Boston Herald. "The resolution would ask city employees not
travel to Arizona for conferences or other city business."



And in San Francisco, Supervisor David Campos introduced a resolution
-- embraced by Mayor Gavin Newsom -- that discourages doing business
with Arizona, while also calling on professional and collegiate sports
organizations to do the same. According to SF Weekly, the resolution
"also commands the clerk of the board to send a copy of the resolution
to the governor of Arizona and the commissioners of the National
Football League, National Basketball Association, Major League
Baseball; and the President of the National Collegiate Athletic
Association."



Beyond local governments, numerous organizations across the country
that are not necessarily involved in immigration policy are calling
for a boycott.



"Among the widening reverberations from the Arizona law," reported the
New York Times on Sunday, "the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, a
historically black organization whose members included Rev. Martin
Luther King, Jr. and Justice Thurgood Marshall, announced that it was
moving its annual convention in July to Las Vegas from Phoenix. The
fraternity said it had been expecting as many as 10,000 people,
including members and their families, to come to the meeting."

On Facebook, a page titled "Boycott Arizona 2010" has some 11,000
fans; its first target is the Arizona Diamondbacks, which, it notes,
is the third-highest contributor to the National Republican Senatorial
Committee this year. (More targets are promised.)

Even relatively obscure organizations are taking a stand: Sociologists
Without Borders (SSF) "will refrain from holding any meetings or
soliciting the services of any entity, public or private, located in
the state of Arizona," according to its Web site. "We call on SSF
members and Sociologists to boycott travel to or soliciting the
services of entities located in the state of Arizona unless absolutely
necessary until the law is repealed or deemed unconstitutional."

Predictably, all the calls to boycott Arizona have led to
counter-calls from the Right to support Arizona and its anti-immigrant
law. A "National Arizona BUYcott" campaign already has a Web site and
a Facebook group with more than 1,300 members. Media figures like
Tennessee radio host Steve Gill are calling on listeners to patronize
such Arizona-based establishments as Cold Stone Creamery. ("We're
going to go out to Cold Stone Creamery and dish out some free samples
to local listeners and let them buy some Arizona ice cream as part of
our 'buycott' to support Arizona," Gill told KTAR.)

Beyond the right-wing backlash against the boycott, business trade
groups and organizations are combating calls to boycott Arizona,
saying it will hurt their businesses and employees. Upon hearing that
the Washington D.C. City Council was considering a boycott of Arizona,
Joseph A. McInerney, president of the American Hotel and Lodging
Association, sent a letter to Council Chair Vincent C. Gray, calling
the measure "ill-advised." "In Arizona, the state's lodging industry
alone employs 52,000 workers, as well as hundreds of thousands of
other employees in related tourism businesses such as restaurants and
entertainment who depend on visitors and investments," he wrote. "Do
the council members know -- or care -- that they are hurting
lower-income workers in Arizona when it pushes something like a
'boycott' proposal through its chambers?" The city council has since
decided to postpone any such move.

For the moment, the baseball boycott looks like it will be the one
gaining steam.

"In California, Senate president pro tem Darrell Steinberg is drafting
a letter to MLB asking for the league to move spring training out of
Arizona, noting that one in four professional baseball players is an
immigrant," Newsweek's Arian Campo-Flores reported on Friday. "And
state Sen. Gilbert Cedillo of Los Angeles tells me that he's going to
be speaking to Dodgers officials to urge similar action. 'This is the
team of Jackie Robinson, who broke the color barrier,' says Cedillo.
'This is the team of Fernando Valenzuela, and now the team of Manny
[Ramirez].' How, he asks, can that team continue to train in a state
that just put a target on the backs of every one of its Hispanic
residents?"



Sign the petition -- Ask the Department of Justice to block Arizona's
racist law, the greatest threat to civil rights in America in a
generation.



Liliana Segura is an AlterNet staff writer and editor of Rights &
Liberties and World Special Coverage. Follow her on Twitter.

© 2010 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/146712/



Ask Eric Holder to block Arizona's racist law



Targeting: Eric Holder (United States Attorney General)

Sponsored by: CREDO Action

The state of Arizona has enacted a law that is the greatest threat to
civil rights in America in a generation.

Even though it's 2010 and not 1963, federal action is necessary once
again to protect civil rights in a state where the governor and
legislature are writing racial discrimination into the law.

The Fourth Amendment to the Constitution prohibits unreasonable
government search and seizure. But Arizona Governor Jan Brewer has
signed into law SB 1070, legislation that that effectively mandates
racial profiling and police harassment of Latinos.

Not only does SB 1070 require the police to investigate and detain
anyone who could reasonably be suspected of being an undocumented
immigrant, it actually makes it a crime not to have papers providing
your immigration status.

Sign our petition to Attorney General Holder asking him to file suit
to prevent this blatantly unjust and unconstitutional law from ever
going into effect.

If no injunction is obtained by the Department of Justice, the bill
will go into effect in August, creating a unique and frightening
situation within Arizona's borders where anyone who forgets to carry
identification or papers proving immigration status could be picked up
by police. Arizona will become a place where someone who appears to be
a Latino or speaks English with an accent will be at constant risk of
being stopped and interrogated by law enforcement.

The Arizona bill is so extreme that even Tom Tancredo--a rabid
anti-immigrant zealot--opposes this law.

The federal government has a special role to play in situations like
this. When states pass unconstitutional laws that clearly violate the
civil rights of its citizens, the federal government must step in to
protect those rights.

This deeply wrong-headed legislation is not only unconstitutional, but
it demonizes and dehumanizes immigrants and puts them at risk.
Undocumented immigrants who are victims of or witnesses to violent
crime will be afraid to cooperate with authorities -- which is why the
Arizona Association of Chiefs of Police opposes the bill.

The Attorney General has taken an oath to defend the Constitution. He
cannot let this anti-American, unconstitutional attack on the civil
rights of immigrants and Latinos stand.

Petition Text

Block Arizona's racist law

Dear Attorney General Holder,

As Attorney General, your job is to uphold the law and defend the
Constitution. Arizona's new immigration law is grossly unjust and
blatantly unconstitutional. Please go to court and block the
enforcement of this law before it is scheduled to go into effect in
August.

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