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Sunday, April 17, 2011


"All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood." (Article 1- Human Rights)




 Article # 1 of the United Nation's Human Rights states for equalty, but it is more than obvious that people with diabilities will not be assimilated into their societies through the goodwill of the powerful. Disabled people will change society through their increased participation, their skills, experience and insights. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 restructured the attitudes of business, government, and society and expanded opportunities for all Americans, but people with disabilities were left outside.

I beleive people with disabilities should have a say and the oportunity to choose. Prejudice and injustice have been the main problems this group have had to confront in their daily lives. Don't you think it is enough? Just imagine yourselves in their situation, how would you feel if you were denied to attend school or to use the public transportation just becuase you are different?... Something must be done about this major issue, and I have the perfect resolution.

I propose the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA),originally written by Alice Paul. In the past its ratification was neglected, but with your vote my fellow Congress members we can mark history, we can certainly make a change, the change that we have all waited for so long!  The Equal Rights Amendment will eliminate all barriers that people like the disabled face day by day.  It will  it guarantee equal opportunity for individuals in dealings with public and private sector employment, accommodations, transportation, telecommunications, and state and local government services. With the ERA we can stop the abuse and act towards the rights that we all have according to the law and that we all deserve. If you're lloking for a better life free of discrimination and unequal treatment, vote and aprove the Equal Rights Amendment and get ready for the change that will mark this era. With the Equal Rights Amendment everyone will count and we will all have the treatment and benefits that we have always wanted.

Making the CHANGE!


                                                         

Disability rights for disabled people have greatly increased over the last few years when the Disability Discrimination Act came into force in 1995, as it aimed to put an end to the discrimination that disabled people faced everyday. Many changes have been made regarding te rights of people with disabilities. Americans with disabilities have been one of the most disciminated groups. Although groups and individuals have advocated for an end to this oppression, cross-disability rights activism did not begin until the late 1960s.


Many movements and acts were made enabling people with disabilities to have a better and easier life. The independent living movement has been an important part of the movement for disability rights, allowing an individual to manage his or her personal care, to keep a home, have a job, attend school and to participate in the life of the community. There are also many other acts securing for disabled Americans  access to their civil rights, and to the society around  them, the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act of 1975, and most importantly the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, are some of them. The A.D.A. Act has been the most effective one, by stating that people with disabilites had to have the same oportunities as everyone else. It unlawful for the people with disabilities to be discriminated against in the areas of: employment , access to goods, facilities and services ,management, buying or renting of land or property . The Special Educational Needs and Disability Act of 2001, makes it unlawful for providers of education and related services to discriminate against disabled people.

 
We could say that the disability rights and independent living movements have transformed American society. I think it is great the fact that so many acts had been passed regarding these group, because I think they really deserve it. Also it is very important to promote equal opportunities and to assist and give advice on how to treat disabled people because they were really mistreated in the past and it is important not to repeat such barbarity. Many changes have been made but there are many other that need to be improved to further improve the quality of their life.




  






Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Disabled People Fight Back



 
Disabled people have always being categorized as "special" and "different". They are constanly marginalized  and segregated against, and even though discimination for the disabled is against the law it still happens. People with disabilities and their supporters have fought very hard to make their voices heard and stop the mistreatment. They encounter with so many obstacles everyday, and even though they have fought a lot, very little progress has been made throughout the world, especially in the least developed countries.

People with disabilities require certain accomodations and the benefit to not wait in lines, or whatsoever. It has not been an easy path but thanks to all the voluntary support of so many generous people that have struggled for the rights of these people, today they receive a lot of benefits and the right attention they need. Throughout history, many organizations and groups have united to fight back for the rights of the disabled. In 1983 the ADAPT (American Disabled for Accessible Public Transit ) made a move that changed history forever,thanks to them today people have the access to wheelchairs that are installed on the city buses. Today ADAPT is a national grassroots movement with chapters in thirty states.There's also the Disabled In Action (DIA), founded in 1970 by Judith E. Heumann and several other disabled people which is a civil rights organization, committed to ending discrimination against people with disabilities through litigation and demonstrations.

