Onward Together

Onward Together
Showing posts with label Immigrants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Immigrants. Show all posts

Sunday, June 17, 2018

Immigration Atrocities

Immigration Atrocities Must Stop
Separating Children from their Parents is Inhumane

The Trump Republican Party’s assault on basic human dignity and respect for the family continues unabated. Every time I think they cannot sink any lower on the depravity scale, they take it further down by miles.

Ours is a country made great and strong by immigrants who came to our shores seeking freedom from religious or political persecution and a better life for their families. My first immigrant ancestors came from Germany in the 1700s and settled in upper New York State. They farmed and became prosperous. They joined the Revolutionary Army and fought with Washington to repel British rulers and undo unfair taxes. My wife’s Brewster ancestors came to Plymouth, Massachusetts on the Mayflower and stood up for religious freedom that came to be enshrined in our founding documents.

Wave after wave of immigrants came to America and helped build our cities, railroads, canals, and many other mechanisms of economic growth. Many who came spoke no English and had no education. They took the jobs no one else who had already gained a measure of security would take. Those immigrants brought their families to a better home than they left.

One of the dark sides of the immigration epic found its way into our history when those who came before and gained some success looked down on some of those who came later as less worthy or less deserving. The newcomers had to knock down these barriers and show their worth before becoming accepted by those several generations off the boat. Sometimes they had to organize into unions to make sure the doors stayed open to continued upward mobility.

Another dark side of our immigration history is found in the treatment of people of color by the Anglo-European majority. The involuntary immigration of those stolen from Africa aside, immigrants from Asia and South and Central America, with skin tones yellow to brown, faced additional hurdles. They tended to settle in Chinatowns and Little Havanas in major cities, seeking the protection of racial isolation.

All of the injustices visited on these later immigrants, pale in comparison to the newest atrocities being imposed upon immigrant families who seek safety and a better life by the Trump administration. It is made worse by the acquiescence of those Republicans in Congress who have the power to stop them.

Following the historical lead from dictators past, immigration authorities are now forcibly separating young children from their parents when the family units cross the border without proper permission. Those now effectively orphaned are sent far from their parents with no way of staying connected and housed in hastily converted empty big box stores set up with wire cages usually found in animal shelters. Their parents are not told where their children are being held and have no way to communicate with them. The damage inflicted upon these young humans by this treatment will stay with them for the rest of their lives. They and we can take little solace in the heartless solution offered by Attorney General Sessions, “if you don’t want to lose your children, don’t come here illegally.”

Not content with just tearing families apart, Sessions recently slammed the immigration door shut to many from south of our borders by announcing that fleeing from domestic or gang violence will no longer be accepted as a legitimate reason to seek asylum in the United States. The realities of domestic and gang violence in parts of Central and South America are well documented. Those who resist or fail to assist have legitimate fear of violent reprisals and have every reason to flee. 

These immigrants, along with many who come from Mexico without proper visas, are willing to roll up their sleeves and work in our restaurant kitchens, dairy farms, vegetable growing operations, and other occupations requiring long workdays and back breaking labor. They take jobs that most already here never apply to take. Why we shun people willing to work hard and become productive future citizens baffles me.

We have a representative in Congress who plays a central role in overseeing these and other immigration policies and has the power to bring a much more humane cast to how we treat those who come to our shores. Senator Ron Johnson chairs the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs. He is in a unique position to stop the family destroying atrocities and establish legislative policy on who may seek asylum. Contact Sen. Johnson at 414-276-7282 and tell him to stand up to the Trump administration’s immigration policies.

We are engaged in behavior equal to the horrors of the slave trade we fought a civil war to abolish. It must stop.

Wednesday, May 2, 2018

Social Responsibility

Claiming Social Responsibility
Requires Hard Choices

“Social Responsibility” is generally thought to include working with a higher purpose than mere profitability, a striving to improve our society and strengthen community life.

To some on the right side of the political spectrum, the phrase has taken on a pejorative meaning and they use it to label left leaning folks and groups as “do gooders,” consistent with their world view that we should just care about ourselves and not each other. 

Some organizations use “social responsibility” as part of their mission statement. Claiming this mantle is meant to show a concern for the well being of others and a commitment to making the communities they serve better through their good works. 

Our local Y (formerly the YMCA) and the national Y organization have staked a claim to being socially responsible. The Y touts its social responsibility in its promotional materials and offerings. It stresses “healthy living” by offering exercise and fitness classes, youth programming, nutritional and health screenings, child care and other endeavors meant to promote long, healthy lives for all ages of members.

