Category: Uncategorized

  • Family Expects Ibrahim Father to be Released Monday

    A source close to the Ibrahim family says they expect Salaheddin Ibrahim, the father of five-going-on-six children, to be released from the Haskell, Texas immigration prison tomorrow, putting an end to the family’s three month ordeal as prisoners of USA immigration authorities.–gm

  • From Outsourcing to Community: Crisis in Border Policy is Ours to Seize

    A Sunday Manifesto

    Not only has immigration policy been torn away from the common sense of communities who live along the border between the USA and Mexico, but the moral responsibility for leadership in this realm has also been outsourced. This morning’s New York Times reports:

    On some of the biggest government projects, Bush administration officials have sought to shift some decision making to contractors. When Michael P. Jackson, deputy secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, addressed potential bidders on the huge Secure Border Initiative last year, he explained the new approach.

    “This is an unusual invitation,” said Mr. Jackson, a contracting executive before joining the agency. “We’re asking you to come back and tell us how to do our business.”

    Boeing, which won the $80 million first phase of the estimated $2 billion project, is assigned not only to develop technology but also to propose how to use it, which includes assigning roles to different government agencies and contractors. Homeland Security officials insist that they will make all final decisions, but the department’s inspector general, Richard L. Skinner, reported bluntly in November that “the department does not have the capacity needed to effectively plan, oversee and execute the SBInet program.”

    On the first day of a two-week border caravan that will traverse the USA border with Mexico, Jay Johnson-Castro reported on a “pathetic immigration system” that is grinding people’s lives past the point of no return into unmarked, mass graves along the USA border with Mexico.

    As we see from the evidence above, and with our own eyes at the T. Don Hutto prison for immigrant families, such brutal chaos brought down upon the common life is happening in a context of actual chaos in responsibility from leadership.

    Wherever we find such a situation we find the duality of crisis revealed as both horror and opportunity. It is time this week to seize the opportunity. We will not be ruled by profiteers. We will not accept a dominion of free trade without free people. Furthermore, there is no reason to expect that the chaos of profiteering can rule over the long run–if the people stay aware and active.

    And, finally, the shocking brutality of power as revealed in the three-month imprisonment of the Ibrahim children, will ensure that the people do not fall to sleep unawares.–gm

  • Coretta Scott King: Grand Mujer del Mundo

    By Irma Muniz "Citlalmina" and Ramiro R. Muniz "Tezcatlipoca"

    Mexicanas/Latinas of the Sixth Sun salute with
    our hearts and love, Coretta Scott King, who will be
    remembered as one of our founding mothers of liberation
    and justice of the coming new American of the world.
    Women of all races have witnessed the epitome of strength,
    courage, and perseverance during the most difficult
    times of struggle note only for civil rights, but for
    women’s rights in America. We will continue with the same
    guidance, inspiration, and spirituality of struggle for
    the restoration of peace, love, and harmony in this world.
    We must recognize and contemplate on our brave
    companion, Coretta, knowing how she must have felt upon
    receipt of a letter from the Reverend Martin Luther King,
    confined from his cell, asking that she be remain firm in
    belief and determination. He stated, ‘"I know this whole
    experience is very difficult for you to adjust to, but as
    I said to you yesterday, this is the cross that we must
    bear for the freedom of our people…"

    This is the cross that women of the 21st century must
    embrace and continue to carry, knowing in our hearts that
    Martin Luther King and Coretta Scott King have become
    archangels of freedom, justice, and spirituality.

    The Reverend Martin Luther King constantly spoke of
    the role of women, sharing that the women in the present
    era must not be afraid to become tomorrow’s leaders and
    address the continuous issues of discrimination, poverty,
    and oppression. He had a dream, and Coretta Scott King in
    her strong, faithful spiritual manner, continued the noble
    pursuit of that dream.

    Now it is us who will fulfill that dream in the
    21st Century. The Reverend Martin Luther King shouted,
    "I had a dream" with all his heart. He would stare into
    the heavens, then fix his eyes upon Coretta Scott King.
    He knew that his wife was (as women are) the essence
    of that dream.

  • Excellence at A&M? We Found It!

    A recently released survey of Texas colleges and universities, regarding proposed responses

    to the Supreme Court’s Grutter ruling, yields a fascinating study in contrasts. Nowhere are the

    contrasts more striking than in the differences found between two presidents at the Texas A&M campus in

    College Station. Well known by now is the initiative of Texas A&M president Robert Gates to disregard

    affirmative action in admissions for the College Station and Galveston campuses. But what has not been

    noticed is the quiet work underway at the Texas A&M Health Science Center, headquartered “across the

    tracks” in College Station.

    The report that follows is based solely on documentary

    evidence made available through open records requests and internet searches. But the documentary

    differences are astonishing and instructive. At Texas A&M, it is the worst of times, but also the

    best.

    On Dec. 19, 2003, the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board asked the state’s

    colleges and universities to report the changes they were planning to make in the wake of the Supreme

    Court’s Grutter decision. The 5-4 decision, handed down during the Summer of 2003, written by Justice

    Sandra Day O’Connor, vindicated affirmative action as a constitutional practice, providing that certain

    criteria were kept in mind.

    The Grutter ruling ended a seven-year period in Texas,

    during which a regional opinion handed down in the Hopwood case, was widely enforced as a prohibition

    against affirmative action. On June 27, 2003, Texas A&M President Robert Gates posted a statement at

    his official web page, declaring that:

    “Last Monday’s Supreme Court decisions involving

    the University of Michigan appear to level the playing field with other universities throughout the

    country, enhancing our ability to attract high quality minority students. Texas A&M already has a

    number of initiatives and programs under way consistent with Texas law to attract such students. We are

    looking to see if the Supreme Court decision offers us additional opportunities to assist in attracting

    a student body more representative of all Texans.”

