Enrique Morones has been at the heart of the movement to move the 2011 Major League Baseball All-Star Game from the state of Arizona. As much as anyone in the United States, he is uniquely positioned to provide leadership on the connection between baseball and the rights of immigrants. For six years, Morones worked for the San Diego Padres as a Vice President in charge of connecting the franchise to the Latino community, Major League Baseball’s first Department of Hispanic Marketing. In addition, Morones is the founder of Border Angels, an organization that leaves blankets, food and water on the rough desert terrain to provide tools of survival for people crossing the border. Considering the estimated hundreds who die every year from dehydration, hypothermia and sun stroke while crossing those unforgiving acres, Morones could be seen as a hero. Instead he has been the subject of death threats and harassment from those who accuse him of encouraging illegal immigration. Now Morones has turned his energy against his former employer Major League Baseball. Morones has joined the cause of movethegame.org to move the 2011 All-Star Game. Here I spoke to Mr. Morones about his work. All we are seeing is the delayed impact of NAFTA on the Mexican economy, great for U.S. corporate profits but for the Mexican economy and workers...not so great.
When you have a big difference in unemployment/inflation (also known as the “misery index”) between two neighbouring countries, it tends to drive the longer-term immigration patterns.
So you just need to wait until the U.S. Depression picks up speed and the flow of people goes the other way, Mexicans returning home and the surplus American workers head to Canada (“El Norte”).
Bruce, if you're interested I'm thinking about turning my garage into an apartment. I'll just run the pool heater through an old radiator, hook up a hot plate and voila, home sweet home...
Exactly how are an ethically nihilistic people going to be suddenly organized around a moral cause which barely finds support from within itself and its fanbase?
How can we pursue something vaguely called equality while simultaneously holding people like Selig and Rodriguez to, respectively, different variations of "higher standards". And what exactly are these standards?
So I happen to disagree with the immigration bill, personally, but I fail to see a coherent argument against it expressly using professional athletes and their franchises as a political platform. I'm not trying to be cynical, but maybe I'm not seeing something.
Does being a branded athlete enable you to speak politically? Or does it obligate you? Sports stopped being a social cause and reverted to a business with bottom line interests a long time ago. Why do we wax nostalgic when the civil struggles are so clearly different, then and now? Great point about NAFTA above, but these aren't delayed effects - they're prolonged.
no heater for you then...
... given the large number of latinos being signed by MLB clubs, it would seem that racism is not the issue here.
The fact that they come cheaper than local USA-ians, that b-ball is in fact the National sport of many of these countries (the Dominican, Venezuala, Cuba, etc... but not Mexico, of course, where true football rules) and not of the USA, where pseudo-football has ruled the roost for some time now, etc and so on.
So, the real issue is neither racist or nationalist as far as MLB is concerned... Bud is just keeping his head low, trying to stay out of political trouble, when the real problem is economic, and MLB management profiteering at the expense of others and the game in the US...
so, nothing new there then... as the recent leaks in Florida go to further indicate.
Bud's job is to see that the owners/management skate, skate, skate to greater profits, while doing nothing to take the misguided spotlight of players (and fans) etc.
Good job, Bud.
Silence is indeed golden on this issue. Politicized Racism/Nationalism is bad, bad, bad for MLB business.... but what can the poor schmuck do? Take a profit-making opportunity away from one of his owners? Not bloody likely...
Through the spotlight on the surrender of baseball's claim to national sport status in the US? Highlight the fact that little or none of the profits rolling MLB's way are being put back in the grassroots of the sport in the USA?
Best to say nothing, indeed.
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Dave Zirin is the author of the book: "Welcome to the Terrordome: The Pain, Politics and Promise of Sports" (Haymarket). You can receive his column Edge of Sports, every week by going to dave@edgeofsports.com.
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