Sunday, June 17, 2018

THE OLD WETBACK LAW OF 1954 TO INDISCRIMINITELY ROUND UP ILLEGALS FROM SEA TO SHINING SEA HAS COME FULL FORCE IN TENNESSEE IN THE 21ST CENTURY - THE HOME STATE OF DAVY CROCKETT- ICE GETS TO DEPORT 54 FAMILY MEMBERS WHILST THEIR CHILDREN SUFFER - THE TRUE OUTCOME OF THE FAILED IMMIGRATION POLICY - FAMILIES SEPARATION - THE 21ST CENTURY TRAIL OF TEARS

1954 OPERATION WETBACK

One morning in April, federal immigration agents swept into a meatpacking plant in this northeastern Tennessee manufacturing town, launching one of the biggest workplace raids since President Trump took office with a pledge to crack down on illegal immigration.
Dozens of panicked workers fled in every direction, some wedging themselves between beef carcasses or crouching under bloody butcher tables. About 100 workers, including at least one American citizen, were rounded up — every Latino employee at the plant, it turned out, save a man who had hidden in a freezer.
The raid occurred in a state that is on the raw front lines of the immigration debate. Mr. Trump won 61 percent of the vote in Tennessee, and continues to enjoy wide popularity. The state’s rapidly growing immigrant population, now estimated to total more than 320,000, has become a favorite target of the Republican-controlled State Legislature. In 2017, Tennessee lawmakers passed the nation’s first law requiring stiffer sentences for defendants who are in the country illegally. In April, they passed a law requiring the police to help enforce immigration laws and making it illegal for local governments to adopt so-called sanctuary policies.
But Morristown, a town of 30,000 northeast of Knoxville that was the boyhood home of Davy Crockett, has drawn migrant workers from Latin America since the early 1990s, when they first came to work on the region’s abundant tomato farms. As stepped-up security has made going back and forth across the border more difficult, many of these families have settled into the community, enrolled their kids in school, and joined churches where they have baptized their American-born children.

No comments:

Post a Comment