Tuesday, April 11, 2006

Queers of Color Respond To L'Affaire Cannick

Oh dear! The response to Jasmyne Cannick's now infamous op-ed in The Advocate , "Gays First, Then Illegals" has become even more heated. Pam Spaulding at The Blend has linked to an "Open Letter to the LGBT Community" which was posted on Christopher Goeken's Queer Law Watch blog on Monday. Pam had some quite incisive points in her post, which was titled "Immigration vs. gay rights -- not a zero-sum game." However, the open letter is an even more devastating critique of Cannick's article, to wit:

[...]

We are painfully aware that lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities still lack many basic protections under the law in this country, including the right to care for and support all of our families, in the various ways in which we construct family and kinship. Nevertheless, supporting immigrant rights, while we continue to work for LGBT liberation, does nothing to hurt our cause. In fact, we believe the opposite to be true, and want to work towards building powerful coalitions between immigrant and LGBT movements to work together for social justice.

We are also aware that many immigrant right advocates have (intentionally or not) used anti-black rhetoric to move their agenda forward. Arguments such as “Don’t treat us like ‘criminals’” or “We are doing work that ‘other’ Americans won’t do” have the effect of positioning immigrant narratives as subtly juxtaposed with American stereotypes of non-immigrant black communities. They leave native-born black Americans as among the only people who do not have access to the immigrant narrative, and so are in a permanent position of subordination, as the state consistently negotiates and redefines citizenship and “American-ness” for almost everyone but blacks. Nevertheless, the solution to this problem is not to abandon support for the struggle of immigrant communities. Rather, we call on immigrant movements and (non-immigrant) black organizations to work together for real racial and economic justice in this country. Together these movements can work to end the exploitation and targeting of both communities, and to ensure that black folks and immigrants do not end up having to choose between competing for low-paying jobs, or being targeted for detainment or imprisonment.

As lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people of color, we support the current immigrant rights marches and rallies happening across the country this month, and we march too. We march because immigrants are among the most politically vulnerable, underpaid and exploited communities in the country, and are asking for basic human rights, including the right to live free from torture and exploitation, and the right to work. We march because we recognize the connections between the state attacks on immigrant and LGBT communities, and that LGBT immigrants in particular are disproportionately affected by much anti-immigrant legislation. We march because we oppose the heightened policing and criminalization of immigrant communities, including the increased militarization of the border, as mandated by HR 4437 and Senate bills. We march because we oppose indefinite and mandatory detention of noncitizens—as well as the mass incarceration of people-of-color-communities in the U.S. more broadly—and envision a society that ensures the safety and self-determination of all people, regardless of national origin, race, class, gender or sexuality. We march because we oppose the guestworker proposals, which would continue the exploitation of many low-wage workers. We march because we demand the repeal of the HIV ban. We march because our sexualities have been historically criminalized by this country, and we understand that “law” and “justice” are not the same thing.

[...]

We also call upon our community to imagine how much more progress we could make if we all stopped thinking of social justice as a zero-sum game.


Dayum!! You should go to Queer Law Watch and read the whole thing, but it is exceedingly well-written, compelling and comprehensive. I just wish I had written it myself! :-) The letter calls on the organizations that Jasmyne Cannick is associated with, like the National Black Justice Coalition and National Stonewall Democrats to clarify their position with regards to immigration reform and rights for immigrants, so it is likely these issues will continue to be discussed for the forseeable future.

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