    So it came as a surprise to Texas

    media, legislators, and civil rights organizations when Gates announced in December that he would not

    be recommending the resumption of affirmative action in admissions.

    The admissions

    policy that the Gates administration ushered through the committee structure at Texas A&M made no

    references to race or affirmative action. It made no mention of Grutter.

    Accompanying

    the written plan were other initiatives by president Gates to put money into scholarships, recruitment

    of students and faculty of color, and hiring a vice president of diversity. According to the chair of

    the Faculty Senate, Martha Loudder, “These recommendations had been made every year since I have been

    involved in the Faculty Senate. It was only when Dr. Gates came to Texas A&M in September 2002 that any

    of them were seriously considered by the administration. Every single one of them has been

    implemented.”

    Dr. Gates argued publicly that by concentrating funding and energies in

    other areas, the goals of racial diversity could be achieved without resort to affirmative action in

    admissions. And his arguments won support from an admissions committee and the faculty senate.

    But Gates’ public arguments were not submitted in writing as part of the official

    minutes for any of the reports. Furthermore, there is yet no record to reflect that Texas A&M

    considered its unique responsibilities to the ongoing process of federally-supervised de-

    segregation.

    What we do have is a list of bullet points, outlining some of the criteria

    that will be considered during the admissions process, along with a note from the admissions committee

    chair, “that time is of the essence.” The undergraduate committee report went from recommendation,

    through Faculty Senate, crossed the President’s desk, and was approved by the Chancellor as an agenda

    item for the Board, all within two weeks’ time.

    Many faculty at Texas A&M who identify

    with diversity read the Gates initiative in terms of the many things that would be done for

    scholarships and recruitment, at last. However, in the highly unusual rush to final adoption, the

    public record does not demonstrate any care whatsoever to present the new policy as a response to

    Grutter.

    In fact, one month after the adoption of the new admissions policy, president

    Gates was calling on Regents to abandon legacy considerations, too. But nowhere does the written

    policy reflect any consideration of legacy admissions. So we are not yet sure what else Texas A&M is

    doing that is not mentioned in the bare bones document.

    All this is history that may be

    skimmed over, if you have been following the news of these events during the past two months. A little

    further down, we will approach the example of the Texas A&M Health Science Center. But first, a brief

    word about the responses from other university systems in Texas.

    In contrast to the

    Texas A&M reply, which returns an already-adopted document that makes no mention of Grutter, the

    Coordinating Board also divulges working statements from Texas Tech University and the University of

    Houston. The Tech proposal says that, “A category for ‘Diversity of Experience’ will be added to the

    review process. Diversity of experience may include, but will not be limited to, study abroad,

    knowledge of other cultures, proficiency in other languages, race/ethnicity and experience with college

    preparatory programs.”

    UH policy makers conclude that, “Therefore, to the extent

    necessary to achieve a diverse student body, and after race neutral alternatives have proven

    unsuccessful, we believe each component institution should have the discretion to adopt admission

    policies which consider the totality of each individual applicant’s background and strengths, including

    but not limited to cultural history, ethnic origin, race, hardships overcome, service to others, extra

    curricular activities, grades, test scores and work experience. Further, an applicant’s background,

    including race and ethnicity, should be an allowable but not determinative consideration in awarding

    some discretionary scholarships.”

    These statements by other university administrations

    in Texas address Grutter directly as a policy matter for Regents to take seriously. Similar language

    is being proposed by the University of Texas at Austin and North Texas University. Compared with their

    peer systems in Texas, the documentary record from Texas A&M is peculiar in that it fails to take

    notice in writing of the fact that a new constitutional framework is at hand.

    Perhaps

    this is why the Journal for Blacks in Higher Education offered the following headline on Dec. 11:

    “Hopwood is Dead, but the Ruling Lives on at Texas A&M.”

    The peculiar document produced

    by the Gates administration is all the more astonishing when contrasted with the reported response from

    the Texas A&M Health Science Center in College Station. Here is the complete text from the

    Coordinating Board’s survey results:

    “Health Science Center programs supply graduates to

    meet the health workforce needs of Texas. Committees in each HSC discipline (Medicine, Dentistry,

    Dental Hygiene, Public Health, and Graduate Education) are currently aligning admission requirements

    with health workforce needs of Texas and these committees will recommend how race and ethnicity are to

    be used, among many other factors, in a narrowly tailored fashion during the admission process. When

    committee recommendations have been completed and submitted to the HSC President for review and action

    changes to HSC admission requirements will be presented to the A&M System Office and the A&M Board of

    Regents. If approved at that leve
    l, State law requires they be published one year prior to use in the

    admission process.”

    What could be better than that? Right there in river city.

    A brief examination of the Health Science Center web page helps to clear up the

    mystery. The President’s name is Nancy W. Dickey, MD. Prior to her appointment as president on Jan.

    1, 2002, she had served as the first woman physician president of the American Medical Association.

    She is editor-in-chief of a widely-lauded internet company, Medem, which provides secure email

    communication for doctor-patient correspondence and a fine library of medical

    information.

    We worry a little that we are so profoundly impressed by Dr. Dickey’s

    leadership. We intend to do her career no harm.

    For further reading, we recommend her

    paper on “Regional Disparities in Health Spending,” where she argues for a methodology called “evidence

    based medicine.” Notice her crucial argument, that traditions of hierarchical knowledge must give way

    to independent inquiry and accessible sources.

    Again, we’re sorry to put you on the

    spot, Dr. Dickey, but we’d like to see you invited across campus some day.