The methods that the disabled people's organizations and groups have used are mostly protests and peaceful demosntrations. This shows the extraordinary, nice and beutiful persons they are. The organizations have only one goal: fight to eliminate the barriers that prevent people with disabilities from enjoying full equality in  the American society. They have struggled a lot to be where they are today but thanks to that today people with disabilities are granted many rights.


Rights of the People with Disabilities
1. The term "disabled person" means any person unable to ensure by himself or herself, wholly or partly, the necessities of a normal individual and/or social life, as a result of deficiency, either congenital or not, in his or her physical or mental capabilities.

2. Disabled persons shall enjoy all the rights set forth in this Declaration. These rights shall be granted to all disabled persons without any exception whatsoever and without distinction or discrimination on the basis of race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or other opinions, national or social origin, state of wealth, birth or any other situation applying either to the disabled person himself or herself or to his or her family.

3. Disabled persons have the inherent right to respect for their human dignity. Disabled persons, whatever the origin, nature and seriousness of their handicaps and disabilities, have the same fundamental rights as their fellow-citizens of the same age, which implies first and foremost the right to enjoy a decent life, as normal and full as possible.

4. Disabled persons have the same civil and political rights as other human beings; paragraph 7 of the Declaration on the Rights of Mentally Retarded Persons applies to any possible limitation or suppression of those rights for mentally disabled persons.

5. Disabled persons are entitled to the measures designed to enable them to become as self-reliant as possible.

6. Disabled persons have the right to medical, psychological and functional treatment, including prosthetic and orthetic appliances, to medical and social rehabilitation, education, vocational training and rehabilitation, aid, counselling, placement services and other services which will enable them to develop their capabilities and skills to the maximum and will hasten the processes of their social integration or reintegration.

7. Disabled persons have the right to economic and social security and to a decent level of living. They have the right, according to their capabilities, to secure and retain employment or to engage in a useful, productive and remunerative occupation and to join trade unions.

8. Disabled persons are entitled to have their special needs taken into consideration at all stages of economic and social planning.

9. Disabled persons have the right to live with their families or with foster parents and to participate in all social, creative or recreational activities. No disabled person shall be subjected, as far as his or her residence is concerned, to differential treatment other than that required by his or her condition or by the improvement which he or she may derive therefrom. If the stay of a disabled person in a specialized establishment is indispensable, the environment and living conditions therein shall be as close as possible to those of the normal life of a person of his or her age.

10. Disabled persons shall be protected against all exploitation, all regulations and all treatment of a discriminatory, abusive or degrading nature.

11. Disabled persons shall be able to avail themselves of qualified legal aid when such aid proves indispensable for the protection of their persons and property. If judicial proceedings are instituted against them, the legal procedure applied shall take their physical and mental condition fully into account.

12. Organizations of disabled persons may be usefully consulted in all matters regarding the rights of disabled persons.

13. Disabled persons, their families and communities shall be fully informed, by all appropriate means, of the rights contained in this Declaration.








Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Oppresion of the disabled people



People with disabilities have been objects of shame, fear, pity, or ridicule. Before, it was legal for state governments to sterilize disabled persons without them wanting to, other laws prohibited them from marrying, or even from appearing in public. Ignorant People, but especially the government, had mistreated these people emotionally and phisically very badly. They used to see them as if they were supernatural things, and felt shamefull of being associated with a "freak", these events still happen but hopefully not as much as before.

People with disabilities are constantly mistreated for the simple reason of being somewhat different form everybody else. Social prejudice kept disabled children out of the public schools, and sanctioned discrimination against disabled adults in employment, housing, and public accommodations.  They suffer from economic deprivation and social disadvantages, also they live with the label of being different. Many of the traditional organizations for the disabled had advised the government that discrimination was not a problem for disabled people and that legislation of laws protecting them was unnecessary.  Everyday disabled people are denied so many things, they don't get the propper attention, medication and time they need. For the goverment they are a burden and for their families, an obstacle  of wich they want to get rid of.
Until the 1950s children with disabilities were hidden away or put into institutions. This was better than the previous century when they were put into prisons/poorhouses with common criminals.


