Category: Uncategorized

  • Valley Leads Job Growth for Texas, USA, and Mexico

    Dynamic Growth in the Rio Grande Valley
    By José Joaquín López
    Dallas Fed

    Texas Manufacturing employmentIts proximity to Mexico and fast-growing, binational job market are major factors in the Rio Grande Valley’s economy. They’re a large part of the reason employment has increased at a faster, steadier pace in the Valley than in the United States, Mexico or Texas as a whole. Despite rapid job creation, the Valley remains relatively poor. The McAllen–Edinburg–Mission metropolitan statistical area ranks last among the nation’s 361 MSAs, with a per capita income of $15,184 a year, less than half the national average of $31,472. The Brownsville–Harlingen MSA comes in next to last at $16,308.

    The combination of rapid job growth and low income is unusual. In a study covering 1967 to 1997, Dallas Fed economist Keith Phillips found weak employment gains in other states’ low-income counties—annual averages of 2 percent in Kentucky, 0.4 percent in West Virginia and 0.3 percent in Mississippi. Valley employment, by contrast, rose 3.4 percent a year over the three decades.

    Southwest Economy

    Issue 2, March/April 2006
    Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

    http://www.dallasfed.org/research/swe/2006/swe0602c.html

  • New Evidence in the Ramsey Muniz Case

    Note: the following email from Irma Muniz passes along a claim by her
    husband Ramsey that new evidence has been discovered about the
    circumstances surrounding his 1994 arrest for marijuana trafficking.–gm
    —————

    Dear Friends:
    What would any person with a past conviction do upon being
    SUDDENLY PURSUED FOR NO REASON after having gotten
    out of a car he had just been asked to move? What would he
    choose to do with the car key? Ramsey had only seconds
    to think as he quickly rushed to a pay phone to try
    and reach an attorney. In the rush he thought,
    "If I give them the key, it is giving consent to search
    a car that doesn’t even belong to me. If I keep the key,
    it will implicate me in something." He never made it.
    If this was done to Ramsey in 1994, why shouldn’t one
    believe that the same happened in his first conviction?

    The enclosed is an excerpt of a letter from Ramsey Muniz in
    response to a letter received regarding his case against
    the United States government. Please forward this letter
    to students in Chicano studies programs, Mexicano law students,
    law student associations, civil rights organizations,
    and listservs. All interested parties may contact the
    National Ramsey Defense Alliance for additional information.

    –Irma Muniz
    *****************

    August 14, 2004

    Dear Armando:
    Shakespeare said, "as the waves make towards the
    pebbled shore, so do our minutes hasten to their end."
    (Sonnet LX). The loss of our friend, Raul, shows us a
    very important fact about life, a fact we must remember.
    "Life goes on forever toward its end, never slowing down
    or going back. Our lives do indeed ‘hasten to their
    end.’" (The Movement of Time – Shawn Waddell).

    During my almost eleven years in one of American’s
    arduous prisons, I have shared the cultural endeavor
    that we, Los Mexicanos, have organized throughout the
    entire southwest within the state and federal prison
    systems of America. Raul, outside, was a clear example
    of what Los Mexicanos can do in this country. Here, and
    from here, my beliefs and principles against the
    oppression and discrimination toward nuestra gente have
    been strongly expressed – more strongly than ever. For
    this reason, I will never give up on claiming that my
    trial was not conducted fairly. Of course, you are
    correct by stating that circumstantial evidence tying
    me with that vehicle was the basis for my conviction.
    And certainly, all the courts are expected to give
    deference to jury findings, regardless of my explanation
    to the contrary. But your very welcome opinion is based
    on a relitigation "doctrine," which is not the basis for
    reopening my case. Let me explain.

    Evidence only discovered a few months ago shows a
    link, prior to my "alleged participation," between the
    government and a confidential informant (the owner of
    the load found in the vehicle in question), who was
    recompensed for setting me up in this case. Of course,
    neither Dick (my trial counsel) nor I knew of this
    evidence. In Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419 (1995), the
    Supreme Court reviewed the standard for granting
    collateral relief where the materiality of suppressed
    evidence was considered. In sum, the court held that
    a "reasonable probability" of a different result is
    shown when the government’s evidentiary suppression
    undermines confidence in the outcome of the trial.
    115 S. Ct. at 1566. As you know, Kyles’ holding has
    been the subject of explanation and exploration in
    subsequent courts of appeal decisions.

    For example, in United States v. Smith, 77 F.3d
    511 (D.C. Cir. 1996), the court reversed drug related
    convictions nothing that, post Kyles, materiality
    [of suppressed] information is not gauged by a
    sufficiency-of-the-evidence test, 77 F.3d at 512,
    citing Kyles. In other words, the
    evidence in my case showing that my conviction "hinged"
    on a key hidden in my sock, which tied me to the loaded
    vehicle, would be irrelevant under Kyles. In Smith,
    the reversing panel described the holding in Kyles,
    noting "a reviewing court must focus on the fairness
    of the trial the defendant actually received rather
    than on whether a different result would have occurred
    had the undisclosed evidence been revealed." Accordingly,
    the question here is whether in the absence of this
    evidence, did I receive a fair trial, within the meaning
    of Kyles.

