Archive for the justice Category

North Carolina likes Undocumented Students

Posted in America, Americans, Dream Act, ICE, Immigration, civil rights, college, deportation, education, ideas, illegal immigrants, illegal immigration, immigrants, inspiration, justice, law, life, news, opinion, people, school, thoughts, undocumented student, undocumented students on July 26, 2008 by iamashadow

Well, this is from the News and Observer, all of it, so all credit belongs to them and the writer of the article, Kristin Collins. I’m busy now, I have a new Xbox 360, but I couldn’t pass the opportunity to post this. Stuff in bold is added by me for emphasis.

RALEIGH - The state Attorney General’s Office says it’s legal for the N.C. Community College System to admit illegal immigrants.

That advice, given to the colleges Thursday and made public today, represents a reversal for the office of Attorney General Roy Cooper, which advised the colleges in May to bar illegal immigrants from degree programs. The colleges took that advice and issued a new policy prohibiting illegal immigrants from enrolling, even at out-of-state tuition rates. Cooper’s office said at the time that post-secondary education might qualify as a public benefit to which illegal immigrants are not entitled under federal law.

But on Monday, Cooper’s office got a letter from federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement, in response to a request for clarification of the law. The letter, from former Mecklenburg County Sheriff Jim Pendergraph, who now works for Immigration and Customs Enforcement, said that admission to colleges is not considered a public benefit under federal law.

Federal officials made the same statement to the News & Observer in May, but officials with the community colleges and the Attorney General’s Office said they wanted to wait for a formal letter.

J.B. Kelly, general counsel, advised the colleges in a letter Thursday that it is up to them to decide whether to admit illegal immigrants.

Community College System President Scott Ralls was not immediately available for comment on whether he would lift the ban on illegal immigrants.

Now, I’m pretty happy about this decision and you know what I do when I’m happy. I play video games. Not only that, but I laugh. HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

PS. Maybe the people from NC aren’t as bad as I thought they were.

Dream Act Students

Posted in America, Americans, Dream Act, ICE, Immigration, anxiety, dehumanization, deportation, discrimination, human rights, ideas, illegal immigrants, illegal immigration, immigrants, inspiration, justice, law, life, opinion, people, personal, politics, undocumented student, undocumented students, videos, youtube on July 24, 2008 by iamashadow

Another great video. Must watch.

Another Political Cartoon

Posted in America, Americans, ICE, Immigration, art, dehumanization, deportation, history, human rights, illegal immigrants, illegal immigration, immigrants, justice, law, life, opinion, people, picture, politics, thoughts, undocumented student, undocumented students on July 23, 2008 by iamashadow

This is another political cartoon I like. Enjoy. From the US News and World Report.

It Continues

Posted in 2008, America, Americans, ICE, Immigration, civil rights, dehumanization, deportation, discrimination, fear, illegal immigrants, illegal immigration, immigrants, justice, law, people, race, racial discrimination, racism, thoughts, undocumented student, undocumented students on July 23, 2008 by iamashadow

Again from North Carolina, what’s wrong with these people, I would NEVER want to live there. Anyway, back to the point, again from North Carolina, another sign of the GREAT job the police are doing.

It was another dangerous mother, doing the horrible crime of driving. I’ll just quote the rest of the story, because seriously people, I couldn’t make this shit up even if I was paid to. From the News and Observer.

An illegal immigrant arrested on a traffic violation last month was forced to leave her three children on the shoulder of Interstate 85 in the middle of the night — where they were alone and stranded for eight hours.

An Alamance County sheriff’s deputy pulled Maria Chavira Ventura over just before 2 a.m. on June 14, according to arrest records. He took her to jail for driving without a license and displaying a false license plate, and she was eventually put under a federal deportation order. He left her children, 14, 10 and 6, with a man they barely knew, according to the N.C. Justice Center and Maryland social workers. He was a fellow church member who had been catching a ride with the family.

I’m just shocked by all the hypocrisy in the matter of enforcement. Many anti-immigrant advocates say that their problem is not with immigration, just with illegals. No, that’s a lie. Their problem is with brown people because policies that give immigration powers to police that only go after Latinos. That’s the truth. There is no way to differentiate between legal and illegal residents unless the assumption that all Latinos are illegal is made, which is what the anti people do. And please, don’t say that’s a lie, this is discrimination and demonization of an entire group of people. I thought America was better than this.

Immigration Enforcement Working!