"In all societies of the world there are still obstacles preventing persons with disabilities from exercising their rights and freedoms and making it difficult for them to participate fully in the activities of their societies. It is the responsibility of states to take appropriate action to remove such obstacles" (Key resolutions of the United Nations General Assembly, 1946-1996). Human Rights are fundamental, they are made to be followed whether we like them or not, but as you can see they are constantly violated. We will never have equality, dignity and freedom if we continue violating them.   Disabled people are denied their human rights, this is because people are too blind and eager to accept that we are all equal, that we all have rights and for that major reason everyone should be treated fairly and deserve to have dignity and respect.

http://www.infouse.com/disabilitydata/disability/
http://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/opportunities.htm

Monday, April 4, 2011

History of the Persons with Dissabilities

People had struggled for centuries to gain rights, the disabled people are not the exception but a great example of discrimination, exclusion and segregation. A disability is a  physical, mental, or sensory impairment, that limits the capacity to perform one or more essential activities of daily life Many people in the United States and worldwide are born with disabilities. They are mistreated and excluded from doing many activities, they encounter with many handicaps throughout their lives, but thanks to Civil Rights organizations, they are now seen as part of our community, not and exclusion.



In the United States, the disability rights movement began in the 1960s,Civil rights organizations believe that everyone should be treated equal regardless of race, sex or physical ability. These organizations are firm about their cause and may go to extreme measures to make their message heard. Due to the Civil Rights Movement, many organizations were formed to help people on rights issues. There are many organizations that defend the rights of the disabled people.The American Association of People with Disabilities (AAPD) was formed in 1995, and have been a group since then.  It is the largest organization in the United States that addresses issues relating to the rights of disabled persons.  The Disability Rights and Education Fund, founded in 1979 by people with disabilities and parents of children with disabilities, the Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund, Inc. (DREDF) is a national law and policy center dedicated to protecting and advancing the civil rights of people with disabilities through legislation, litigation, advocacy, technical assistance, and education and training of attorneys, advocates, persons with disabilities, and parents of children with disabilities. There are also Independent Living Center whichare typically non-residential, private, non-profit, consumer-controlled, community-based organizations providing services and advocacy for persons with all types of disabilities.  Their goal is to assist individuals with disabilities to achieve their maximum potential within their families and communities. They work to assure physical and programmatic access to housing, employment, transportation, communities, recreational facilities, and health and social services.


In most countries, one out of ten persons has a disability. Estimations say that there are 500 million of persons with disabilities, a number which is increasing due to many factors, such as: war and destruction, unhealthy living conditions, or the absence of knowledge about disability. According to the US Disabiity Estimates of 2004 there is an estimation of 58, 731,081 of people with dissabilities. The majority of the people that have disabilities live in less developed countries where people lack access to essential services. Although, it may sound mean, poverty can also be associated with disabilities.


Saturday, March 26, 2011

Classmates Essays.

Stephanie Ruiz: 

From Stephanie's blog I learned that the White Americans promised  the Indians help on education, medicine, money and on trade, but they never did, since they always tricked the Indians. She talked about how Siting Bull was honored by his tribe and that he is still respected. We both have the same idea, that most of ths as for the government's fault.

Carlo:

Carlo's blog said that some Indians went to Canada trying to escape the whites persecution. He stated that the natives can improve their today's living style but not alone and I do support him. Also, that native americans were seen as conflictive and aggressive, but that they really were civil and usually acted peacefully. He was always defending the natives, which was really nice.


Paulette:


Paulette's blog talked about mostly about pride and dignity. She said natives lost their pride, self respect and individual identity as they became assimilated. Also that the whites were very immoral and disrespectful towards the natives because they did many bad things to them just to have control.


Hector Porrata-Doria: 


Hector talked about how the natives suffered the things whites did to them, especially having to leave their lands to go to reservations even though they didn't want to. He also says that the whites were too abusive with the natives. He explained the Wounded Knee Massacre which was in December 29, 1890, in Lakota Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, where many people died.


