Amazon.com Widgets
I’m not mad.  Really.

About Ramblings of a Hopeless Khowaga

Welcome to my Web site. My name is Chris, and I’ll be your host. I live in Austin, Texas, with my partner, Ray, and our child dog, Mocha. You can read more about me, learn 100 random things about me, and if you’re wondering what the heck a khowaga is, click here. Feel free to browse, read, and leave comments!

Tag: ‘immigration’



Border Issues, or, Return of the Sepulchre Volante

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009

It’s a week after I swore up and down that I was going to make a concerted effort to return to blogging on a more regular basis, and this would be my very first post since then.  The irony is so rich that I could serve it with ice cream.

I have a valid excuse: for the past couple of days, I’ve been on the road down in the Rio Grande Valley.  On Monday, we were conducting training in Edinburg, Texas, and on Tuesday, we were in Laredo:

Map image

I took my camera with me, convinced that photographic opportunities were going to present themselves.  Unfortunately, save for the cemetery that was overrun with balloons (the one that I drove past at a good sixty miles an hour), not much appeared that was photo worthy.

I’ve always enjoyed traveling down to the Valley.  The people we’re down there to train are always unbelievably savvy and actually interested in what we’re there to do (and turn out in good numbers — our session in Edinburg may well have been the largest one we’ve ever done).  The Valley itself is quite unlike anywhere else in the state of Texas, which is another reason why I like going down there.  You drive and drive across miles of ranching land (which, to the naked eye, would appear to be synonymous with “nothingness”) and then, just as you reach the outskirts of the urban areas on either of the two highways that run down there, a most interesting geographic transformation takes place.  All of a sudden, the scrub land gives way to lush, green fields.  Cactus becomes palm trees.  And suddenly, it feels like you’ve managed to drive through a wormhole into south Florida (senior citizens with RVs included).

We’ve done work in Brownsville, Texas, before, which is absolutely the end of the line.  There’s no part of Texas farther south than Brownsville – from that point forward, it’s all Mexico.  This time, we were in Edinburg, about an hour’s drive west. 

Our local contact in Brownsville, with whom we’ve become friendly over the years, used to take us to a restaurant across the border in Mexico.  This trip, however, we didn’t discuss crossing the border.  For one, the passport requirement for land crossings kicked in last month, and I don’t like using my passport to enter the United States because apparently there’s something on my Customs and Border Patrol record that makes immigration officers frown.  Second, and more critically, the situation on the Mexican side of the border is pretty tense at the moment.  The State Department issued a warning last week for Americans traveling in the border region, and a good number of the bridges were shut down due to citizen protests believed to have been orchestrated by one or another of the drug cartels battling for control of the major cities along the US border.

So, after we completed our session in Edinburg and headed north for our first-ever session in Laredo, we did not cross the border and take the more direct and apparently superior Mexico Highway 2 that runs between Reynosa and Nuevo Laredo.  Instead, we took the main highway on this side, US Highway 83.

I wrote many months ago about a trip in a service taxi in Morocco that we’ve since dubbed the “flying coffin.”  The trek on US 83 kind of reminded me of that trip.  It wasn’t that I was pulling up behind semi-trucks and then pulling out blindly into the opposing lane to execute a passing maneuver, as our insane Moroccan driver had done, but it certainly was interesting in a “Aren’t you glad you have Mutual of Omaha?” sort of way.  Vehicles pulled out onto the road (which becomes two lanes after civilization is left behind — which happens very quickly) apparently without regard or interest to whether there was oncoming traffic and whether or not it would have time to slow down.  More than once, I got sweaty palms noticing large vehicles in my lane that were traveling in the opposite direction, in the midst of trying to pass slower vehicles but in no particular hurry to get back over to their own side.

And then there was the omnipresent border patrol.  At nearly every vista where the mostly flat geography was interrupted by a hill that afforded a view toward the border off to our left, there was an SUV from the border patrol parked on the side of the road, apparently full of officers who were, presumably, less interested in illegal immigrants than drug traffickers.