    As to whether Blakely applies to my case or not, any
    response to that would be premature. First the Court must
    effectively overrule McMillan, 447 U.S. 79, something it
    has twice declined to do, and hold that Blakeley applies
    to the Federal Sentencing Guidelines. Second, any
    favorable ruling in this matter must be retroactively
    applied before I put my horses to run. Although it is
    possible to argue that under Tyler v. Cain, 533 U.S.
    656 (2001), in which the Court held that a new rule of
    criminal procedure may be retroactive through a series
    of that Court’s cases (the combination of Schriro v. Summerlin,
    U.S. June 24, (No. 03-526, 2004 WL 1402732 at *5-7), and
    Winship,) the Schriro’s Court’s conclusion that Ring v. Arizona
    should not be applied retroactively is a problem. The only
    difference between Ring and Blakely is the name of the state
    (Arizona-Washington), and apparently, more important
    (considering Teague’s prong against retroactivity), the
    involvement of a lower standard of proof which undermines
    the accuracy of the proceeding’s outcome.

    Because the Arizona law (in Ring) already required
    aggravating factors to be proven beyond a reasonable doubt,
    it appears that arguably, in Schriro, the majority’s analysis
    against retroactivity was limited to the Ring rule. But I don’t
    need to torture my brain with this question, after all, "if a
    precedent of the Court has direct application in a case, yet
    appears to rest on reasons rejected in some other line of
    decisions," it is the Supreme Court who has "the prerogative
    of overruling its own decisions." Rodriguez, 490 U.S. at 484
    (1989); State Oil Co. v. Khan, 522 U.S. 3, 20 (1997) (same).
    Thus, I must wait. If I see a good chance, surely, without
    doubt, I will be part of that fight. For now, however, the
    Kyles argument is my main target.

    Thank you for taking the time to inquire about my case.
    You will be constantly in our prayers for strength of
    your Mexicayotl (consciousness).

    Sincerely,

    Ramiro R. Muniz
    **********************

    http://www.freeramsey.com

  • Tom Philpott: Border Sanity Via Farm Policy

    If we agree that a global economic system hinged on export and long-distance trade is energy-intensive, and that US policy (and by extension, IMF, World Bank, and WTO policy) has for decades worked to
    subsidize and promote global trade, then a way forward comes into view.
    An environmentalism that challenges this fundamental status quo has real potential to bolster sustainability. By developing and promoting local production for local consumption on both sides of the border, the US economy can wean itself from its schizophrenic addiction to disenfranchised Mexican labor. And the Mexican economy can begin to work for its own citizens, not for the global investor class.

    To do so means forging cross-border coalitions to challenge the assumption that state power exists to promote long-distance trade. One place to start: the 2007 Farm Bill, which Congress will soon take up. The
    bill will govern how the government subsidizes agriculture. Since the 1970s, the federal government has spent hundreds of billions of dollars
    rewarding bulk production of environmentally ruinous commodities like corn, which also threaten rural livelihoods in Mexico.

    Let’s work to rewire federal farm policy to promote organic agriculture destined for nearby consumption. Ending the commodity-corn subsidy alone will instantly provide relief to beleaguered rural Mexicans now contemplating a hazardous trip north to a nation that both relies on and scorns them.

    Toward a Green Agenda on Immigration, By Tom Philpott, Grist.org, Wednesday 12 April 2006 (via Truthout and Roberto Calderon’s list).

  • Molly on Diane

    It don’t get no better than this. Molly Ivins reviews Diane Wilson’s book, Unreasonable Woman. Check it out at the Bioneers Blog:

    "I believe the book will become a classic, not just of the environmental movement, but of American lit, as well. It is the rare, clear, moving voice of a working-class woman goaded into action against the greatest massed forces in the world today: globalized corporate greed backed by government power."
    And from Australia, a round of applause with this quip: "I reckon that ASIO didn’t think the Australian protest movement would be able to think like Diane Wilson unless we went to a Scott Parkin class."

    Parkin is the Texas activist who got kicked out of Australia in 2005 for attempting to educate folks on nonviolent resistance. He now resides in the California bay area.

  • Republicans Promise Hearings on Border Provocations

    As it turns out, we clipped last week’s story from the Dallas Morning
    News for good reason. This week begins with a news report posted
    at GOPUSA that Republicans in the US House of Representatives will be
    pursuing the issue of border incursions along the Rio Grande river
    involving "military style" uniforms and equipment.

    Homeland Security Committee Chairman Peter T. King (R-N.Y.), along with
    Reps. Mike Rogers (R-Ala.), Michael McCaul (R-Texas), and Steve Pearce
    (R-N.M.) announced on Friday that they have asked Mexican Ambassador to
    the U.S. Carlos de Icaza to explain what’s going on.

