logo
How US immigration raids hurt summer pleasures, from berries to barbecues

How US immigration raids hurt summer pleasures, from berries to barbecues

The Guardiana day ago
From his father's strawberry farm in central California, Tomás Diaz noticed a border patrol vehicle driving toward a field of workers. Diaz, himself Mexican American and a US citizen, yelled in Spanish: 'Run for your life! That's immigration!' As the men scattered, the agents grabbed whom they could. In the chaos, six workers escaped, and Diaz was detained for interrogation. 'Why did you yell at the Mexicans to run?' an officer pressed. 'No reason at all,' Diaz calmly replied.
This did not happen yesterday, but in 1953. Driven by fears of border infiltration by communists and 'criminal' and 'diseased' migrants, the Immigration and National Service (the Department of Homeland Security's predecessor) carried out 'Operation Wetback' from 1954 to 1957. Border patrol officers raided public spaces, workplaces and homes and formally deported about 400,000 Mexicans (hundreds of thousands more repatriated out of fear).
More than 70 years after Operation Wetback, the mass deportation campaign orchestrated by Trump, homeland security (DHS) adviser Stephen Miller and DHS secretary Kristi Noem is using Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) officers to conduct Orwellian raids. Trump's administration knows that targeting workers in the food chain is the easiest way to reach Miller's quota of 3,000 arrests a day. Labor department data affirms that 42% of US farm workers lack proper documentation. Ice agents are rushing into fruit orchards, vegetable fields, dairy barns, processing plants and restaurant kitchens to arrest people on the spot.
The consequences of these raids will be profound in our food labor system and greater society. First and foremost, these raids are traumatizing people. Many arrestees are 'disappeared', their locations unknown by loved ones and lawyers.
Second, the raids will affect summer food chains and other industries throughout the year. The juicy watermelons and peaches, berry pies, barbecue, ice-cream and lobster rolls we are currently enjoying come from the labor of a heavily immigrant workforce. Almost every bit of American food and drink passes through the hands of an immigrant, and the DHS is denying this reality while terrorizing food workers with brutal efficiency.
In the seafood industry, Latin American and Caribbean workers in fish-processing plants in New England and on the Chesapeake Bay and the Gulf Coast ensure cod, crawfish, crab, scallops and lobster get to our markets and restaurants. An early Trump 2.0 raid targeted a seafood depot in Newark, New Jersey. Without warrants, agents demanded documentation from workers who looked Latino, and detained three immigrants and the warehouse manager, a Puerto Rican veteran who was eventually released but distressed that his citizenship and military service meant nothing. In New Bedford, Massachusetts (the nation's highest-value fishing area), at least two dozen Guatemalan men have been taken. Latin American and Caribbean workers stepped into New England's seafood industry at the turn of the century, a critical juncture when the children of Euro American fish workers rejected their occupational inheritance. If these workers are deported in large numbers, seafood circulations will decline precipitously across the nation and globe.
Summer ice-cream is made possible by the milking labor of (mostly undocumented and male) Latino dairy workers. In April, a raid occurred at a dairy farm in Vermont, a US state that would topple economically if not for milk's production. Sixty-eight per cent of the state's milk (and 43% of New England's milk) comes from farms reliant on immigrant workers.
Enjoyed meat at a Fourth of July or weekend barbecue? A whopping 71% of animal-processing workers in the US are immigrants from Latin America, Asia and Africa. When Ice agents raided the Glenn Valley meat-processing plant in Omaha, Nebraska, and detained 76 workers, they took half of the plant's workforce. Though Omaha has been a home for Mexican meatpackers for more than a century, the local police and sheriff cooperated with Ice dragnets by blocking traffic around multiple production plants.
Raids on food workers in California (which provides a third of the vegetables and more than half of the nation's fruit and nuts) have gone the most viral. Video captured a fieldworker being chased down in the fog, while berry and citrus workers were harassed across three counties. Ice agents raided a grocery store; grabbed a tortilla truck driver; and arrested a female street vendor outside a Home Depot who held desperately onto a tree as bystanders filmed and yelled: 'They're kidnapping her!' It's already happening, but food sellers in our informal economy will stop working in public in greater numbers.
Meanwhile, in brick-and-mortar establishments, Ice detained employees at nine restaurants in Washington DC; an Italian restaurant in San Diego; two Mexican restaurants in the Rio Grande Valley; and a Mexican restaurant in Pennsylvania. Food workers are often rendered invisible in spaces like fields, warehouses and kitchens. Trump's administration is hoping that this food precariat is expendable enough that Americans won't care or fight back against these workers' arrests and detentions.
They're wrong. Food workers are increasingly visible as the public records and spreads word of Ice incidents. Protesters showed up at the Omaha meat plant, and locals decried the arrest of a beloved Salvadoran bagel shop manager on Long Island, New York. Chilling videos of Ice agents invading private homes and smashing car windows to grab Latino drivers are inspiring popular backlash. And, as in the 1950s, US-born Latinos realize the hunting of 'illegal' bodies leads to their own racial profiling.
In the 1950s, many agricultural employers railed against the INS and border patrol for deporting undocumented workers, claiming citizens were too unavailable or unreliable (in reality, this was often a union-busting argument). Today, food industry bosses are similarly pushing back against government. Glenn Valley owner Chad Hartmann accused the federal government of traumatizing his employees and failing to improve the E-Verify system that checks immigration status. The dairy industry has called out the deportations as myopic and reckless. Employers surely remember the first year of Covid, when food labor flows halted. Foreign workers were held up or quarantined at the border, while some US citizen farm workers stayed away from harvesting sites for fear of contagion and death.
Suddenly remembering his agribusiness donors, Trump declared a stop to immigration raids in the food industry on 12 June. Five days later, DHS leaders reversed Trump's reversal, telling Ice agents to carry on. This whiplash reveals the administration's internal dysfunction and callous denial of immigrant workers as fuller human beings with longstanding ties to the United States. Their ideal is a white America, with foreigners used for labor but considered return to sender at a moment's notice.
What can the past tell us about what's to come? Consumers will feel the financial pinch first, and growers will blame increasing workforce instability and losing time on training new employees. Agriculture scretary Brooke Rollins's ridiculous idea of using Medicaid recipients as farm workers will likely be supplanted by Trump's expansion of the H-2A visa program. From 1942 to 1964, the bracero program (which offered around 5m labor contracts to Mexican men to work in US agriculture for six to nine months at a time) was shored up as the legal solution to the 'wetback' crisis. The H-2A program is bracerismo reincarnated; it binds a guest worker to one employer for the entirety of their contract, even if problems arise regarding wage theft, substandard living conditions or threats to physical safety. Swift backlash against grievances keeps guest workers feeling silenced and chronically deportable.
Cruelty and dehumanization are the points of Trump's immigration schemes. We must not lose sight of this while protesting raids in food spaces. Immigrants' value lies far beyond 'doing the jobs Americans won't do'. Their mistreatment and unfreedoms are inextricably bound up with, and will affect, those of other Americans. Most recently, Maga acolyte Laura Loomer's X post about feeding the nation's 65 million Latinos to alligators in the Everglades generated loud condemnation. The US has long consumed the labor, cuisine and culture of Latinos, both citizen and immigrant. Loomer's rhetoric takes that consumption to a grotesque level of real, not just imagined, violence.
Today's Ice raids are an echo of the past, and stem from the Trump administration's racialization of Latinos. At best, they can be instrumentalized for labor; at worst, they are a perpetually foreign population to be eradicated. Through showing solidarity with the diverse people who hold our food chains together, the public can give the Trump administration a much-needed reality check that it can't talk (or eat) out of both sides of its mouth.
Lori A Flores is a professor of history at Columbia University and the author of Awaiting Their Feast: Latinx Food Workers and Activism from World War II to Covid-19
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Disabled wheelchair-bound son 'told to leave his family's stall in Atlanta mall'
Disabled wheelchair-bound son 'told to leave his family's stall in Atlanta mall'