Posted in America, Americans, ICE, Immigration, cops, courts, dehumanization, deportation, discrimination, human rights, illegal immigrants, illegal immigration, immigrants, justice, law, life, opinion, people, police, politics, race, thoughts, undocumented student, undocumented students on July 22, 2008 by iamashadow

Oh yea, enforcement is working. It is taking those countless criminal scumbags of aliens of the streets and back where they belong. They are all so dangerous and scary. Lets take a look at the first example of a dangerous individual.

First up, as reported by FOXNews. There was an evil librarian in the town of Burlington, NC. Yep, she was taken care of. She was dangerous all right, being here for so long that she doesn’t remember the place she came from. And of course, she married a real American and had a kid. She committed the crime of stealing that guy from a real American woman. The shame! I’m so glad that giving the police immigration powers is working so swell.

Second to the plate, by the NY Times. This wretched human being was caught for driving badly. So, she went to jail for 6 days, she was 9 months pregnant and had a kid on a hospital while having an officer watching over her. Of course, she was also chained to the bed with handcuffs while having the kid. We all know women usually have a very merry time while giving birth. Having a kid is so easy that she could have tried to escape. So the police did the right thing by chaining her, right.

Now, I’m not even going to bother writing anything about this because I couldn’t seriously make this up or make fun about it, I’ll just quote the article.

After she was discharged from the hospital, Mrs. Villegas was separated from her nursing infant for two days and barred from taking a breast pump into the jail, her lawyer and a doctor familiar with the case said. Her breasts became infected, and the newborn boy developed jaundice, they said.

No, let me speak seriously for a minute. ARE YOU FUCKING SERIOUS??? The woman had a baby for Christ’s sake. But of course, she is a dangerous individual.

I’m so tired of the bullshit that comes from giving police immigration powers. Instead of going after people that actually put people in danger, you know, actual criminals, they do this shit. Going after librarians? Recent mothers? People working at factories? I mean, come on, the hypocrisy of immigration enforcement is so thick I could cut it with a knife.

Those two stories above are shameful and people should be embarrassed that their tax payer money (including my parents’) is being used like that. How did we come to this? What next? I’ll be taken out because I was having fun at my university?

Hate Crime

Posted in America, Americans, Immigration, cops, courts, death, dehumanization, discrimination, fear, illegal immigrants, illegal immigration, immigrants, inspiration, justice, law, news, people, police, politics, race, racial discrimination, racism, sick, tragedy, undocumented student, undocumented students, white supremacy on July 20, 2008 by iamashadow

Wow, this sort of news makes me sad for America. America  is supposed to be better than this but apparently not. A man named Luis Ramirez was beaten to death by 6 teenagers in the town of Shenandoah, Pennsylvania. The following are quotes from the article from ABC News.

“From what we understand right now, it wasn’t racially motivated,” Nestor said. “This looks like a street fight that went wrong.”

Umm, no, a street fight is one thing. Ganging up on someone and leaving them one step away from death is another. Look at the picture below.

This is the result of a hate crime. (Crystal Dillman/AP Photo)

Luis Ramirez. This is the result of a hate crime. (Crystal Dillman/AP Photo)

Retired Philadelphia police Officer Eileen Burke, who lives on the street where the fight occurred, told The Associated Press she heard a youth scream at one of Ramirez’s friends after the beating to tell her Mexican friends to get out of Shenandoah, “or you’re going to be laying next to him.”

On Dillman’s fireplace mantel hangs a medallion of Jesus that Ramirez was wearing the night he was beaten. Ramirez had an imprint of the medallion on his chest, marking where an assailant stomped on him, she said.

The Garcias said they heard the youths call Ramirez “stupid Mexican” and an ethnic slur.

Burke, the former Philadelphia officer, said she saw shirtless youths swarming around Ramirez, called 911 and went outside, when she heard a youth yell obscenities and make the get-out-of-Shenandoah remark.

But do the people in the town choose to believe this. Take a look at the quote below to know.

Despite the witness statements, Borough Manager Joseph Palubinsky said he doesn’t believe Ramirez’s ethnicity was what prompted the fight: “I have reason to know the kids who were involved, the families who were involved, and I’ve never known them to harbor this type of feeling.”

Of course, the witnesses are lying. Yep. They are just out to ruin the kids who were defending themselves from the big scary Mexican illegal. OOOOOOOOOOOOOHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH look out, I’m also scary. I’m like boogie man, out to get you. I guess someone forgot to inform my girlfriend and friends that I’m scary, because all Mexicans are, right?

