talking about "the nation of immigrants" centers a nation that is by default committed to further kill Indigenous communities because this messaging assumes that they are dead. The nation of immigrants" is also anti-black. Black folk arrived to this land on chattel slavery
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when we use frameworks of "nationhood" to advocate for immigrant rights, we are directly uplifting the projects of settler-colonialism and trans*atlantic slavery.
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"the nation of immigrants" also normalizes documented & undocumented migration. TBQH: my family never wanted to migrate. We come from Zapotec land where we don't own our water, food plantations, and sometimes, our own homes. We migrated b/c of settler-colonialism.
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Talking about "the nation of immigrants" downplays our experiences as displaced people and as Black people who never had to choice of where to go because our bodies/ our ancestors were kidnapped, transported, enslaved and thus, arrived to this land via shipment on boats.
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As immigrants, we need to learn how to build, fight alongside with and uplift those who are Indigenous to what is now the "U.S." and to Black folk whose ancestors were enslaved in what is now the "U.S."
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I share this publicly, and I also risk having gaps in my analysis because we need to do better. We cannot afford to be reactionary anymore. As a Black and Indigenous person, this is an analysis that has come to me out of necessity to continue to survive.
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I am tired y'all, I have asked so many folk to please divest from "
#HereToStay" because every time I see this hashtag on my newsfeed, it hurts me more and more. This hashtag tells me: settler-colonialism is necessary and trans*atlantic slavery is a thing of the past. No!1 reply 6 retweets 24 likesShow this thread -
As immigrants, we need to position ourselves as "visitors." When we do this, we honor the fact that this is not our land. We honor Indigenous communities who are fighting for sovereignty. Did you know there are huge numbers of tribes that are not federally recognized?
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Being a visitor means that we have no long-term plans to settle. As immigrants who were pushed out of our lands, we still have to see ourselves as "visitors" even if we are refugees, asylum seekers, undocumented, international worker, etc. The land we migrate to has a heartbeat
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the land we migrate to is alive the land we migrate to has a history the land we migrate to has a memory of a time before colonialism and slavery the land we migrate to is not "a nation of immigrants" or a land that we should claim we are "
#HereToStay" for.1 reply 10 retweets 38 likesShow this thread
Thank you for this. Grateful. I had to read it several times because of the way it runs counter to the racist, anti-Indigenous, and anti-Black narrative narrative/worldview I am so seeped in. I will reflect and think about your words for a long time. Thank you again.
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