I have long been associated with the Y. I learned to swim in Y pools as a kid. I attended Y sponsored summer programs and camps well into my adolescence. As I aged, I came back to the Y to regain lost fitness, continue my cardiac rehab, and reconnect with other seniors in my community. I try to get to the Y on Washington St. three times a week to work out and meet with my personal trainer, who has helped me stay alive.  By partnering with Silver Sneakers and other health insurance programs for seniors, the Y has made membership free to those on fixed incomes.

All of these activities certainly entitle the Y to claim that it acts in a “socially responsible” manner. Unfortunately, when attempts were being made to expand the Y’s social responsibility activities to include more current social issues, the current Y management was not interested.

The first issue came in the form of a request to make the Y a “Safe Space” for people who felt attacked or threatened in the new wave of anti-immigrant, anti-LBGTQ sentiments that sprang up after the last presidential election. The Y was asked to participate in “Safe Space” training and to post a small poster in the window indicating that the Y would offer protections to those harassed or threatened. The former “Social Responsibility” director refused the requests, indicating that the Y does not discriminate against people of color, those with non-majority sexual orientation or gender expression or those in minority or immigrant groups. She did allow placement of the “Safe Space” poster on a community bulletin board in an upstairs hall in the building, but refused to replace it after it mysteriously disappeared from the board.

The second attempt to engage the Y in an expanded vision of  “social responsibility” involved its fund raising program that included accepting funds from and advertising for a local business whose mission is to encourage the taking of human life by armed violence. Again the Y dropped the ball and refused to even discuss the matter at a recent Board of Directors meeting. 

The Y started a campaign to solicit funds from local donors. In exchange for a $1,000 donation, the donor got his or her name on a small banner hanging from the rafters in the Y lobby. For a $2500 or larger contribution, the donor received a much larger banner hanging closer to the floor with their name. Most names on the banners are well known members of Washington County’s donor class.

One prominent name on a large banner on the first row is Delta Defense coupled with the logo of the US Concealed Carry Association. I have written here before about Delta Defense’s owners and their attempts to purchase respectability with corporate largess. For those who do not know, the company provides support to the concealed carry/self-defense movement and advocates for an individual’s absolute right to take human life through armed violence.

When I tried to point out that the Y’s claim to “social responsibility” was inconsistent with taking Delta Defense money and advertising its brand, the Executive Director and the Executive Committee of the Y’s Board of Directors decided not to engage in the discussion about gun violence in our community and refused to bring the issue before its full Board for a discussion of its “social responsibility” policy. 

Organizations claiming the mantle of “social responsibility” cannot ignore the social issues of our time just because they are controversial or may anger some of their members. If you are going to be socially responsible, you have to be willing to examine what that means and take positions consistent with your mission even if it means giving back some money and letting marginalized people know they are welcome and safe.

Waring Fincke is a retired attorney and serves as a guardian for the elderly and disabled with a Sheboygan County non-profit agency.

Wednesday, September 6, 2017

Protect the Dreamers

Protect the Dreamers
No Hate Allowed Here

Immigration reform has been a hot button issue since people started travelling to new places. We are a nation of immigrants and those who settled here in the first instance would claim that all those who came after them and took their lands are here illegally. We white folks settled those claims in the Indian Wars of the 1800s by brute force and genocide, but never you mind that part of our history.

The current effort to rid our shores of brown skinned immigrants was announced with a smirk by Attorney General Jefferson Beauregard Sessions this week. President Trump made the call, but left it to Sessions to announce the decision and he did so gleefully.

Former president Obama tried without success to fix immigration in Congress, but the republican majority prevented a comprehensive fix. As a last resort, President Obama implemented DACA, the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, to tackle what appeared to be an easy part of the problem. He protected the Dreamers, kids who were brought to our shores by parents who entered this country without proper documents.

DACA made it possible for the Dreamers to remain under certain conditions. Almost 800,000 received DACA protected status because they met conditions that include registration, proof of entry while a minor with parents without documentation, educational attainment or military service and lack of a criminal record. They paid a hefty fee for the privilege to boot. As adults with a protected status, they are productive members of our communities.

The average DACA recipient is 26 years old and came here at the age of six. Ninety-one percent are gainfully employed. One hundred percent have no criminal record. They pay $500 to renew their status every two years. One, a Houston paramedic, died rescuing people in his flooded city after Hurricane Harvey.

With the stroke of a pen, the Trump/Sessions administration took away DACA protection for these neighbors of ours, subjecting them to easy incarceration and deportation, unless Congress acts to solve the problem by next March.