The people defending on this story are full of shit, it is that simple. They are defending kids because what, they are football players and win games. Because they know the families involved? All shit. The kids deserve to go to jail or more for the crime they committed. It doesn’t matter whether the person who is now dead was illegal or not, he was attacked by the simple fact of being Mexican. The man was stomped one and kicked in the head, how is that not a crime.

This article and event are disturbing beyond belief, I’m Mexican and I’ve always been afraid of something like this happening to me or my family. This is what happens when the immigration debate gets out context and everyone within group are labeled as demons, in this case, Latinos. I thought American was better than this.

The rest of the abomination is written in the following article by ABC News, the quotes and pictures belong to them.

Sweeps Threaten Latinos and Constitution in Maricopa County

Posted in America, Americans, ICE, Immigration, dehumanization, deportation, discrimination, human rights, illegal immigrants, illegal immigration, immigrants, justice, law, police, race, racial discrimination, racism, undocumented student, undocumented students on July 17, 2008 by iamashadow

The deputies began driving into the neighborhood, terrorizing the community until almost 11 p.m. that night. Young Latino men were brought into the parking lot in handcuffs. They looked terrified as they arrived in the back of sheriff
’s vehicles.Stadium lights were everywhere. The media was on-site interviewing deputies and concerned residents.

read more | digg story

Beaufort County, SC and Operation Surge

Posted in ICE, Immigration, anxiety, civil rights, cops, dehumanization, deportation, discrimination, fear, human rights, illegal immigrants, illegal immigration, immigrants, justice, law, news, people, race, racial discrimination, racism, thoughts, undocumented student, undocumented students on July 16, 2008 by iamashadow

What, now counties? Unlike my other two postings, which consentrated on blaming immigrants for the end of the world, now it is an entire county. It seems like we are moving up. Actually, this is quite scary since this has been the third article of this kind in the last couple of days.

So, what’s going on in South Carolina. Well, the entire state hates us but this county does it with a vengeance. The started something called Operation Surge, which to what I’m reading, it means that all brown people will be arrested and have the documents checked. No, of course there is no racial profiling, who would ever think that!?

It is disgusting that things are happening this way. Note to self, never visit Beaufort County, Escondido or Freemont. I’ll take my money elsewhere.

Read the article over the crap that is going over there in the following link.

In Limbo

Posted in America, Americans, Dream Act, ICE, Immigration, anxiety, civil rights, college, dehumanization, deportation, discrimination, human rights, illegal immigrants, illegal immigration, immigrants, justice, law, life, news, opinion, people, personal, politics, thoughts, undocumented student, undocumented students on July 14, 2008 by iamashadow

Wow, talk about being stuck in limbo and then some. I have the unique advantage of people not knowing my location and such, I keep a low profile. I mean, I could go out and party and such, make a disgrace of myself but I choose not to, I think it is the smarter move. Anyway, back to the point, this kid who goes by the name of Arthur Mkoyan is stuck in the limbo from hell.

He graduated with a 4.0 GPA, probably higher than most of his American-born peers, and a letter of admission to UC Davis. So, that would be good right. Well, no, he is an undocumented immigrant from Armenia. But wait you say, I thought all undocumented immigrants were stinky Mexicans. No, you are wrong, epic fail.

So, why is the kid an undocumented immigrant. His father made the choice of emigrating to the US bringing his wife and kid, Arthur, at the age of 1. So, now, after a 16 year process that didn’t give the family assylum, they are supposed to be deported. Apparently having your house burned down and shop they owned getting ransacked aren’t valid enough reasons to flee your country and seek asylum elsewhere.

Well, now, here we are 16 years later and Arthur is stuck in limbo. He wants to continue his education but that has become doubtful considering he is undocumented. So, here we have a kid who would probably do well in life, his life in the US, but can’t because of the mistakes of others. Are you going to ask him to leave to a place where he has never been? Is that fair? And I thought I had it bad. I still can’t believe things like this could happen in this country but I guess I was wrong.

Read more about Arthur and his family’s story in the following article.

Umm…if only there was a piece of legislation that would allow his DREAMs to come true. Nah, I’m sure there isn’t one, no wait–

Arpaio Leaves Citizens Behind

Posted in Americans, ICE, Immigration, cops, dehumanization, deportation, discrimination, illegal immigrants, illegal immigration, immigrants, justice, law, people, police, politics, race, racism, undocumented student, undocumented students on July 14, 2008 by iamashadow

Well, here we go, from the so-called America’s toughest sheriff. He is leaving his residents behind. When the sheriff’s office started to concentrate on becoming immigration agents, their real jobs, being police agents to you know, protect and serve, was thrown out the window. This is what would happen if people get their way on regards to transforming police officers into immigration agents.