Natassia:


Natassia's blog explains how the natives lands were taken away from them. I learned that many people died trying to protect their culture and the way that they lived. Also, that the whites killed many natives as they found no other way to take their lands away.





Native Amercians vs. White Supremacy

Native Americans had no other option than assimilation. Today, we have the right to choose. Back in the days you had rights only if you were part of the elite society, in this case, a white person. White people were so hungry power that they did whatever they had to as to gain all the land that belonged to the Native Americans. They took advantage of the inocense of the Native Americans and achieved their goals. Whites wanted total control over the Native Americans, they forced them to assimilation, tricked them and took everything away from them.


Back in the 1800's white americans came into the Sioux lands where Native Americans settled, they wanted to have their lands, the gold and all those sources which back then meant a lot.. White people always wanted to have total control. They believed everything had to be done as they said because they were "superior" and for it they ruled and they deserved everything they wanted. They  forced the Native Americans to leave their home lands and put them to live on reservations. Some reservations were the Lakota, Pine Ridge, Rosebud and Standing Rock. Whites wanted the Native Americans to become so like them that they banned the Ghost Dance on Lakota reservations  in December 1890, then on Pine Ridge and Rosebud as the rites of this religious fervor continued.  Native Americans were very naive, but still they struggled againt the whites trying to remain with some dignity and being loyal with in themselves. As the Ghost Dance was banned, Short Bull, Kicking Bear and Sitting Bull tried to resist since they didn't like to be told what to do. By the end, a struggle struck where Sitting Bull died, and none of the Native American's efforts were worth since the whites always had their way.


Assimilation should be an option not an obbligation. Whites wanted the Native Americans to mish into their culture, customs and beliefs as a way to assimilate and become more like them. They wanted Indians to convert into christianity and to speak their languange (English). They even gave them "Christian" names and banned eveything that was not good for the white's eyes. Native Americans had no saying in this whole situation, they either accepted it or died (second option was the best for the whites since they wanted to exterminate the indian race). Charles Eastman, once called Ohiyesa was a great example of this assimilation. He couldn't resist to the white orders so he became assimilated, he was going to med school and had a romance with  Elaine Goodell, a teacher of the reservations.


Native Americans passed through a lot, they were tricked and constantly abused. They were forced to leave their lands and put to live on reservations, where life wasn't easy at all. Some refused to leave their lands but as the situation worsen, they had no other option than accepting. Native Americans and whites were not always fighting, they usually traded and negotiated peacefully. Things went peacefully until the white's started tricking the Indians, like signing the treaty of Traverse de Sioux; when Red Cloud signed it they were promised many things which never happened, the white's tricked him and now he had no option than signing or all of the tribe would be killed.  Also General Sherman and General Custer, they were always trying disastrous things against the harmless Native Americans, like burning their homes and forcing them to do things they didn't want to. The whites betrayed the Native Americans, but there was nothing the Indians could do, if they tried to rebel against the whites they would end up just like Sitting Bull.


It is clear that the only way Native Americans could survive was by assimilating. I think the whites went too far. They were very rude and hard to the Indians. I believe we were all born with differences and were all raised differently, just as the Native Americans and the whites, but to the eyes of God we are all equal, and for that major reason we should all accept who we are. Assimilation was a great option, but it was opt to them if they wanted it or not. Native Americans were very ignorant and whatever they were said they would believe it. I think many of the events that happened could have been prevented if the whites tried to communicate and kept real the promises they made to the Indians. Most of this was for the government's fault, but it is more than obvious that they will never accept it.



Monday, February 21, 2011

My Classmates Blogs

Stephanie Ruiz:  ----->  http://www.tefiruiz01.blogspot.com/

I like the way she thinks on the immigration issue because we kind of have the same beliefs of this matter! Immigrants are treated unfairly and something must be done. I really like how she says that immigrants are equal because she is defending their rights and speaking for them that WE ARE ALL EQUAL. ;)




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Nelsharry Baerga -----> http://sharryknowsit.blogspot.com/


I support Nelsharrys point on saying NO ONE IS ILEGAL! For many people it may seem controversial, but for me it is very clever and most importantly, the truth! I like how she supports immigration and that she is pro-immigration. It really show me that she is a very caring person, and I really like how she expresses the way she feels when she sees how immigrants are mistreated 


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Hector Porrata-Doria  -----> http://sayhellogoodbyeoutloud.blogspot.com/


Hector's family story is very fancy and interesting. I have always liked his last name Porrata-Doria and now I like it more because of its story. I disagree with Hector on saying that it is right that immigrants in Arizona are being deported, I think immigration is a very serious matter and by him saying that people should be deported but that their situation makes him sad makes no sense! But I liked the fact that somehow he feels sorry for them!