The GOP controlled Congress has not been able to pass a single piece of significant legislation yet. Internal divisions between ultra conservative members of the Freedom caucus and more moderate GOP pragmatists have prevented House Speaker Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell from advancing a budget, passing healthcare reform, or much of anything else. Tax code reform bills are next, along with funding the wall on our southern border, infrastructure repair and natural disaster relief measures. With all this on the congressional plate, and little GOP interest in talking with Democrats, comprehensive immigration reform or even protection for the Dreamers appears well beyond the horizon for consideration in this short period of time.

Make no mistake. This move is just another of the racially motivated actions by those currently in power to Make America White Again. Trump’s rhetoric and actions increasingly appeal to those white Anglo-Saxon evangelical racists who voted for him as he tries to shore up his political base against the rising tide of opposition from those in both parties and the Independent middle who fear further erosion of our democracy.

Former President Obama took the unusual step of weighing in on President Trump’s action and concluded his condemnation of it with the following:

Ultimately, this is about basic decency. This is about whether we are a people who kick hopeful young strivers out of America, or whether we treat them the way we’d want our own kids to be treated. It’s about who we are as a people – and who we want to be.
“What makes us American is not a question of what we look like, or where our names come from, or the way we pray. What makes us American is our fidelity to a set of ideals – that all of us are created equal; that all of us deserve the chance to make of our lives what we will; that all of us share an obligation to stand up, speak out, and secure our most cherished values for the next generation. That’s how America has traveled this far. That’s how, if we keep at it, we will ultimately reach that more perfect union.”

We must protect the Dreamers just like many Germans did when they hid the Jews from Hitler’s thugs. We must stand up for our neighbors, friends and co-workers who share in the American Dream. Hate, prejudice and discrimination must not be allowed to triumph.


Waring R. Fincke is a retired lawyer who serves as a guardian for minors, the elderly and disabled.

Tuesday, May 16, 2017

Reject White Nationalism

White Supremacy Prevents Democracy

White nationalists recently marched at night in Virginia holding flaming torches while chanting racially charged and support for Russia slogans. The historic reference to Klu Klux Clan nighttime, torchlight marches was not lost on anyone familiar with America’s racist history. 

One of the Virginia marchers’ objections was removal of Confederate war hero statues from public areas in several Southern states.  Others phoned death threats to the crane companies employed in New Orleans to take down Jefferson Davis’ statue. The crane operators had to work at night and wear masks while taking down the statuary for their own protection.

Let that sink in.

Trump’s thinly veiled campaign plea to white supremacists, “Make America Great Again,” followed by his open embrace of unabashed white nationalists Steve Bannon, Sen. Jeff Sessions and others has unleashed a wave of racially motivated violence and protests across the country starting during his campaign rallies and continuing into his presidency.  His appeal to those who hated Barack Obama for no other reasons than his mixed race heritage and temerity to have been the leader of the free world for eight years was clear.

Jeff Sessions’ appointment as Attorney General and much of their subsequent shared agenda continues to exacerbate white fear of darker skinned fellow Americans. White racists are being openly encouraged to lash out publicly against those perceived as different and inferior, even after being shamed in Facebook videos. Videos from Wal-Mart checkout lines, public beach confrontations and stand your ground shootings by fearful white citizens and even police officers are much too common.

Those who denigrate fellow citizens because of perceived superficial differences seem to be easy prey for weak-kneed politicians who happily whip up racial frenzy instead of thoughtfully addressing real problems facing all of America’s citizenry. Senseless calls to deport or imprison those with different skin tones, foreign sounding names, culturally different clothing choices or non-Christian religious practices further inflame white fears and baseless notions of white superiority.

Travel bans unconstitutionally aimed at those who believe in Islam and come from some Middle Eastern countries, but not others, evidence Trump’s discriminate hatred of Muslims without a shred of proof they pose a danger to the homeland. Federal trial and appellate courts rightfully look to Trump’s campaign promises as evidence of his illegal racial and religious motivations in proposing the bans. Many of his supporters use the bans as a license to harass and intimidate people who look “Muslim,” even though they may just as easily be Christians, Jews or Hindu.

This imaginary fear mongering has found its way into our public policy in many other disturbing ways. Cuts to urban public education, failure to pass much needed infrastructure funding, get tough on crime policy pronouncements, frenzy over gun rights, opposition to sensible firearm restrictions, restrictions on local political control, new voter suppression laws, gerrymandered political districts, attacks on reproductive choice, restrictions on public health policy, environmental regulation rollbacks and even foreign policy decisions all have roots in white nationalistic superiority beliefs.

America is already great, in large measure because we have historically overcome notions of white Anglo-Saxon Christian superiority in favor of inclusion and diversity. We are stronger and project a more vibrant and creative image to the world when we embrace and celebrate our differences. We are better when we are kinder to our neighbors and the rest of those who share in the riches our fragile planet can provide. Divide and conquer politics diminishes our greatness and weakens the American fabric, especially when motivated by racial animus.