I won’t say that it wasn’t a great relief that we managed to reach the outskirts of Laredo before the sun went down.

Our contact for the next day was a very excitable lady who, while very nice, was also a level of manic that might require medication.  Within two minutes of her arrival in the morning, we had established where we would be having lunch.  She also gleefully told us that there had been so much interest in our session that she had reopened registration the day before — which would have been fine had this not left us going through all of our things hoping for one or two copies of brochures and worksheets so that we wouldn’t find ourselves in the awkward position of telling people that they had to share.  Fortunately, at the end of the day, we managed to scrape by with nearly no extras, but enough things for everyone in the room.

Over lunch, she regaled us with stories of life on the border.  “I won’t go over there,” she said.  “It’s really bad.  I mean, they kidnap Americans for the ransom.  Even though I’m lower middle class, we’ve already figured out that if one of us gets kidnapped, we can count on our friends to raise thirty, forty thousand dollars for ransom for me.”  (How this situation would present itself in light of her first statement was a question none of us wanted to raise.)  She then went on to tell us, “You know, they harvest organs over there.  The media doesn’t report on this stuff, but I know it’s happening.  I mean, if you’re sick and you can find a rich American than no one’s going to miss, you kidnap them and take them to the black market.  Look at any one of you — I mean, you’re young and fit.  They’d take your kidneys without a second thought.”

She then went on to tell us that she really wanted to get a gun.  “A cousin of mine lives in Houston, and she carries, and this one night she was being followed and the car pulled up next to her at a light.  So she took the gun out and put it on the dashboard, and they drove off in a hurry.  So, I want to get one, too.”  Clearly her kidneys depended on it.

And so it was, when I rolled into my driveway last night, with both of my kidneys still firmly in place, that it occurred to me to wonder whether that was an indication that I’m no longer young and fit, and my kidneys aren’t desirable.  Hey, wait a minute!  How come the Laredo cartel doesn’t want my kidneys?  They’re perfectly good! 

Hmph.

Anyway.  That was my last trip for a while.  I’m looking forward to being able to put my feet up and relax this weekend, free of travel plans and hotel rooms and chain restaurants.  The conspiracy theories do make for good blog fodder, though …

All over but the voting

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

I’ve remarked to a couple of people this morning that I am actually feeling nauseous with anxiety over the outcome of today’s presidential election.

I was kind of this was the last time around, in 2004, when I was wholeheartedly in agreement with the oft-run photo of the British tabloid asking “How could [exact number of people who voted for Bush] be so stupid?” The idea of another four years of Bush was too hard to take, and–while I was one of the record number of people looking at the immigration Web sites for various other English speaking countries–what got me through it was knowing that there were only four years left.

Well, the four years are up. Back in the day, I thought to myself that John McCain would be a Republican president that I could live with, and maybe, to some extent, he still is. I definitely can’t live with her, however. No matter how silly Tina Fey’s dead-on portrayal on SNL is, what alarms me about her is that she’s opened the way up for every religious right nutjob and neoconservative policy wonk to declare McCain/Palin as “their” candidates.

I’ve had enough of the neocons. They’re after my job, you see, and I’d like them to go away.

The other thing that really has turned me off is the way that the Republicans have exploited the blatant xenophobia that’s been cultivated under eight years of Bush. All it takes is whispers in the hallway that Obama is Muslim to turn voters off of him.

So what? Muslims gave us algebra, the numbers we use, the ability to navigate across oceans. Muslim doctors provided Europe with medical textbooks that were still used in the 19th century. And they accepted the heliocentric view of the solar system long before the Europeans, and no one lost their head over it.

And, no, I haven’t forgotten 9/11. I just seem to be able to remember that 1,999,999,950 Muslims were NOT involved with the 9/11 plot as opposed to the 50 or so who were. One of those numbers is larger than the other. Kids, can you tell which one?