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Stephanie Rivera    -----> http://www.ssrivera.blogspot.com/

The thing that I liked the most of Stephanie's blog was her family story. It is a really nice story how her grandparents met.  On the immigration issue I liked the fact that she sees it as a risk but that if it was necessary for the good of her family she would do it, that shows the caring person she is! We both kind of have the same idea about immigration: It is dangerous, but at the end it will worth it ;)

My great-grandfather: A Cuban Immigrant



My great grandfather was Marcos Colon Perez, a Cuban immigrant. He was born in Cuba and immigrated to Puerto Rico when he was still a child. He  along with his family came to Puerto Rico after Fidel Castro took control of Cuba. His family had sugar mills back in Cuba, they were one of the most wealthy families of Cuba but their plantations were taken away by Fidel Castro himself, as their situation worsen they became desperate and found no other option than immigrating to Puerto Rico. 


They could have never made a better decision than moving here. When they moved to Puerto Rico and established in Guayama they became successful easily. My great grandfather is one of the most well-known carpenter in Guayama's history. He even helped on the construction of what is today known as "La Casa Cautiño".  


I didn't know that I had immigrant heritage. I was very shocked because I consider immigrants as heroes and who would say that I was so close to one. His family was very courageous and successful and that really fills me with a lot of mixed emotions. I feel proud, excited and happy, because if they never had the guts to move here, maybe I would be living in Cuba, having a miserable life . I never got to meet my great grandfather, but I feel very proud of him. From now on he is one of my heroes!
(Now I realize why my father is so penny-pinching, because as you may know Cuban are really stingy, ha ha!)

My life as a Japanese immigrant!


My name is Mizuki, I am a 16 years old Japanese immigrant girl.  Me and my family had  moved to the United States from Japan looking for a better and easy life. Things were going on pretty well  not exactly as we imagined it, but at least it was a lot better than living back in Japan. We had a home and food. Me and my brother were attending school and  father had a good job.  Living in the United States was great. We were having the life we had always dreamed of, but things were about to change.



My dad has always been a person who fights for getting what he wants, the one who stands for his family sustaining all their necessities, but most of all a persevering man. For me, he is my example to follow. Being in the United States wasn't easy for him. He worked for many hours, every single day, but at least he was well paid. He worked very hard, he was so good at his job that he was now receiving a better payment than many Americans. His ability to succeed was seen as a menace for his co-workers and their hatred towards him grew stronger after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. He was fired and accused of treason. He was sent to jail and he is currently in it. 

Our life has changed from a dream to a nightmare. It sounds cruel and dramatic, but it is the truth. I felt so blessed and thankful when I came to America, because I thought that our suffering was over, but it was just the beginning of our tragedy. I feel like living in hell. My dad was thinking on saving some money and going back to Japan, but who would imagine that this could happen? That a thing like this would happen to us? I just live with the hope that someday things will be better just as they were when we arrived here!  I have never quit on dreaming, because even though we are now passing through a very hard situation, my prayers were once heard and fulfilled.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Honduran Immigrant Faces Deportation After Helping Her Sister Report Domestic Violence


