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Hillary Clinton Cries Crocodile Tears for Latin American ImmigrantsPosted on Feb 19, 2016By Meleiza Figueroa At first glance, Thursday seemed like a banner day for Hillary Clinton’s “minority firewall.” Several respected leaders of Latinx organizations offered their enthusiastic support for the Democratic presidential candidate, while at the same time—Beyoncé-style—her campaign dropped a new, emotionally charged ad into the Nevada market two days before the state’s crucial caucus event. In the ad, a 10-year-old Latina girl expresses fear for her parents, who have just received a letter of deportation. Clinton urges her to be “brave” and let Clinton do “all the worrying”; the candidate chokes up as she tells the child, “I’m going to do everything I can so you won’t be scared.” Though the ad was obviously meant to be warm and inspiring, it chilled me to the bone. I grew up in Los Angeles—the great Latinx-majority metropolis I once heard described as “the northernmost city in Latin America”—as the child of immigrants, and I have been a witness to the great transformations wrought by the dynamics of immigration over the last few decades. And I cannot reconcile Clinton’s newfound role as “worrier-in-chief” for immigrants in the U.S. with what I know about the policies she has supported for that vast region south of our border where many immigrants to the United States (especially those lacking legal permission) come from. The “pull factor” of her new, fashionably humane stance on immigration policy cannot be considered outside the context of the “push factors” that compel poor, peasant and working-class Latin Americans to leave their families and brave the incredibly hard, long and increasingly dangerous route to El Norte. Many of these push factors—including the devastation of local livelihoods and family-based agriculture, extreme exploitation (especially of women) in the low-wage maquiladora economy, and the outright terror of political violence—can be traced directly to policies Clinton supported and, in a few cases, personally acted upon as secretary of state. A look at her foreign policy record with regard to Latin America finds plenty to be scared about. Indeed, the very prospect of Clinton in the driver’s seat of the American empire should trigger alarm bells in anyone who has witnessed or lived through the consequences of Central America’s “dirty wars.” Yes, the bloody legacy of regime change in America’s backyard started with President Reagan, not Secretary Clinton, but two things—her embrace of Henry Kissinger as a “friend” and “mentor” on foreign policy and her personal involvement in the 2009 coup in Honduras that forcibly removed President Manuel Zelaya, a left populist, from power—reveal her commitment to maintaining a legacy of political terror in Latin America that has caused millions of people to flee their homelands. Advertisement Square, Site wide Mark Weisbrot of the Center for Economic Policy Research has reported extensively on the Honduran coup and its bloody aftermath, as well as Clinton’s personal involvement in forcibly removing a democratically elected leader from office and preventing his return—a plan of action to which she not only admits but boasts of in her memoir (and ode to Kissinger), “Hard Choices.” This approach to foreign policy, as Weisbrot notes in one report, is also where Clinton’s “secret email issue” becomes extremely relevant to the question of what kind of commander in chief she would be:
Clinton’s role in the Honduras coup alone should be sufficient to show that she is no friend of the Latinx immigrant community, but in the last Democratic presidential debate, on Feb. 11 in Milwaukee, she went even further to dismiss the humanity of migrant children caught up in the violent aftermath of the regime change she encouraged and partially engineered. Here is the pivotal exchange between Clinton and Bernie Sanders:
Once again, like a Freudian slip, Clinton’s hawkish attitude undermines her attempt to claim the mantle of humanitarianism, and I was a little disappointed that Sanders in that moment did not go further to press her about her role in creating and maintaining the violence in Honduras that families were desperate to send their children away from. New and Improved CommentsIf you have trouble leaving a comment, review this help page. Still having problems? Let us know. If you find yourself moderated, take a moment to review our comment policy. |
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