Oh, and let’s don’t even get started on the bit where politically Muslims and Evangelical Christians vote in a block on every major issue. Muslims are pro-life, in favor of the definition of marriage as between a man and a woman, pro-faith based initiatives, and would vote in favor of school prayer as long as provisions were made for non-Christian children to pray on their own. Heck, if the Dems were smart, they would have encouraged people to think Obama was Muslim and encouraged Evangelicals to think that this meant he was their candidate.

The other thing that I find ironic, by the way, is that the whispers about Obama being Muslim are completely incompatible with the other whispers in the hallway that his Christian preacher is a black supremacist — you can’t have it both ways, folks!

I was a bit stunned this morning when I read that there have been legal challenges filed against Obama’s eligibility to run based on rumors that he wasn’t born in the US.

Allow me to go on record: I don’t think Obama is perfect. Far from it. He’s a bit young. He’s a bit inexperienced. But if we’ve learned anything from the Bush administration, it’s that the president’s experience doesn’t matter if he surrounds himself with people that know what they’re doing, and Obama has definitely done that.

What does McCain have? Karl Rove and a woman who thinks dinosaurs ran around with cave men.

It’ll all be over soon. But I’m on pins and needles. C’mon, America. Prove we’re better than that. For once. Please.

Random Round-Up

Friday, January 12th, 2007

Man, it’s been a while since I’ve done one of these, but there’s just a couple of things going on in the world.

Let’s see …

A rocket was fired this morning at the U.S. Embassy in Athens

At this point … and granted, it’s still too early to tell anything … those who form baseless opinions for a living suspect that the culprits were probably one of the Greek domestic terrorist groups. There’s a lot of anti-American sentiment in Greece, where memories run long. The so-called “birthplace of democracy” has had precious little of it in the 20th century. Many Greeks still recall the U.S. support for the military junta that ruled in the late 1960s and early 1970s. In keeping with the colossal irony so prevalent in the eastern Mediterranean, it was the Turkish invasion of Cyprus (which many Greeks and Greek Cypriots fervently believe took place with the blessing of Henry Kissinger) that caused the junta to finally fall.

Hence, the American Embassy is a frequent site for protests and a frequent target of political frustrations. The war in Iraq is desperately unpopular in Greece, as is what Greeks believe is a U.S. refusal to force Ankara to sit down at the negotiating table over Cyprus.

And so the madness spreads ever further away from its epicenter.

On a slightly brighter note (at least for us liburls):

A state judge has blocked the implementation of a city ordinance that would make it a crime to rent to illegal immigrants in Farmer’s Branch, Texas.

I’m not terribly surprised about this, although I’m rather surprised that it took so long. The ordinance was supposed to go into effect today. Too bad I’m not still in San Alguien – I’d love to hear what my new friend has to say about this. The ordinance was suspended on the ground that it wasn’t available for public debate–the city council essentially rammed it through without public comment, which is against Texas law. There are a couple of other challenges still outstanding, and, naturally, the city says it’s going to fight the suspension in court.

Illegal immigration is a huge problem, don’t get me wrong, but the thing about this is (OK, one of the many things about this) that the ordinance doesn’t actually accomplish anything. I mean, it makes Farmer’s Branch a whiter place, but trust me: there’s not a single person anywhere in the world outside of the United States who is reconsidering trying to migrate here illegally because they won’t be able to settle in Farmer’s Branch, Texas. All it does is make it someone else’s problem — something we have a lot of experience with in Texas.

And finally … and you knew I was going to have to say something about it …

The Deciderer wants to send 20,000 more troops to Iraq.

Now, boys and girls, what you need to do is go bang your head against a brick wall and repeat “this makes sense” over and over again, and at some point, right before you pass out from the pain and blood loss, it will. Try it — it totally works!

And on that note, I must get to work now. Happy Friday!

Home Sweet Home

Wednesday, January 10th, 2007

I’m back in Austin, sitting at home with the dog wandering over repeatedly to sniff my feet. I’m exhausted – somehow the drive back is always longer than the drive there, although we actually made the trip in less time. I haven’t unpacked yet, but I’ll get around to it … eventually.