WASHINGTON  -- An undocumented Florida woman who helped her sister report domestic violence now faces an order of deportation from Immigration and Customs Enforcement, even though her lawyers say she never should have been detected by ICE agents in the first place.
The woman, Rita Cote, 25, is married to a U.S. citizen and has four children, all of them citizens. She has no criminal record. But when police arrived to respond to the domestic-violence call on Feb. 16, 2009, law enforcement instead took Cote into custody, detained her for a week and handed her over to ICE.
Cote now faces deportation at any time to her native Honduras, which she fled as a child in 1998 to escape Hurricane Mitch and its aftermath. If deported, she could be separated from her husband and children for up to a decade.
While law-enforcement officials seek to work closely with their communities to prevent or solve crimes, immigrant-rights advocates say cases like Cote's hurt that cause. The threat of deportation can have a chilling effect on the willingness of undocumented immigrants to turn to the police, they argue, even in similar cases of violent crime, leaving areas heavily populated by illegal immigrants more dangerous and lawless.
ICE officials say their enforcement priorities first target illegal immigrants who have committed serious crimes, but in practice, the agency more often rounds up those whose only crime is being in the country without documentation. The Obama administration has set a record for deportations of immigrants without a criminal record -- expelling so much people than those with a criminal record, although deportation of criminals has also increased.
In a pair of lawsuits filed on Jan. 25, the American Civil Liberties Union claims that the chain of events leading up to Cote's removal order began with racial profiling. The lawsuits accuse the Tavares Police Department, which responded to her sister's 911 call, and Lake County, which held Cote in a detention center for a week, of overstepping their bounds by asking her for identification and taking her into detention.
John Makholm, an attorney representing the City of Tavares, told HuffPost the city rejects the ACLU's characterization and insists that the responding officers followed standard procedure. Officials in the county sheriff's office declined to comment on the ACLU lawsuit facing them because it had not yet been served.
ICE officials had previously issued Cote a removal order while she was still a minor, but ACLU and immigration lawyers said she never received notification of the order.
In 2009, Cote appeared on ICE's radar once again following the 911 call on behalf of her sister, who does not speak English. She was still present when police responded to the call. At that point, ACLU lawyers say the responding police officers swayed from normal protocol and required everyone at the scene to present identification. According to ACLU lawyer Glenn Katon, the police took Cote to jail after demanding that she show her passport rather than another photo I.D., which had her married name.
The ACLU lawsuit contends that asking Cote for an I.D. -- and taking it to the level of demanding a passport -- was a matter of racial profiling by the police and claims police and the county had no authority to detain her. "I find that hard to believe that if this was a white family and someone got into a fight at a party, they'd ask everyone for I.D.," Katon told HuffPost.
Makholm, the lawyer for the city, said the police scanned Cote's identification under normal procedure and found a warrant in the federal database filed by Immigration and Customs Enforcement. They then confirmed the warrant with ICE before an ICE agent called back and asked police to detain Cote, he said.
"In terms of this case, the officers acted appropriately, and she was not targeted because of any ethnicity," Makholm told HuffPost. "She was the person who was wanted on the warrant, and the arrest was made pursuant to U.S. customs. Our view is that if there is a problem, the problem is with U.S. customs laws, and not with the City of Tavares Police Department."
U.S. immigration law leaves little room to maneuver for undocumented immigrants who, like Cote, entered as children. Even though she is married to a U.S. citizen, Cote cannot apply for citizenship under normal marriage visa laws because she entered the country illegally. Instead, she would need to return to her native country and wait 10 years before returning, unless immigration officials waived that waiting period. The Dream Act, a bill that would have offered paths to legal status for illegal immigrants who came to the United States as children, failed to pass the Senate in December.
Cote's second order of removal was issued after the ACLU filed its lawsuits against the city and county. Her immigration lawyer, John Barry, said Cote would likely be granted a reprieve from deportation because of the circumstances of her case. (High-profile cases are more likely to dropped by immigration officials, lawyers say.) Several Florida newspapers, along with Latino news outlets, followed the story of her arrest and the ACLU lawsuits.
"You need media attention, plus something else," Barry told HuffPost. "A health problem or some other kind of compelling family circumstances ends up being helpful."
In addition to the ACLU's presence, Cote's case attracts attention because she is married to a combat veteran, Barry said. He said ICE agents had indicated that Cote will not be deported, but may instead be granted parole status.
Other immigrants in similar situations, though, may not be as lucky, particularly as enforcement programs such as Secure Communities and 287(g) expand ICE's reach.
"They're screwed over, and it's a crime," Barry said. "What this case does is show that the only thing unique about Rita's case is that she happens to be married to a retired U.S. service member. You could think of her being married to any other person who didn't have a combat record, and there's not much that can be done for those people."


