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Activists rally forces for immigration reform

Immigration reform advocates see time running out

Cynics might call it an exercise in futility, at least this year.

But count Michael Flores among the true believers: those convinced that with a lot of hard work, comprehensive immigration reform legislation could finally move forward in 2010, despite previous failures and the fact that Washington's attention is focused squarely on other issues.


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"This is the time," said Flores, Southern Nevada director of Reform Immigration For America . "We're organized and we're not going to take no for an answer."

In November, Flores, 22, began leading the local arm of a national campaign to reform immigration laws in a way that will keep families together and provide a path to citizenship for the estimated 12 million illegal immigrants living in the United States.

His job includes lobbying congressional representatives and mobilizing the local Hispanic community and others concerned with getting immigration reform legislation passed. He's trying to get people as excited about the issue as they were in 2006 and 2007, when thousands participated in immigration reform marches in Las Vegas.

It's proven to be a difficult task.

Politicians have put the issue on the back burner in favor of such concerns as health care and the economy. Frustration among reform advocates came to a head after President Barack Obama's State of the Union address in January, during which he devoted a single sentence to immigration reform.

While advocates feel it is time politicians made good on their promises, getting others to remain energized has proven tricky, Flores said.

"People are a little hesitant. They don't want to get their hopes up again."

Joanna Nuñez, a University of Nevada, Las Vegas student and member of the United Coalition for Immigrant Rights, said a lot of people have lost hope. "They think it's not going to happen" this year, she said.

Flores and Nuñez gathered last week with about a dozen other student and professional organizers and volunteers at the Progressive Leadership Alliance of Nevada's downtown offices. The meeting of the "comprehensive immigration reform working group" was equal parts pep rally, brainstorming session and support group.

They shared the emotions people in the Hispanic community are experiencing concerning immigration reform: cynicism, frustration, guarded hope.

"What I'm hearing out there is people are very disillusioned," said Vicenta Montoya, a local immigration lawyer and community activist. "People want a realistic presentation of what is politically possible this year."

Whether or not it's realistic to expect reform in 2010, "the immigrant rights community doesn't want to let this go by without a fight," said Petra Falcon, who is part of RIFA's national campaign.

"The president made a commitment publicly when he ran for office to pass comprehensive immigration reform," she said. "It's going to happen, with a fight. There are people in this room that can change history."

Locally, that fight includes planning events, staging rallies, sending out news releases and urging anyone who will listen to call their congressional representatives and demand they work on passing immigration reform this year. It means reaching out to churches, labor unions, the business community and anyone else who could potentially help.

Flores helped organize an immigration rally in front of the Lloyd George U.S. Courthouse in January and a protest in front of Aria at CityCenter that coincided with Obama's recent visit. He's putting together another rally, scheduled for April 10, that he hopes will capitalize on momentum generated from a scheduled March 21 immigration reform march in Washington, D.C. Organizers hope to draw at least 100,000 people to the march in Washington.

Flores is taking some time off from his social work studies at UNLV to concentrate on the work.

"Our efforts are very strong," he said. "We've created a machine that cannot be ignored."

Lately, that machine has taken up most of Flores' time. He doesn't mind. He comes from a family of hard workers.

Flores' grandmother emigrated to the United States from Mexico as a teenager and "had to work her butt off to make it here," first as a nanny, then as a restaurant worker and finally as the owner of her own restaurants, he said.

Flores was working as a busboy by the time he was 7 years old.

Now he wants to help make sure other immigrant families -- some of whom haven't been so lucky -- are able to stay together through immigration reform.

"It's unbelievable how families are getting torn apart," he said. "This has got to be one of the solutions."

Contact reporter Lynnette Curtis at lcurtis@review journal.com or 702-383-0285.

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tim paynter wrote on March 30, 2010 01:47 PM: Jason, I don't think this is going to be an exercise in futility! You will be surprised by the results. The sleeping majority awakens... tim paynter immigrants2bfree


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eddy wrote on March 19, 2010 12:09 AM: all you all need to go to the shrink, you dont even knowwhat you writing about, you just have so much hate that blinds you; nothing its free in this country so if an illegal alien finds a job its because you are sitting at home writing BS on your computer instead of looking for a job!!! so get up find yourself something better to do before we take over all your positions!!! and the unemployment line will be shorter.