It’s been something of a whirlwind trip down to the Rio Grande Valley and back, and it was unusual in that these trips are usually rather enjoyable and we have a great rapport with the folks that we work with in Brownsville — and in fact that was the case this time around.

What was different was that we added a day to work with a new group of people in a town barely twenty minutes up the road from Brownsville in a place I’ve code-named San Alguien (there are lots of places named San or Santa something in the area, so it seems fitting). They may be only 20 minutes apart, but the experience was like night and day.

The group that we worked with was very conservative — we’ve come to expect that in traveling around the state. Bush jokes go over very badly in some parts, so we don’t tend to make them unless a clear Democratic vibe comes out of our audience beforehand. However, what we weren’t quite expecting was the level of … racism is too strong a term, and elitism is not quite on the mark either, but something in that vein. (Co-ethnic superiority complex, maybe?)

The reason that we weren’t expecting it is that we were in a community that is clearly predominately Hispanic (their term, not ours). In fact, most (if not all) of the people we worked with were Hispanic, which made it all the more surprising when the discussion got going and it was revealed that although they may be Latino in origin, they consider themselves to be much, much, much better than the Latinos on the other side of the Rio Grande. And they needed us to know it.

For example. One lady – who had strong opinions on everything and wasn’t afraid to share them – informed us that she had taught in Brownsville, but had to leave because the school district was too large and, in any case, “every car dropping kids off in the morning had Tamaulipas license plates.” (Tamaulipas is the adjoining state on the Mexican side of the border). At another point during a discussion on migration (legal migration, for the record), she informed us that there is a fleet of fishing vessels who ferry illegal immigrants from Mexico up the coast to Corpus Christi … and can make the 120 mile trip in an hour and a half. (Must be some boats!)

After lunch, I got cornered by another gentleman who asked me what my opinion of “the situation in Farmer’s Branch” is. I had no idea what he was talking about at first — Farmer’s Branch, an upper middle class suburb in the Dallas/Fort Worth metroplex, passed a resolution in city council that imposes stiff fines on anyone who rents to, hires, or does business with illegal immigrants. Having been to the Valley before, I know that a lot of people down there have mixed pasts and that many of them have students who are the children of illegal immigrants or family members on both sides of the border and they’re generally very sympathetic on issues related to immigration. In any case, I wasn’t terribly comfortable with the conversation (although I managed not to rub my nose constantly, which is my usual physical response), so I muttered something about “I’m sure it’ll be struck down soon.”

Oh, no. This fine, upstanding gentleman in front of me does not wish it to be struck down. He wishes that more places would pass such laws so that “they’ll stop sneaking over.” Before I had time to process this fully, he then proceeded to launch into a lengthy explanation of how discrimination does not come from bias.

At this point, I began making a futile attempt to look for Natalie, hoping that she would come and rescue me, but she had very conveniently wandered into the hallway and was pretending to be fascinated by a bulletin board covered in student work.

Now, two things. First, as a gay man, I can’t actually agree with that statement … although I didn’t actually state this, since in professional settings I don’t reveal my sexuality (and, for anyone who wants to argue the need to be out and proud in any and all settings, my response is: YOU stand in front of a bunch of football coaches in rural Texas and queen out. Go on. I dare you.).

Second, when I asked him where discrimination does come from, somehow the question was never answered. (And third: of course he can take the moral high ground. He looks white, he’s straight, and he’s a man. At no point in his life has this individual ever experienced discrimination.)

It was definitely an interesting day from an anthropological perspective, after which Natalie and I got in the car and drove back to Brownsville where we had dinner with our contact there and vented over multiple margaritas. It’s left both of us a little shaken, I think, because it’s one of those things where you hear about people who think this way but never expect to find yourself in a room full of them … We’ve been all over the Valley, but this was a definite first.

At any rate. I have, of course, come up with lots of witty and intelligent responses to all of this since, but it’s one of those things where you can’t quite think of an appropriate response at the time.

Ray has come home and I should engage in matters more mundane and domestic. I’m letting myself off the hook for the evening and will resume deep thoughts tomorrow…

 

Blog Theme by LJP & SLR Lounge