It is the rural communities that are affected by this measure. They depended on the man they elected and he threw them out the window in his search of glory and his five minutes of fame. Here is a quote from the article.

As a result, even serious criminal investigations began to suffer, the Tribune reported. In El Mirage, for instance, sheriff’s detectives did little or no investigation into at least 30 violent crime cases, including a dozen reported sexual assaults, during 2006 and 2007. The lack of significant work on those cases prompted the sheriff’s office to open an internal affairs investigation.

Is that what the residents wanted, unsafe communities. Sure, there are less immigrants now but only the hardworking ones are being scapegoated and such. It is quite sad. That’s the price that has to be made by giving the power of immigration to the local authorities. I hope that Arpaio is enjoying his 15-minutes of fame, because I know after all this mess is solved, he will live in infamy forever.

Read the rest of the sheriff’s bad decisions on the following article by KTAR.com.

Border Agents Using Racial Profiling to U.S. Citizens

Posted in Americans, ICE, Immigration, dehumanization, deportation, discrimination, fear, illegal immigrants, illegal immigration, immigrants, justice, law, news, race, racism, undocumented student, undocumented students on July 11, 2008 by iamashadow

The patrols have sparked protests in the city as well as upstate, most recently last weekend in Syracuse, where a group said that agents have even targeted U.S. citizens who look “foreign”. Immigration attorneys say witnesses have said that agents sometimes question only people of color.

read more | digg story

Montgomery Police

Posted in Americans, ICE, Immigration, cops, dehumanization, deportation, discrimination, ideas, illegal immigrants, illegal immigration, immigrants, inspiration, justice, law, news, opinion, police, politics, thoughts on July 10, 2008 by iamashadow

I just want to say thank-you to the police department of Montgomery, Washington, for doing your job. Protect and serve. Yes, to protect and serve everyone in the community. Not just the citizens and legal residents, because everyone is entitled to live a peaceful life in their homes. The job of the police is not to terrorize a group of people that is already being demonized by the likes of politicians and such.

“We don’t want our community members to think Montgomery County police conduct random raids that can result in the deportation of undocumented immigrants,” Baur said, adding that the support of all residents, including illegal immigrants, is necessary to report crime and solve cases.

I couldn’t agree more or said it better myself. I mean, really, why is that the anti-immigrants believe that transforming cops into immigration agents is going to solve the immigration issue. It is not. It is a band-aid solution. Undocumented immigrants will learn to live with whatever obstacles that you put in front of them. It is not a matter of wanting to break the law, but a matter of necessity. Taking the kids to school, going to work, buying the groceries, those are all activities necessary for the function of a family. Immigrants are not going stop doing that.

Nothing is gained by terrorizing a group of people. Nothing but their distrust and unwillingness to cooperate on actual criminal investigations, investigations that actually track down real law breakers who deserve to be in jail. That is who the police should be focusing on, not helping in the latest cheap illusion of solution of cont–er, I mean immigration raid. The police should focus on the protection of their community, of all members in it, everyone deserves to live in peace.

Obama and Immigration

Posted in Americans, Dream Act, ICE, Immigration, Obama, candidates, civil rights, election, famous people, human rights, ideas, illegal immigrants, illegal immigration, immigrants, inspiration, justice, law, life, media, opinion, people, politics, thoughts, undocumented student, undocumented students, videos, youtube on July 10, 2008 by iamashadow

This are Obama’s views on immigration. I like them. Awesome speech as always.

Speech to the League of United Latin American Citizens, in Washington D.C.
July 8, 2008

Rhode Island and Immigration

Posted in Americans, ICE, Immigration, dehumanization, deportation, discrimination, human rights, illegal immigrants, illegal immigration, immigrants, justice, law, life, news, opinion, people, politics, thoughts, undocumented student, undocumented students on July 9, 2008 by iamashadow

Well, apparently the legislators and politicians of Rhode Island are trying to make a bigger issue out of something that is not, immigration. According to this article, most Rhode Islanders care more about other things. I quote.