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eddy arellano wrote on March 18, 2010 11:50 PM: please let me know where can i find more information about immigration issues, like, laws, more lately news, history; to help me write a short essay for college. Thanks and sorry to bother you.


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Tara Murphy wrote on March 13, 2010 06:07 AM: Time for some gut-level honesty. Over 80% of illegal immigrants in the U.S. are from Mexico, and they are the largest minority in the country. They come from an historically dysfunctional country where corruption, passivity and cheating (not paying taxes, for e.g.) are the norm. I do not admire their history, nor their people for not having shown the guts to take matters into their own hands and form a democratic, egalitarian society. Uneducated Mexicans come here with an assortment of prejudices: homophobia, racism, mysoginy, machismo, superstition and little or no experience in organizing and standing up to their chronically corrupt government/drug cartel leaders. Eisenhower said, "people get the government they deserve". Illegal immigrants do not deserve to be in the U.S. We are not required to take on all of their needs. Their advocates, who seek increased personal power, are barking up the wrong tree when they bully, demand, insist, threaten OUR President to pass amnesty laws. Mexicans are not interested in diversity, only in their own ethnicity and in the generosity of a country and PC lobby that will provide them with what they want. Everything for nothing. Todo es gratis en el E.U.? It's time to say NO. It's time to realize that they are not the victims, we are being victimized by them. In every state, every school, every jail and prison, every community. Their costs far exceed their vaunted 'contributions'. Give their jobs to Haitians. Deduct the costs from the foreign aid we give to Mexico each year. Americans have had enough of the most parasitic, whiniest most expensive ethnic group to inhabit our country.


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Tara Murphy wrote on March 13, 2010 05:34 AM: Time for some gut-level honesty. Over 80% of illegal immigrants in the U.S. are from Mexico, and they are the largest minority in the country. They come from an historically dysfunctional country where corruption, passivity and cheating (not paying taxes, for e.g.) are the norm. I do not admire their history, nor their people for not having shown the cojones to take matters into their own hands and form a democratic, egalitarian society. Uneducated Mexicans come here with an assortment of prejudices: homophobia, racism, mysoginy, machismo, superstition and little or no experience in organizing and standing up to their chronically corrupt government/drug cartel leaders. Eisenhower said, "people get the government they deserve". Illegal immigrants do not deserve to be in the U.S. We are not required to take on all of their needs. Their advocates, who seek increased personal power, are barking up the wrong tree when they bully, demand, insist, threaten OUR President to pass amnesty laws. Mexicans are not interested in diversity, only in their own ethnicity and in the generosity of a country and PC lobby that will provide them with what they want. Everything for nothing. Todo es gratis en el E.U.? It's time to say NO. It's time to realize that they are not the victims, we are being victimized by them. In every state, every school, every jail and prison, every community. Their costs far exceed their vaunted 'contributions'. Give their jobs to Haitians. Deduct the costs from the foreign aid we give to Mexico each year. Americans have had enough of the most parasitic, whiniest most expensive ethnic group to inhabit our country.


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Roy wrote on March 09, 2010 08:04 PM: Immigration reform will break our bank. Already there are mansions accross Mexico built by the Earned Income Tax credit. This is money that was never paid by the recipient to the country. Amnesty will bring millions of elderly latinos to the US almost immediatly. They will jump on Social Security disability. They did not come here to provide us anything. They came here to scam the system taking what they could get. Legallities be damed.
If you don't let them, your a racist!!!


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comment62 wrote on March 09, 2010 06:52 PM: We need something that will take care of the immigrants that are here, but in a humane and justly matter. They are here, and we need to do something about them.

