Sunday, August 19, 2007

Paranoid

"Leadership in this society here would naturally fall to the paranoids... But you see, with paranoids establishing the ideology, the dominant emotional theme would be hate. Actually hate going in two directions; the leadership would hate everyone outside its enclave, and also would take for granted that everyone would hate it in return. Therefore their entire so-called foreign policy would be to establish mechanisms by which this supposed hatred directed at them could be fought. And this would involve the entire society in an illusory struggle, a battle against foes that didn't exist for a victory over nothing."

- Philip K. Dick, "Clans of the Alphane Moon" (1964)

Friday, August 10, 2007

Edmar Alves Araujo, R.I.P.



Araujo was a house painter and roofer from Brazil, living in Milford, MA. On August 9, he was picked up by the city police in Woonsocket, RI on a routine traffic stop, and was unable to produce a valid driver's license. The police booked and fingerprinted Araujo, learned he was an undocumented immigrant under a 2002 deportation order, and called the federal office of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Araujo's sister learned he was in jail and drove to Woonsocket. She told the police that he was epileptic and needed medicine; the police told her that he could tell them himself about his medical condition, and told her to go away. (The cops later acknowledged that she visited the station; later they claimed they did not know of Araujo's condition until he was taken away by federal agents. Araujo died later that afternoon. According to the Massachusetts Immigration and Refugee Advocacy Coalition, his was the 63rd death in ICE custody in three years.

It's unsurprising that ICE has little regard for the health of detainees. When the feds raided a factory in New Bedford several months ago, they shipped dozens of people off to detention facilities in Massachusetts in Texas without asking if they had dependents at home, and without notice to family members. Nor is it strange that people are dehumanized because of a historical construct, like Japs, Jews, Indians, "illegal immigrants." Araujo was, by all accounts, a nice guy.

"There's night and day, brother, both sweet things; sun, moon, and stars, brother, all sweet things; there's likewise a wind on the heath. Life is very sweet, brother; who would wish to die?" (George Borrow, 1803-1881)