When asked “what do you think is the biggest problem facing Rhode Island right now,” hardly any respondents mentioned illegal immigration. Thirty-three percent said the economy, 17 percent said the state budget, 6 percent mentioned gas prices, 8 percent listed government corruption, 6 percent said taxes, 5 percent said education and 4 percent said illegal immigration.

So, why is the governor ‘cracking’ down on illegal immigrants? Because he needs a scapegoat or perhaps he needs to show the people the illusion of doing something? Cracking down on immigration is not going help a state that needs its seasonal workers, most which are undocumented immigrants.

It is an issue that the Republican party has used to make people angry and try to get more votes. It is not an issue that affects most people directly, after all, the majority of Americans don’t know undocumented immigrants or are not being hurt by them, despite what the popular beliefs that we are raping and killing innocents by the thousands everyday. Simply not true. Most of us are just trying to make our way in this world. I’m in college, others are working in farms and restaurants.

I also agree with the following, the immigration issue is a federal problem, not a state one. I quote.

“We support consistent, reliable immigration policies. We want a consistent, reliable system we can work with,” he says. What is frustrating, Stokes adds, are attempts by the state to put small business owners on the frontline in stopping illegal immigration; that’s a task for the federal government –– not a Newport restaurateur trying to make a living under the fleeting summer sun.

Undocumented students have a degree of anxiety

Posted in Americans, Dream Act, ICE, Immigration, anxiety, civil rights, college, dehumanization, deportation, depression, discrimination, editorial, education, human rights, illegal immigrants, illegal immigration, immigrants, inspiration, justice, law, life, opinion, people, personal, politics, school, thoughts, tragedy, undocumented student, undocumented students on July 8, 2008 by iamashadow

This article is from the LA Times, I’m posting the entire thing. I embolden some letters for emphasis. My comments will be ( ) and italicized. Here is the link for the original article.

Undocumented college students endure hardships over their status, then see an uncertain future.
By Gale Holland, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
July 8, 2008

He took 15 AP classes (HOLY GOD, that’s amazing and insane) in high school, and kicks himself for passing up two others. Now, he is graduating from UCLA, with a double major in English and Chicano Studies and a B-plus grade point average.

But for all his success, Miguel does not share the full-bodied exuberance of the graduating seniors who marched last month five abreast into Pauley Pavilion, belting out the ’60s hit “Build Me Up, Buttercup.” A native of Puebla, Mexico, he is an illegal immigrant.

Around the UCLA campus, ubiquitous kiosk signs encourage students to “Jump Into Great Jobs!” But for Miguel, any employment will be difficult. Like many undocumented students, he may elect to prolong his studies to stave off an uncertain future.

When you’re in school you have a place in society, you’re a university student,” Miguel, 23, said during an interview at a campus coffee spot on graduation day. “When you graduate, you’re just an immigrant again.( I know the feeling on that regards, it almost happened to me after high school).

Miguel and other students, who asked that their full names be withheld for fear that they or their families could face federal action, are caught between contradictory U.S. immigration policies.

A 1982 U.S. Supreme Court decision entitled illegal immigrants to public education from kindergarten through high school; 50,000 to 70,000 graduate from U.S. high schools each year (California’s share, by some estimates, is 40%), according to experts. But the students’ access to higher education has not been guaranteed by the courts and Congress.

Over the last seven years, California and nine other states have encouraged undocumented college students to pursue higher education by offering many who graduated from California high schools in-state tuition. California public universities do not ask about legal status on applications. Some private universities, including Loyola Marymount and Santa Clara, have scholarships tailored for illegal immigrants. They are not entitled to most financial aid or loans at public colleges.

Their numbers at the university level remain low. The UC system had an estimated 271 to 433 undocumented students, out of total enrollment of 214,000, in 2006-2007, the latest figure available, a spokesman said.

But attending college, and even doing splendidly, does nothing to alter these students’ illegal status. (I’ve met people who think me being at my university changes things, it doesn’t). A proposed federal law called the Dream Act would have offered a pathway to citizenship for many college students and members of the military. But supporters last year were unable to secure enough votes to prevent a filibuster of the bill.

Opponents said the students are looting limited educational resources that should go to citizens and legal residents.

“To these students, I say I hope you return to your home country right away,” said Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Huntington Beach), “and I hope you repay what you have spent of other people’s money. It’s a horrible crime.”

Students have come far

Advocates argue that it’s inhumane and counterproductive to ostracize students who have come so far with so little.