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     I think this is really unfair. Immigrants are treated so badly as if they were nothing. Events like this should be marked as a violation to our rights. People are so mean to the immigrants, they do not see the position in which immigrants stand at.
     Rita was not doing anything wrong, but helping her sister with such a serious situation as domestic violation is. I think she acted the way she had to because it was her sister, her blood, who was involved and I would've done the same thing without caring what could happen if I was caught. Rita is a great example of what people is capable of for their loved ones, she is just as other people who struggle to survive in such a difficult world, to be exact: immigrants. When I think about it and put myself into Rita's position, it really affects me.I know I would've done the same thing for my sister, but facing deportation really scares me.  All for what Rita has fought for, all the hard work she has done, everything that she has gone through  in order to be where she is today is at risk, what will she do if she is deported? I really can't  imagine myself being in her situation, of just thinking about it scares me!
     It makes sense the fact that immigration has been banned because they might take away the jobs from the Americans and also to prevent the United States from being overpopulated, but this do not mean that immigrants should be treated so badly. I thing something should be done to present things like this from happening. Immigration shouldn't be a bad thing, if a person immigrates to the United States for a good and fair reason they should be able to stay, if not then it's another side of the story and further action should be taken! But SERIOUSLY, the government should consider the people who goes to the US for a better and easy life!

History of Japanese Immigration



The start of the great period of Japanese immigrantion  to the United States was in the 1880s. Japanese people dreamed of a better life and more opportunities. They left their homeland seeking for peace, stability and prosperity.People from Japan began migrating to the U.S. in significant numbers following the political, cultural, and social changes stemming from the 1868 Meiji Restoration. After the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 that was output on the United States, Japanese immigrants were sought by industrialists to replace the Chinese immigrants. By 1900 the demand for additional mining, railroad, and farm labor brought a stream of young Japanese males to the Western United States. 

From 1885 through 1894, over 28,000 Japanese migrated to Hawaii Many Japanese migrated to Hawaii because the sugar industry had caused an economic boom in the state. By 1900, almost half of all Japanese immigrants in the United States lived in Hawaii, making more than half of Hawaii's population. The majority of these immigrants were mainly farmers and laborers.  After making money in the sugar industry or in Hawaii, many of them would return to their home country, Japan. 

Life wasn’t easy for Japanese immigrants. They struggled to make lives for themselvesMost Japanese immigrants were put to work chopping and weeding sugar cane on vast plantations, many of which were far larger than any single village in Japan. The workday was long, the labor exhausting, and, both on the job and off, the workers' lives were strictly controlled by the plantation owners. The Japanese immigrants practiced a wide range of religions. They practiced different types of Buddhism, Christianity, or Shinto. The majority of Japanese immigrants practiced Mahayana Buddhism. Some of the other forms of Buddhism that the immigrants practiced include Jodo Shinshu, Jodo Shu, and Zen. Living in Hawaii was better than living in the mainland,  for which is one of the main reasons why the Japanese immigrants stayed there. Japanese immigrants didn't encountered problems with the Americans but their rising advancement and success were seen as a menace threatening the living standards of American workers, businessmen, and American society in general. The Japanese community's ability to overcome great hardships and succeed made them targets of envy and prejudice by many white Americans. Anti-Japanese sentiment grew throughout communities in the West, particularly in California. Tensions, prejudice and hatred towards the Japanese grew stronger after Pearl Harbor's attack. 

Immigration is a very serious matter. People risk their lives seeking for a better one for them to be able to sustain themselves along with their families. They come to the United States thinking that they will finally have the life that they have always dreamed of, but what they encounter with is a very different side of the story. I personally don't see immigration as a bad thing and I don't think people should see it as such either. Learning about Japanese immigration has made me see life from another point of view. Now I feel blessed for being American and of having the life that for some may be the best.


Japanese arriving at Immigration Stations
http//:www.angelisland.org