    They’ve also written to U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
    and Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, asking them to
    investigate and report back to Congress….

    McCaul expressed concern about individuals in Mexican military
    uniforms helping drug smugglers cross the border. He pointed to a
    recent press report saying that law enforcement officers on the U.S.
    side observed Mexican military humvees equipped with .50 caliber
    weapons escorting drug traffickers back into Mexico to provide them
    safe haven.

    Meanwhile, over at the Texas Farm Bureau website,
    Victoria County Sheriff T. Michael O’Connor claims that 90 percent of
    the migrant traffic through his jurisdiction are OTMs (other than
    Mexicans):

    "I would say 10 percent at most are people from Mexico. The
    rest are a makeup of people from Central and South America," says
    Victoria County Sheriff T. Michael O’Connor, who polices the "fatal
    funnel," a main thoroughfare for illegals traveling Highways 59 and 77,
    en route to Houston. "There have even been some from the Middle East,
    Russia, and China. The U.S. border with Mexico is not a free border,
    but south of that, all borders are open borders. People come into
    various ports in Central and South America, and they find their way
    here. Their main means of transportation today is rail. They get to the
    Texas border and then find their way via a trafficking issue. They pay
    thousands and thousands of dollars to get to the Houston area."

    O’Connor has a political voice worth respecting, since it is not often
    that county sheriffs are also former vice chairs of the Texas A&M
    University System Board of Regents. But we have good reason to doubt his thumbnail statistics (as quoted) since official figures
    reported from the Department of Homeland Security indicate that 92
    percent of foreign nationals apprehended in 2004 were "natives of
    Mexico." Putting ourselves into a posture for reading tea leaves, we’d
    stick by our previous predictions that
    this border issue is being set up by Republican interests for
    exploitation, and we’d add one more thing: keep an eye on O’Connor’s
    electoral career.

    The two part series at the Texas Farm Bureau web site begins with a
    sentence about 9/11 and is a tellling marker of the way that the border
    issue is being increasingly framed within a war on terrorism context
    that criminalizes migrants and militarizes the reflexes of state policy.

    Meanwhile, at the American Chronicle website, columnist Barbara
    Anderson today files her third border opinion of the year, this time calling
    out for "a well regulated militia". The vaunted language of the
    Fourth Amendment right to carry guns is placed in context of Minutemen
    who she calls "the closest thing we have to a militia". Along
    with the Republican chime, Anderson also hits up last week’s report of
    "military style" uniforms and guns at the Rio Grande. She pleads
    for "sovereignty" in the form of a "sturdy fence":

    Is this the time for a “well regulated Militia”? It seems the
    disciplined Minutemen may be an answer for the pressing need of eyes
    and ears, and some defensive arms, along our wide open southern border
    until the government catches up with the sentiments of outrage by its
    citizens.

    And while we’re on the subject of the war on terrorism, here’s a telling exchange at Monday’s White House Press briefing:

    Q According to data currently available at the Department of Homeland
    Security Funded Terrorism Knowledge Base, the incidents of terrorism
    increased markedly in 2005: worldwide attacks were up 51 percent from
    the year before, and the number of people killed in those attacks is up
    36 percent; since the year 2000, attacks are up 250 percent, and deaths
    are up 550 percent. How do you reconcile those numbers with your claim
    that you’re winning the war on terrorism and putting terrorists out of
    business?

    MR. McCLELLAN: Well, just look at the facts. If you look at the facts,
    many of al Qaeda’s known leadership have been put out of business.
    They’ve been brought to justice. They’ve either been captured or
    killed. No longer is America waiting and responding. We’re on the
    offense; we’re taking the fight to the enemy. We are engaged in a war
    on terrorism. The enemies recognize how high the stakes are. And one
    thing the President will talk about, continue to talk about tomorrow
    night and in the coming weeks, is that we continue to face a serious
    threat.

    This is a deadly and determined enemy. But the difference is now that
    we’ve got them on the run, we’ve got them playing defense, we’re taking
    the fight to them. And all of us in the international community must
    continue to work together. We’ve been fortunate that we haven’t been
    hit again since the attacks of September 11th. And that’s in no small
    part because of the great work of our men and women in uniform abroad,
    and because of the great work of our intelligence community, and the
    great work of our homeland security officials here at home who have
    worked together using vital tools, like the Patriot Act and other
    tools, to help disrupt plots and disrupt attacks.

    And there’s great progress being made. But the President made it clear
    after September 11th that this was going to be a long war, but he’s
    going to continue acting and leading and doing everything in his power
    to win that war so long as he is in office. And we also have to work to
    continue to advance freedom. And 2006 was a year of progress when it
    came to advancing freedom around the world. The Middle East is a
    dangerous, troubled region, and that’s why it’s important we continue
    to support the advance of democracy throughout that region.