A few thoughts on Arizona's immigration law and the WSJ editorial.
A little legal mistake in the WSJ piece that's bugging me but illustrates how dangerous this law is: they say the law allows police to stop suspected immigrants then arrest them even if they don't commit a crime. That's not exactly true. They are committing a crime because the law makes
being in Arizona without proper immigration status a crime in and of itself, which is why police can now demand papers of whoever they have a "reasonable suspicion" is an illegal.
The law doesn't define what a reasonable suspicion is, so there's nothing explicitly racial in the text, but we all know better than that, don't we? The effect is clear: anyone who is Hispanic must have their identification on them
at all times or risk arrest, period. That's pretty fucking shocking. As a country we
don't require our citizens to have ID cards. Now we're a country that doesn't require its citizens to have ID cards unless you're brown-skinned and live in Arizona.
There's nothing inherently wrong with an editorial being politicized, by the way, because editorial boards are by definition givers of opinions, not fact-deliverers. I'm generally unimpressed with WSJ's editorials that I read, but that's a different matter. And it's true Arizona is the victim of national paralysis on immigration, but saying Obama is going to/has politicized the law, however, is silly. The law was hyperpolitical to begin with, and no one on either side of the debate should pretend otherwise. Likewise, accusing Obama of not delivering immigration reform in an election year is true, but it's hardly his fault alone, he just gets top billing, because WSJ. Look at the Republicans' axiomatic opposition to pretty much anything the Dems introduce.
EDIT: An extraordinarily angry Linda Greenhouse (NYT Supreme Court reporter) on the Arizona bill.
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/04/26/breathing-while-undocumented/?ref=opinionEDIT2: As far as the politics are concerned, the Republican governor of Arizona has seen her strong lead late last year deteriorate as Hispanics shore up support to her Democratic challenger. As one might expect, following her signing of the bill, she's more popular than ever with Republicans in the state, and anathema to Hispanics.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/04/27/terry-goddard-pulls-ahead_n_553823.html