Adam’s Reviews > Empowered!: Latinos Transforming Arizona Politics > Status Update

Adam
Adam is on page 20 of 167
"After the strike was settled, in 1917, the city of Bisbee removed 1,200 Latino laborers." This is a misrepresentation. The strike was coordinated by the IWW, a radical union that organized across ethnic bounds. A lot of the striking miners were rounded up and marched out of town and loaded onto cattle cars headed for the N.M. desert were Latino, but it was a mixed bunch that included Europeans/Euro Americans.
Aug 16, 2021 08:20AM
Empowered!: Latinos Transforming Arizona Politics

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Adam’s Previous Updates

Adam
Adam is on page 55 of 167
Aug 18, 2021 01:47AM
Empowered!: Latinos Transforming Arizona Politics


Adam
Adam is on page 55 of 167
"Law enforcement— ­ w hether they agreed with the provisions or not— w ­ ere required to enforce the federal immigration laws to the fullest extent of the law. If they failed to do so, or if a person perceived that law enforcement o ffici als failed to do so, S B 1070 created a private right of action for the individual to sue the city, town, or county for neglecting federal immigration laws (Alto Arizona! n.d.)."
Aug 16, 2021 09:39AM
Empowered!: Latinos Transforming Arizona Politics


Adam
Adam is on page 37 of 167
"Furthermore, real, documented threats of terrorism or national security have occurred on the Canadian border, not the Mexican border. Yet, sig nific antly more border patrol and enforcement activities took place on the Mexican border under the guise of national security a ft er 9/11." -- not saying that you are wrong, but where is the citation?
Aug 16, 2021 09:14AM
Empowered!: Latinos Transforming Arizona Politics


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