Latin America
Related: About this forumResolving Border Crisis Requires Increasing Legal Migration - OpEd
April 19, 2024
By Benjamin Powell
Given former president Donald Trumps rhetoric during the Republican primaries, we can expect immigration enforcement on our southern border to be a major focus of his presidential campaign.
However, any solution to our border difficulties must entail reforms that make legal immigration a more plausible option for would-be migrants.
In a Super Tuesday speech, Trump said that things are happening that are unthinkable at the border. There are millions of people invading our country. This is an invasion.
Although his rhetoric is extreme, undocumented immigrants had a record 2.5 million encounters with border agents in 2023, causing difficulties for many communities.
Increased enforcement alone will not solve our problems because the root cause of undocumented immigration, in light of the massive economic opportunities for migrants, is a U.S. policy that essentially prohibits legal migration for most people.
More:
https://www.eurasiareview.com/19042024-resolving-border-crisis-requires-increasing-legal-migration-oped/
GiqueCee
(1,323 posts)... that no one wants to address the REAL elephant in the room regarding the so-called border crisis?
Responsibility for this ongoing train wreck must be laid at the feet of the real culprits: Ronald Reagan and the CIA. The Reagan administration undermined, and ultimately eliminated, the duly elected governments of several Central American nations. Reagan also used money from illegal weapons sales to Iran to train and fund the notorious "Death Squads" that decimated those countries.
And now we're dealing with the consequences of that bastard's malicious actions. We should be doing whatever we can to rebuild those countries we betrayed because "Commanizum!"
Reagan was an evil man. But then, that can be said of every conservative that Satan ever defecated.
If and when the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders is updated to Volume 6, it should state unequivocally that conservatism is a mental disorder on the sociopathy spectrum. It certainly dovetails neatly with existing criteria for sociopathic behaviors.
Judi Lynn
(162,377 posts)05.31.2021
Ronald Reagan Made Central America a Killing Field
AN INTERVIEW WITH
GREG GRANDIN
In the 1980s, the Reagan administration used Central America as a testing ground to rehabilitate US imperial "hard power" after defeat in Vietnam. The results were predictable: death squads, massacres, and murderous repression of left-wing movements.
Latin America has played a crucial role in the history of US empire and not simply because of its proximity to the US. As historian Greg Grandin argues in the recently reissued Empires Workshop: Latin America, the United States and the Making of an Imperial Republic (reviewed by Hilary Goodfriend for Jacobin here), countries south of the border have been used as a crucible in the formation of US policy, a testing ground for its imperial theories, and a touchstone for domestic movements.
One critical moment was the rise of Reaganism, when neoconservatives like Jeane Kirkpatrick and Elliott Abrams steered the USs foreign policy and rank-and-file members of the New Right took a keen interest in fighting left-wing movements in Central America. Right-wing leaders later used the lessons they gleaned from brutal counterinsurgency programs in El Salvador in the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan.
In a recent appearance on the California-based progressive radio show Against the Grain, Grandin spoke with radical journalist Sasha Lilley about the many ways Latin Americas resistance to US empire has reshaped American politics. Their conversation has been edited and condensed for clarity.
SASHA LILLEY
How important has Latin America been for the United States as an imperial power?
GREG GRANDIN
Its been critically important. Its easy to talk about Latin America as a site in which the US imposes its imperial will, carries out coups and regime changes, and pays no attention to the consequences and disastrous results. But theres another story to tell. Latin America was a challenge to the founders of the United States. They immediately had to deal with the fact that the Western Hemisphere had multiple republics, and that they shared with the founders of the United States a sense of American exceptionalism.
Latin America resisted US expansion ideologically, economically, and politically in ways that, say, European empires prior to the collapse of Spain and England in the Western Hemisphere, or indigenous communities, couldnt. That pushback forced the United States to figure out new strategies to project its power. Ascendant political coalitions in the United States used Latin America to work out their worldview and their tactics, and to reconcile contradictions among different constituencies.
That is something absent from most discussions of the relationship of Latin America t.o the United States. Its easy to talk about Latin America as this place where US empire has run roughshod. Its much more difficult to understand the way Latin America has shaped the domestic politics of the United States.
More:
https://jacobin.com/2021/05/greg-grandin-empires-workshop-latin-america
ETC...
GiqueCee
(1,323 posts)... before bedtime! Thanks!
BTW, I always feel a little bit smarter after reading your posts. I love 'em!