Eduardo, your post is thoughtful & understandable, but not well thought out if this movement is to attract citizen support. When my ancestors immigrated here nearly 200 years ago- they did NOT expect this nation to "TALE CARE OF IMMIGRANTS." Quite the opposite, they worked incredibly hard, under far more difficult circumstances, and with a sense of profound gratitude & pride for the opportunity of new life in a great land. They were responsible for every inch of their lives from the moment they cleared Ellis Island. What drives so many Americans nuts is how someone can CHOOSE to break the laws of another country yet expect to be rewarded. Guess we can blame lack of enforcement for that. BUT to make demands during a devastating economic collapse & war will only lessen support because it shows no connection or empathy for this generous country's many heartaches. I suppose we can thank Lyndon Johnson's "Great Society" for this entitlement mentality that inexplicably has transended those legally qualified (reportedly producing generations of welfare families) to those not even here legally. Millions are here now because they trespassed our borders when Congress sold it soul to big business & our laws were buried under their muck of greed. JFK said it best,
" Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country." That's what it means to be American. I wish you all luck, but these movements continue to alienate American support. America welcomes anyone who does it the "right" way.


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comment 62 wrote on March 08, 2010 09:01 PM: For several decades, Mexican presidents have insisted Mexico would not allow the USA to interfer with THEIR immigration plans deying our soverignity. US citizens were employed & apathetic so our government complied. The US Chamber of Commerce relentlessly lobbied Congress to write amnesty legislation to import cheap labor and break the unions. Emerging immigration advocacy groups instructed new "immigrants" how to work the system for benefits. Their offpring ( each an innocent bystander) had birthright which opened a plethera of social services. With a birthrate reportedly 7 times that of citizens, the system soon became overwelmed, pitting illegals vs citizens for limited government resources & costing taxpayers billions. I think many of us are far angrier with the federal government for offering massive incentives to cross illegally than against someone fleeing their failed country. This "movement" was emboldened by a country paralyzed by political correctness & cultural diversity. A sense of entitlement developed & revisionist, anti-American histories were woven into our own as "rights!" Ultimately,it was the unending numbers, clear inequities & frustration with the fed's blind eye that wore out the welcome mat. It appears 2 standards evolved in applying penalties for law breaking: stiff ones to US citizens, but a furtive form of diplomatic immunity for illegal entrants. Those who attempt to defend/apply our laws are villified or called "racist," (getting old). It makes one wonder if our leaders have forgotten what it means to be American. We feel betrayed. Without laws, even generous civilizations as ours can slide into chaos. Before it's too late: ENFORCE OUR LAWS, revisit the 14th amendment, & pass the Real ID Act. To Mr. Flores, your passion is inspiring & future bright, but Americans have little appetite for protests in these dismal times.


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Eduardo wrote on March 07, 2010 09:04 AM: If you don't fix the immigration system, the pro and anti CIR alike will always complain. We need something that will take care of the immigrants that are here, but in a humane and justly matter. They are here, and we need to do something about them. CIR is something that needs to be done. Obama needs to show more focus on this subject.


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Vicenta.Montoya wrote on March 06, 2010 06:26 PM: There has never been an amnesty in this country. Not in 1952 when the Immigration and Nationality law came into existence, not in 1986 when the Immigration and Reform Act was passed and not now. The 1986 Act allowed persons who were present in the United States prior to January 1, 1986 to apply for temporary residence in the United States. That individual had to show documentary proof of living here by the date specified. The person also had to proof he or she was a person of good moral character. The person was fingerprinted and FBI checks were done. Eighteen months after receiving a temporary card good for employment the person had to affirmatively apply for permanent resident status.

Once again the individual had to show good moral character, pass an exam in English concerning the history and civics of the United States or show proof of graduation from high school or attend 40 hours of instruction in English and history of the United States. Nothing was automatically given. Criminals ended up being deported and if you did not apply for the permanent card in the one year time frame you lost the opportunity to become a permanent resident. Nothing was automatically given. The permanent resident status had to be earned.

Michael J. Fox, the actor, was one of the first persons who applied. He was an undocumented alien all the time he was on Family Ties. Because he was Canadian no one ever stopped to question his citizenship.

The program was a success. people became Permanent Residents. They later became citizens. had children, purchased homes , owned businesses, sent children to college, shared in the American Dream. As a result of legalization wages went up. It worked then. It will work now.


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