Ongoing Immigrant Struggles - Mrs. Chu’s Story is a Story of Many
Written By Tina Lam
Every early morning at dawn, the frail yet cheerful Mrs. Chu anticipates her daily activities at the senior center. She puts on her coat and backpack and grabs her cane as she looks up at a black and white portrait of her late loving husband, whom she lost to old age. With much enthusiasm, she heads towards the apartment elevator, where she navigates her way to two buses and uses limited English to greet and thank her bus drivers.
The Farmers vs the Corporations
Written By Luis R. Garcia Chavez
Farms have been a symbol of the American way of life for generations. The idea of a man/woman owning their own land, making their food, and establishing a good life though hard, honest work is a symbol all Americans wish to emulate. In reality, agriculture is now an oppressive, difficult system that sees regular people and immigrants abused by agribusiness corporations.
From Enemy to Friend: Unions & the Immigrant Community
Written By Luis R. Garcia Chavez
Unions and immigrants have had a tenuous relationship since the inception of employment unions… They believed that these workers were causing their wages to fall and a reduction in union power against the employer. However, as union rates have dramatically dropped, their relationship with the immigrant community has changed
A Look at The Undocumented Community: Bridging the Gap Between Knowledge and Action
Written By Medlyn Grasheyella
Illegality is a spectrum consistently and inaccurately represented as being black or white. We're “good” immigrants or we’re “bad” immigrants. We came “through no fault of [our] own” or we came the “wrong” way. We have protection through Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) or we are completely undocumented.
The Politics of My Block
Written By Brandon Zuniga
The guy who lives next door played his loud music yesterday until four in the morning, on a workday… I had to wonder if my neighbors felt the same way, or if they realized that we were to blame as much as him…
The Complexities of the American Dream in a U.S. that Upholds Capitalism and Oligarchs Over Human Lives
Written By Ruth Velazquez
Living in a country that holds capitalism in the highest regard comes at the cost of working- and low-income families’ livelihood and peace of mind. Capitalism is ideally an economic system that allows everyone to thrive through the free market…
Education in a Colonial Society
Written By Medlyn Grasheyella
Colonialism is an ongoing process that constructs the realities of western modernity. The legacies of colonialism are so deeply interwoven into the cultural fabric of our modern society that it dictates contemporary historical trends, geography, political institutions, policies and social structures…
Here is Why Undocumented Immigrants Cannot Apply to Adjust Status
Written By Michel Ramirez
I am one of the 11 million immigrants that reside in the United States without legal status. Whenever people ask me why I didn’t come to the country legally or why I don't apply for a green card, my answer is short: there is no such option.