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Disabled wheelchair-bound son 'told to leave his family's stall in Atlanta mall'

A Metro Atlanta family has claimed their disabled son was kicked out of Cumberland Mall while they were setting up their business table. Demond Crump Sr. says he and his wife were shocked when the mall's general manager allegedly told them their 32-year-old son, who has cerebral palsy and uses a wheelchair, should leave their vending space. The family had just begun setting up shop after Crump won a small business contest through Morehouse College that secured them a spot to sell at major shopping center during MLB All-Star weekend. 'Can't believe our son was discriminated against at Cumberland Mall. Special needs people can't come to the mall now?' Crump Sr. said in a video he shared on Facebook. 'I was talking to him man-to-man, father-to-father, like "man, this is my son you're speaking of," and there was just no remorse,' he told ANF News. Crump said the incident was abrupt and came out of nowhere without provocation. 'We were setting up [and] we were told that my son couldn't be there with us,' Crump continued. 'You're saying that my son has to leave. And he's like, "Yes," and I'm like, "What is he doing?" 'This is my child. This is my son. He's a human being. At this point, I'm really shocked,' Crump Sr. said. Crump said he confronted the manager directly. 'I come to you with tears in my eyes and I said, "Sir, do you know this is discrimination?"' Crump said. 'He said, "File whatever complaint you want. You guys can leave."' 'If my son can't stay, then we can't stay,' Crump added. 'We are leaving as well.' 'Special needs people can't come to the mall now?' Mall ownership group Brookfield Properties later issued a statement claiming the incident was a 'misunderstanding' and welcome his family back. 'This was a deeply unfortunate situation, and we regret our poor communication that led to this misunderstanding.' 'We have reached out to Mr. Crump and welcome his family to return to our shopping center.' But Crump does not believe it was a misunderstanding and has no plans on returning to the mall. has reached out to the Crump family.

