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Justice

Hispanic Alabama Schoolchildren Face Bullying In The Wake Of Anti-Immigrant Law

In a sadly predictable development, Hispanic public school students in Alabama — some of whom are United States citizens — are now facing racially motivated bullying in the wake of the state’s unconstitutional attack on undocumented school children:

It was just another schoolyard basketball game until a group of Hispanic seventh-graders defeated a group of boys from Alabama. . . . “They told them, `You shouldn’t be winning. You should go back to Mexico‘” . . . .

Machine shop manager Hector Conde said his family has seen the problem firsthand. Conde, whose family lives in Autauga County north of Montgomery, was appalled when his 12-year-old daughter, Monica Torres, told him a schoolmate called her a “damn Mexican” during a school bus ride.

“She is a citizen. She doesn’t even speak Spanish,” said Conde, a U.S. citizen originally from Puerto Rico. “The culture being created (by the law) is that this sort of thing is OK.”

A Hispanic woman said her 13-year-old niece was called a “stupid Mexican” and told to “go back to Mexico” by a classmate in Walker County.

For the time being, the provision of the Alabama law requiring public schools to check the students’ immigration status cannot be enforced due to a federal court order. But these bullying incidents are further proof that the law does not need to be upheld by the judiciary in order to succeed in its goal of making Alabama inhospitable to certain kinds of people. When the state government places its official sanction on anti-immigrant bullying, it shouldn’t be surprised when people take matters into their own hands.

Nor is this kind of activity limited to children. After a Birmingham, Alabama restaurant owner complained that some of his legal immigrant workers were quitting their jobs in part because they no longer feel welcome in Alabama, his restaurant faced a boycott campaign and a rush of hate mail attacking him for “suporting [sic] those dam [sic] wetback [sic] that are ruining our country.”

Thousands of immigrant schoolchildren stopped going to school when the anti-immigrant law briefly went into effect, even though the Constitution guarantees their right to an education. Local businesses face harassment because they dared to employ fully legal workers who happen to be Hispanic — and they are struggling to replace the many workers who have fled the state. Crops are rotting in the state’s fields because the states farm workers are being driven out of the state. Alabama’s immigration law isn’t just a cruel attack on the undocumented, it is an indirect assault on the state’s economy and on countless Alabama residents who are in the state legally.

Security

Bachmann: Qaddafi ‘May Be’ Still In Power If I Was President

GOP presidential candidate Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN) opposed President Obama’s decision to take part in NATO’s air campaign in Libya. Today on Fox News Sunday, host Chris Wallace reminded Bachmann that last May, she had said his policy in Libya was foolish and “a disaster in the making” and wondered if Bachmann wanted to revisit that claim now that Libyan dictator Muammar Qaddafi is dead and his opponents now leading in Tripoli. The Minnesota congresswoman wouldn’t budge however, saying that if she was president, Qaddafi would still be in power:

WALLACE: If President Bachmann had been in charged, wouldn’t Muammar Qaddafi still be in power?

BACHMANN: Well he may be but I stand by that decision I think it was wrong for the United States to go into Libya. Look where we’re at today, remember again, Barack Obama said we were going into Libya for humanitarian purposes. It wasn’t humanitarian purposes it was regime change and what’s the result? We don’t know who the next leaders will be…it could be a radical element. It could be the Muslim Brotherhood. It could be elements affiliated with al Qaeda. We don’t know yet who that regime will be. But worse we’ve seen the MANPADS go missing and those shoulder fired rockets that are very dangerous that could fit in the trunk of a car. … This is a very bad decision and it’s created more instability in the region, not less.

WALLACE: Are you suggesting that we would be better off with Qaddafi’s dictatorship still in effect?

BACHMANN: The world certainly is better off without Qaddafi. … But consider what the cost will be. … We knew who the devil was that was running, we don’t know the next one.

Watch the clip:

The United States spent just over $1 billion on the war in Libya and not one American life was lost. Now, Qaddafi is dead and the National Transitional Council is positioning the country toward a democracy. Despite NATO’s successes in Libya and validation of the president’s policy as a result, Republicans for the past two days have been struggling to find a way to attack Obama on Libya. The Wall Street Journal’s Kim Strassel unknowingly summed up right-wing criticism of Obama this week, saying “it could have been a better” victory.

Referring to the Republicans’ confusing attacks this week, ABC’s Jake Tapper said today on This Week, “The Republicans need to come up with a more coherent criticism against the president.”

Politics

Rick Perry Goes Birther: After Meeting With Trump, ‘I Don’t Know’ If Obama’s Birth Certificate Is Real

In April, in an effort to appease a vocal group of conspiracy theorists who believe President Obama was not born in the United States, Obama released his “long-form” birth certificate from Hawaii.

That wasn’t enough, however, to convince Rick Perry. In an interview with PARADE Magazine, Perry said that he recently met with Donald Trump and discussed the issue. Perry stated that he doesn’t “have a definitive answer” on whether Obama was born in the United States or “any idea” if Obama’s birth certificate is real. Here’s the transcript:

Governor, do you believe that President Barack Obama was born in the United States?
I have no reason to think otherwise.

That’s not a definitive, “Yes, I believe he”—
Well, I don’t have a definitive answer, because he’s never seen my birth certificate.

But you’ve seen his.
I don’t know. Have I?

You don’t believe what’s been released?
I don’t know. I had dinner with Donald Trump the other night.

And?
That came up.

And he said?
He doesn’t think it’s real.

And you said?
I don’t have any idea. It doesn’t matter. He’s the President of the United States. He’s elected. It’s a distractive issue.

Perry recently secured the endorsement of Orly Taitz, known as the “birther queen” for repeatedly filing lawsuits asserting that Obama was born outside the United States. Taitz told ThinkProgress that she believed Perry will use the birther issue to attack Obama.

Yglesias

The Failure Of Incentive-Compatible Government

The great oddity about the malaise into which all the large democracies seem to have fallen, is that democratic political systems are generally pretty admirably incentive-compatible. An FT article about Nicholas Sarkozy’s efforts to navigate through the Eurocrisis reminds us that “[h]is best showing in two polls this week put him behind François Hollande, his challenger picked by the opposition Socialist party last Sunday, by a margin of 62 per cent to 38 per cent.”

By the same token, everyone knows Barack Obama’s in trouble. Even in Germany, where the economy is doing “well,” the center-right Merkel coalition has gotten slammed in regional elections and would lose if it had to go to the polls tomorrow. The governing conservative coalition in Denmark just lost, the Socialists in Spain are on the verge of getting wiped out, Berlusconi’s grip on power in Italy is shaky, etc. By contrast in Sweden they did big fiscal and monetary stimulus, got the economy back on track, and the government got re-elected. Fighting recessions is something that incumbents heads of government should be really really good at.

Yglesias

Unemployment Is Below Average In Most Fed Districts

It was suggested on Twitter yesterday that Dallas Federal Reserve President Richard Fisher’s tight money views might stem from the fact that the Dallas Fed region has a healthier than normal job market. If you look at it, though, unemployment in the Dallas region is right around the middle of the pack. It is, however, slightly below the national average.

It turns out, however, that the first, second, third, forth, fifth, eighth, ninth, tenth, and eleventh districts are all at least a little bit below average. That’s possible because the twelfth district is ridiculously gigantic compared to the others and also has the highest unemployment rate. Compared to the extent to which the interests of the citizens of California are under-weighted in the Senate, this is small beer. But every little bit of poorly designed institutions hurts a little.

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