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Don’t Work! Don’t Buy! Don’t Comply! |
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| View List of Solidarity Events in other Cities | |
Donations needed for the all-night vigil on July 28th and all-day presence at the State Building on July 29th:
Donations can be brought to the Derechos Humanos office, 631 S. 6th Ave, or to the State Building on the day of the event. Questions? Contact Frida at: aprpeace@hotmail.com |
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¡Ya Basta/Enough!
Month of Resistance begins in Tucson, Ariz.
Tucson, Ariz.
On June 29, a coalition of 17 Tucson community organizations kicked off a month of resistance against the racist and divisive SB 1070 law with a well-attended press conference, one month before the law goes into effect.
![]() Protest in Atlanta this June wants no
All-Star Game in Arizona. Photo: Sofia Sopa Teona
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The press conference was held in downtown Tucson outside the State Building, which is located at an intersection across the street from the federal courthouse, where mass deportation proceedings take place daily. The proximity of these two buildings has caused this intersection to become the focal point of immigrant rights’ demonstrations in this city.
Isabel García, immigrant rights activist and leader of Derechos Humanos, a community organization, opened the press conference by proclaiming in Spanish and English, “We are announcing our actions against SB 1070, to put pressure on the Obama administration to stop this enforcement madness, and we proclaim our resistance.”
Other coalition members spoke about the culpability of U.S. imperialism in creating the flow of migrants by enacting so-called free trade agreements, such as NAFTA, which force tens of thousands of Latin American farmers off their land and then force them to make the choice to either migrate or starve.
A representative of Jewish Voices for Peace noted how Palestinians live under an SB 1070 of their own, citing Israel’s military occupation and an Israeli law that forces Palestinians to carry documents at all times.
The coalition has broad support and includes the youth organization Tierra y Libertad, the Indigenous group Calpolli Teoxicalli, as well as University of Arizona Students Against SB 1070 and Students for Justice in Palestine. The International Action Center, Tucson May 1 Coalition, Alliance for Global Justice and We Reject Racism Campaign are also participants. After continuous organizing throughout the week, protesters surrounded the State Building in a human chain of resistance in a three-hour demonstration on July 2.
The organizing continues with a major demonstration planned for each Friday evening and culminating in a day of action against SB 1070 on July 29. “If a law is unjust, our duty is RESISTANCE!” says the coalition’s leaflet. Contact tucson@workers.org or info@tucsonmay1st.org to join this campaign of resistance.
“A Love Letter to Tucson”
By Mixelle Rascon
Inspired by all of you who have sacrificed so much para una comunidad con dignidad
Desert blooms,
multiple scents,
abundant in the air amidst our conversations,
new talk about SB 1070 and 2281 have come early this spring season-
death season.
Ocotillos, saguaros, chollas, are starting to rise as high as temperatures and soon,
small shriveled prayers will evaporate into hopelessness along our tribal lands.
The bodies have already started to come in,
86 so far.
La migra,
vigilant like birds of prey along cliff dwellings,
painting America’s White picket fence some thousand miles long with militarization,
enclosing the American Dream of exclusivity,
of denigration.
Like coyotes,
following their pray,
they make their way to South Tucson.
Picturesque murals of Las Adelitas, Cesar Chavez, and Emiliano Zapata,
are now images of sadness, of rape,
chipping away as ICE agents swarms like ants,
hunting for something sweet.
“Illegal”
the word agitates their creed,
candles lit with signs held high,
and as quick as steam rises from the pavement,
Chicanos have already taken to the streets.
Do I look illegal to you?
Marchas,
chants,
tears of separation,
lights and sirens.
¿No tengo papeles y que?
Hand cuffs carved in my wrist,
still smelling like the sweat of the Capitol 9.
The sting of internment camps, of deportations forms, of thirst,
is ever-present in his voice.
As we drive beside the purple mountains,
a breeze of resistance comes to sooth me,
a desert whisper,
and as quick as it is aggressive and defiant she tells me,
Arizona will be yours again!



