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    Ramirez, Sarah

    Chicana/o Studies 111

    14, October 2014

    Professor Zepeda

    Criminalizing Characteristics

    With the passing of the law SB 1070, there has been many arguments that it only

    serves to go against people of color by racial profiling and criminalizing them. This is

    said because this law not only requires people to at all times be able to provide proof of

    legal status, but gives police the right to detain anyone who looks suspicious. Now the

    question is, what does suspicious look like? Inthis essay I argue that SB 1070 racial

    profiles Mexicans or Latinas/os by letting any person of color be detained by police just

    for looking a certain way. Throughout this essay I will present examples about people

    who have experienced this racial profiling themselves to support my argument.

    The supporters of this bill believe that it is costing the state millions to support

    immigrants, but one thing people need to think about in this country is that if immigrants

    arent here, then who is going to do work that rich people dont want to do? (Duque,

    29). And yet people still take this work for granted, by blatantly ignoring this fact or by

    underappreciating the work so much that many Latinas/os are being exploited for their

    work. But one of the main problems, is that immigrants are not being seen as real

    hardworking people, but rather they see [them] as invaders and criminals (Duque, 29).

    A person who looks suspicious is more likely to be shunned when they walk by now

    and not treated as well, but with the racial profiling that this law is enforcing, an

    immigrant who is white and blue-eyed...[people] have treated her well (Duque, 29).

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    The innocent immigrants who come to this country not out of malicious intent but

    in a desperate attempt to find work, have come to be criminalized under this new law.

    This new way of thinking has made harmless people be thought of as strangers who

    have invaded [Americans] dream And colored it (Urrea, 20). But these accusations

    come only from a place of hatred, where a million assumptions are made about any

    person of color. All racial profiling statements about looking a certain way are unfair,

    prejudicial, perhaps even racist assumptions not only about [her], but about anyone who

    would call themselves Mexican (Calderon, 79). And being judged by the way that they

    look is not only wrong and racist, but it is also degrading. For a young woman to be

    questioned about her true nationality and to deny that she really is a person of color is

    more than just a stereotype; its insistence that who [she is], is not valuable (Calderon,

    80). That a Senate law of this United States makes people feel degraded and invaluable

    is not what America should stand for.

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    Works Cited

    Duque, Maria. "Why I Struggle." Presente. Oakland: AK, 2014. 29. Print.

    Urrea, Luis Alberto. "Arizona Lamentation." Ban This. Florida: Broken Sword

    Publications, 2012. 20. Print.

    Calderon, Sara Ines. "What's A Mexican "Supposed" To Look Like?" Ban This. Florida:

    Broken Sword Publications, 2012. 79-80. Print.