“These students have been here since they were small children, and we’ve done everything to encourage them to stay in school and help them prepare for college,” said UCLA Asst. Vice Provost Alfred Herrera of the Center for Community College Partnerships. “The sad reality is most of these students are the best and the brightest.”

And if history is any guide, they aren’t leaving. Some, instead, remain in school.

Living off academic stipends, scholarships and a steady diet of ramen, these students play out an endless “Groundhog Day” script of school applications, research projects and degrees.

They mostly hang around colleges, assistantships, getting paid to do surveys. It’s not employment, it’s catch-as-catch can,” said Michael Olivas, an expert on immigrants in higher education who teaches at the University of Houston Law Center.

“I think continuing your studies is the best option for us now,” said Tam Tran, 24, who heads to Brown University this fall for a five-year doctoral program in American Civilizations.

Born in Germany to Vietnamese parents, Tran has a complex immigration history: a U.S. immigration board in 2001 found that her family faced political persecution in Vietnam for past anti-Communist activities, but ordered them deported to Germany.

Germany, however, would not take them. The nation only recognized as citizens children born on its soil to German parents.

She said she would have liked to stay at UCLA, maybe go to film school. But the public university can’t give her aid, while both Brown and Yale universities offered generous packages.

Robert Lee, professor in the Department of American Civilization at Brown, said the university is not bothered that Tran might be unable to work in the U.S. in her academic field. “Even as students, they’re producing important academic product,” Lee said. “We don’t train all students to become university professors; they might end up working for an NGO [non-governmental organization], or a film producer . . . or in government service, maybe not in the U.S.”

‘Miley Cyrus Americans’

Stephanie, 22, drops out roughly every other quarter towork at low-paying jobs like making cardboard boxes.

“The reason I don’t feel bad about it taking me so long to get through is that as long as I’m a UCLA student, I can say, ‘We’re on our way, we’re up-and-comers,” said Stephanie, over dinner recently at a Japanese restaurant.

Stephanie’s parents brought her here at age 4, after the disco craze dissolved in the Philippines, leaving her father, a lighting installer, without a job, she said. Her parents only told her she was undocumented when she tried to transfer to UCLA, she added.

“What people don’t get is we’re Miley Cyrus Americans,” said Stephanie, an aspiring writer and copy editor. “English is the only language I speak.”

A story about Stephanie in the Daily Bruin newspaper earlier this year drew scant sympathy. Stephanie “has a choice to make: become a legal resident or continue to live a life of deferring the task her parents should have taken care of years before,” a letter to the editor said.

Stephanie and Miguel said they would risk deportation if they sought legal status.

Even the most prestigious academic posting has not shielded students from immigration authorities. Dan-el Padilla Peralta, a classics scholar, Princeton salutatorian and illegal immigrant from the Dominican Republic, was able to pursue a masters at Oxford University without facing possible exclusion upon his return only through an intense legal and publicity campaign, his lawyer, Stephen Yale-Loehr said. Yale-Loehr is an immigration law professor at Cornell Law School.

As it is, Padilla was able to obtain only a temporary waiver and visa so he could travel to the U.S. during summer and vacations to work on a research project for Princeton.

“Naturally the uncertainty over my status has been a source of anxiety,” Padilla said in an e-mail from Oxford. “But I’ve tried to keep that anxiety quite separate from my academic and extracurricular pursuits. I feel enormously privileged to have studied first at Princeton and now at Oxford.

This same optimism pervaded speeches at a small graduation ceremony arranged by the UCLA chapter of IDEAS, a campus support organization for students, documented and undocumented, who receive the in-state tuition exemption.

About 10 students talked about life as an “Underground Undergrad” (the title of a book undocumented UCLA students released this spring): the two- to three-hour commutes, crashing on couches, eating only if somebody could sneak them into the dining hall. Several said they were hopeful the Dream Act will be reintroduced soon, and this time pass, opening the door to legalization.

But mainly, they expressed gratitude for their education.

“I choose not to place the burden [of my situation] on everyone,” said Matias Ramos, another graduating senior, whose grandmother flew in from Argentina for the event. “I have had the blessing of encountering a lot of people who’ve helped me.(So have I).

A lot of stereotypes that linger on, we break all of them,” said Miguel. “All of us are very assimilated and we’re very proud of it. . . . We’re driven by huge optimism.”

But as she cleared cut fruit from the refreshment table, Tran grew wistful.

“We’re always in a position where we’re oppressed and privileged at the same time,” she said. “I wonder if getting a PhD in American studies is going to prove I’m an American?”