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Nicole Foy on Immigration and Labor CounterSpin ([link removed])
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ProPublica: An Immigrant Died Building a Ship for the U.S. Government. His Family Got Nothing.
ProPublica (10/22/24 ([link removed]) )
This week on CounterSpin: Reading the news today, you might not believe it, but there was a time, not long ago, in which it was acceptable to say out loud that immigration is a boon to this country, and immigrants should be welcomed and supported. Now, news media start with the premise of immigration itself as a “crisis,” ([link removed]) with the only debate around how to "stem" or "control" it. That the conversation is premised on disinformation about crime ([link removed]) and wages ([link removed]) and the reasons US workers are struggling is lost in a fog of political posturing. But immigration isn’t going away, no matter who gains the White House. And children torn from parents, families sent back to dangerous places, workers’ rights denied based on status, won’t be any prettier a legacy,
no matter who it’s attached to.
Journalist Nicole Foy ([link removed]) reports on immigration and labor at ProPublica. She wrote recently about the life and death of one man, Elmer De Leon Perez ([link removed]) , as a sort of emblem of this country’s fraught, dishonest and obscured treatment of people who come here to work and make a life.
We hear that story this week on CounterSpin.
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Plus Janine Jackson takes a look back at recent press coverage of NPR's overseers ([link removed]) and the Washington Post's non-endorsement ([link removed]) .
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