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What is it like to do the back-breaking work of immigrants? To find
out, Gabriel Thompson spent a year working alongside Latino
immigrants, who initially thought he was either crazy or an
undercover immigration agent. He stooped over lettuce fields in
Arizona, and worked the graveyard shift at a chicken slaughterhouse
in rural Alabama. He dodged taxis--not always successfully--as a
bicycle delivery "boy" for an upscale Manhattan restaurant, and was
fired from a flower shop by a boss who, he quickly realized, was
nuts.
As one coworker explained, "These jobs make you old quick." Back
spasms occasionally keep Thompson in bed, where he suffers
recurring nightmares involving iceberg lettuce and chicken
carcasses. Combining personal narrative with investigative
reporting, Thompson shines a bright light on the underside of the
American economy, exposing harsh working conditions, union busting,
and lax government enforcement--while telling the stories of
workers, undocumented immigrants, and desperate US citizens alike,
forced to live with chronic pain in the pursuit of $8 an hour.
"A good organizer is a social arsonist who goes around setting
people on fire." (Fred Ross). Raised by conservative parents who
hoped he would "stay with his own kind," Fred Ross instead became
one of the most influential community organizers in American
history. His activism began alongside Dust Bowl migrants, where he
managed the same labor camp that inspired John Steinbeck's The
Grapes of Wrath. During World War II, Ross worked for the release
of interned Japanese Americans, and after the war, he dedicated his
life to building the political power of Latinos across California.
Labor organizing in this country was forever changed when Ross
knocked on the door of a young Cesar Chavez and encouraged him to
become an organizer. Until now there has been no biography of Fred
Ross, a man who believed a good organizer was supposed to fade into
the crowd as others stepped forward. In America's Social Arsonist,
Gabriel Thompson provides a full picture of this complicated and
driven man, recovering a forgotten chapter of American history and
providing vital lessons for organizers today.
American democracy is seemingly in retreat. Voting rates are at an
all time low, citizens are disillusioned, and inequality continues
to soar. But there is also a belief that change is possible.
Calling All Radicals argues that we can reclaim our democracy in
the old fashioned way -- through grassroots organizing. Gabriel
Thompson draws upon his own experience of working within local
communities to demonstrate its immediate impact. Some examples:
When a brother and sister were being evicted from their home of 73
years, the community responded by staging a protest in front of the
landlord's home -- gaining media attention and forcing the owner to
allow them to stay. With children in Central Brooklyn suffering
from lead poisoning, Thompson designed a campaign that trained
inner-city high school students to test neighborhood homes and
found that 1 in 3 were dangerous -- forcing NYC officials to act by
pushing through citywide legislation that held landlords
responsible for implementing more proactive steps to fix hazards.
Calling All Radicals argues that everyone is capable of community
organizing. It explains the key tactics of organizing, leadership
development, conducting research, and working effectively with the
media.
Mexican immigration has become one of the most polarizing issues
and will remain a central issue in the coming years. Once Mexicans
had a sizable presence in a few select states like California,
Texas, Arizona and New York; today the fastest growing populations
are in places like North Carolina, Arkansas, Georgia and
Tennessee.. What motivates people to risk their very lives, and why
don't Mexicans just "play by the rules" and enter legally? How do
they cope, living in a strange country among people that speak a
language they can't understand? And after everything they have gone
through, do they see immigration as a blessing, a curse, or
something in between? There's No Jose Here allows Mexicans in the
U.S. to speak in their own words. The central narrative follows
Enrique, a 34-year-old livery cab driver who came to the US
illegally at the age of 16 and has since seen his daughter lead
poisoned, his mother abandoned in Mexico by his father, his cousin
murdered on the streets of Brooklyn, and his best friend deployed
to Iraq. This book gives readers a look into these stories as
people struggle to survive in a new and often hostile land.
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