BREAKING NEWS Trump's DOJ makes bombshell decision on Ghislaine Maxwell case
BREAKING NEWS Trump's DOJ makes bombshell decision on Ghislaine Maxwell case

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

BREAKING NEWS Trump's DOJ makes bombshell decision on Ghislaine Maxwell case

The Justice Department isn't letting British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell off the hook for her role in Jeffrey Epstein 's child sex trafficking ring. Currently serving a 20-year prison sentence, Maxwell's lawyers argue she shouldn't have been put on trial in the first place because of the plea deal Epstein reached with Florida prosecutors in 2008. But Donald Trump 's Attorney General Pam Bondi's DOJ responded in a filing on Monday saying that the Supreme Court should not take up her case. A lawyer for Maxwell slammed Trump for letting the government 'break a deal,' in a statement to the Daily Mail. 'He's the ultimate dealmaker - and I'm sure he'd agree that when the United States gives its word, it should keep it,' attorney David Oscar Markus stated. 'With all the talk about who's being prosecuted and who isn't, it's especially unfair that Ghislaine Maxwell remains in prison based on a promise the government made and broke.' John Sauer, Trump's pick for Solicitor General, requested an extension for the appeal two times on behalf of the administration and was granted it once. The deadline was up on Monday, July 14. Bondi can't seem to escape the Epstein case despite her desperate attempts to leave it in the rearview mirror. The Maxwell filing comes at a particularly charged time for Bondi where, as head of DOJ, she is under fire by pro-MAGA firebrands claiming she botched the Epstein files review. Last weekend the DOJ and FBI leaked an unsigned memo concluding that Epstein did kill himself in prison in August 2019 and that he did not hold a converted 'client list' of high-profile co-conspirators. The memo said that no more people would be arrested, charged or convicted in the Epstein child sex trafficking case. An uproar ensued among Trump's base with calls for him to fire Bondi, and Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino threatening to resign if the AG stuck around. Republicans and Democrats aren't buying the story that there isn't more to be learned from the evidence in the case. Meanwhile, the DOJ is facing a staffing issue at the office charged with defending legal challenges against Trump administration policies. Of the roughly 110 lawyers in the Federal Programs Branch, 69 have voluntarily left or announced plans to leave since President Donald Trump's election in November, according to Reuters. Trump has defended Bondi's leadership at the Justice Department despite a growing chorus of pro-MAGA voices expressing ire at her handling of the Epstein files. Maxwell is still the only person facing the music for Epstein's crimes. While the disgraced financier was in prison, he died on August 10, 2019 in what was determined to be a suicide by hanging. And the Daily Mail revealed exclusively this week that Maxwell is willing to speak before Congress about the so-called 'list.' A source said: 'Despite the rumors, Ghislaine was never offered any kind of plea deal. She would be more than happy to sit before Congress and tell her story. 'No-one from the government has ever asked her to share what she knows. She remains the only person to be jailed in connection to Epstein and she would welcome the chance to tell the American public the truth.' What that 'truth' is remains to be seen. Meanwhile, French modeling agent Jean-Luc Brunel, an associate of Epstein's, was arrested on December 16, 2020 by French authorities, but also died by suicide in 2022 before his trial could proceed. Therefore Maxwell is the only one left serving a sentence for the child sex trafficking crimes on charges of perjury, enticement and conspiracy to entice minors and the transportation of minors with intent to engage in criminal sexual activity. In June 2022 she was sentenced to 20 years in prison. But Maxwell's lawyers say she should have never been put up on trial. 'Despite the existence of a non-prosecution agreement promising in plain language that the United States would not prosecute any co-conspirator of Jeffrey Epstein, the United States in fact prosecuted Ghislaine Maxwell as a co-conspirator of Jeffrey Epstein,' they wrote in a filing reviewed by Newsweek. 'Only because the United States did so in the Second Circuit and not elsewhere, her motion to dismiss the indictment was denied, her trial proceeded, and she is now serving a 20-year sentence,' they lamented. Due to the disparity between how circuit courts interpret the plea deals made by the U.S. with plaintiffs, Epstein's lawyers were requesting a review by the DOJ on initial charges against Maxwell. In at least five other circuit court jurisdictions, Maxwell's dismissal request would have likely been granted – this includes the Eleventh Circuit where Epstein's agreement was entered. 'This inconsistency in the law by which the same promise by the United States means different things in different places should be addressed by this Court,' Maxwell's lawyers argued.

Trump to unveil $70 billion in AI and energy investments
Trump to unveil $70 billion in AI and energy investments

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Trump to unveil $70 billion in AI and energy investments

PITTSBURGH, July 14 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump will announce $70 billion in artificial-intelligence and energy investments on Tuesday, according to a White House official and a person familiar with the initiatives. Trump will reveal details of these new initiatives at an event near Pittsburgh, where he will be joined by Republican Senator David McCormick, who is hosting the first Pennsylvania Energy and Innovation Summit at Carnegie Mellon University. McCormick's office did not respond on Monday to requests for details of the announcements. The investments come from various industries that include new data centers and power grid upgrades and expansions, according to the White House official. Axios was the first to report the $70 billion figure.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store