Trump’s pathetic calls for an end to words that incite violence will continue to ring hollow until he purges the ranks of his political appointees of the white superior nationalists and reverses the policies he and they have implemented to forward their mutually shared agendas.

Those of us from white Anglo-Saxon backgrounds take for granted our privileged position in American society and political life. That needs to change in favor of actively embracing a more diverse and inclusive world-view if we are to survive as a democracy. Authoritarian imposition of white superiority will never succeed and is a sure path to the end of the American democratic experiment.

All of us need to take a hard look at the actions our government is taking and hold those who enact them accountable when racial or religious bias is shown to motivate changes. We must step up and demand that our representatives adopt race neutral policies and laws that do not favor any religion over another.


Waring R. Fincke is a retired lawyer and serves as a court appointed guardian for the elderly and disabled.

Wednesday, December 28, 2016

Never Again

Never Another Kristallnacht
Evil will not prevail

There is an old saying, “those who refuse to learn from history are doomed to repeat it.” We are entering an era where our national government will ignore the lessons of history and all of us will be doomed to repeat them. I fear it will not end well.

Donald Trump’s campaign, including the candidate himself, embraced the spurious notions that white people are superior to those with different skin tones, that Christianity is the preferred religion and that physical violence against those “others” as well as those who dare to disagree is acceptable. Threats and intimidation are approved and used to try and silence critics.

Let me take you back to Germany on the night of November 9-10, 1938. On that night, while government officials looked on but did nothing to stop it, members of the German SA Paramilitary and German civilians systematically sought out Jewish businesses, synagogues, homes and hospitals. They smashed windows, looted, arrested many Jewish men and killed hundreds. Buildings were demolished with sledgehammers. Jews were moved to concentration camps. The pretext for these extreme actions was the earlier assassination of a German diplomat by a Jew living in Paris and later by claims that Jews were inferior to Aryans and could not be allowed to marry pure Germans. All of this was preceded by systematic government sponsored propaganda that blamed Jews for all of Germany’s ills. And so began a purposeful and public “pogrom” to rid the German state of Jews.

That night became known as “Kristallnacht,” or the night of the broken glass, from the shards of the windows that filled the streets. Incidents recently reported here in the Daily News and others are apparently the beginnings of our own “Kristallnacht.”

Casa Guadalupe is a respected non-profit in West Bend that helps Spanish speaking immigrant residents learn English and American culture. It is completely apolitical. It does, however, provide needed services to people of the same ethnicity Donald Trump deemed rapists and criminals. Many of those immigrants work on our local dairy farms and in our restaurants. They play a vital role in our local economy. Someone, in the dead of night, put rocks through front windows of Casa Guadalupe’s office on North Main Street not once, not twice, but three times since late November.

If these were isolated incidents, it might be written off as just kids creating mischief. Unfortunately, Casa Guadalupe’s window damage was preceded by similar attacks on the homes of two people who had the temerity to display large “Hillary for President” signs in their yards during the recent election. They too had rocks put through their windows and dents put in their siding. Democrats have had signs stolen and damaged in past elections, but never have peoples’ homes been damaged. These are law-abiding, tax paying West Bend citizens whose property was damaged as payback for disagreeing with the community’s political majority. Just think if someone had been sleeping in those rooms as rocks came through the windows.

This behavior is unacceptable. Damage to property is never appropriate to advance a political agenda. There is another old saying that fits here as well. “The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men (and women) to do nothing.”

Law enforcement still looks for those who caused the damages. No arrests have been reported.  Cowards who break windows with rocks under cover of night cannot be allowed to continue. Those responsible have most likely not kept silent about their “good deeds” in defense of the empire. If we are not to descend into the anarchy that faced German communities in the lead up to World War II, the good people of our city need to speak up and report the rumors and leads to the police. Let the justice system do what it does to correct illegal behavior.

Our city leaders have been strangely silent as these attacks were reported to local police and reported in this paper. Where is their outrage and condemnation of these cowardly attacks on our citizens’ property and a respected community institution? Silence equals complicity and clearly sends a message that fascism in pursuit of ideological and racial purity is the new norm.

As a society and community we will be noted in history by how well we treated each other and took care of those who find themselves on the fringes. West Bend is better than allowing cowards to break windows in the dark. At least, I still have hope that we are and that we will not experience another “Kristallnacht.” It is up to all of us.


Waring R. Fincke is a retired attorney and vice-chair of the Democratic Party of Washington County.