Canada is using ancestry DNA websites to help it deport people

spacemonkeyg78:

ashermajestywishes:

spacemonkeyg78:

ashermajestywishes:

angstbotfic:

allthecanadianpolitics:

In another example of the extraordinary lengths Canadian immigration officials go to deport failed refugee claimants, the Canada Border Services Agency has been collecting DNA from migrants and using ancestry websites to find and contact their distant relatives and establish their nationality.

“I think it is a matter of public interest that border service agencies like the CBSA are able to obtain access to DNA results from sites like Familytreedna.com and Ancestry.com,” said Subodh Bharati, a lawyer who is representing a man who says he’s Liberian, but who the government is now trying to prove is actually Nigerian. “There are clear privacy concerns. How is the CBSA able to access this information and what measures are being put in place to ensure this information remains confidential?”

Bharati, who is representing his client through CLASP, the legal aid clinic at Osgoode Hall Law School, said he is aware of at least two individuals who used Familytreedna.com, one in the UK, who have been contacted by the CBSA seeking to deport someone from Canada.

“Individuals using these sites to look at their family tree should be aware that their confidential information is being made available to the government and that border agents may contact them to help facilitate the deportation of migrants,” he said.

Continue Reading.

holy shit, but also … the science on this is nowhere near good enough to support this use, even if it wasn’t horrible. 

I’ve been saying not to use these sites for the longest. The science is still new and the professional ethics are non-existent.

Ancestry.com and FamilySearch.org is Mormon owned and no offense to the cult I grew up in (actually, offense is meant) they are a bigoted bunch of cultists who already got involved with politics enough to be threatened with removal of tax exempt status for their fight against equality so I can see them being 100% friendly with the gestapo arms of the governments if they’re told it will remove black and brown people from their communities. Why people trusted their DNA and gross amounts of information about themselves and every member of their families to these cults is beyond me.

This explains a lot. I would not give that lot my information. These are the people who thought black people were cursed until the 70s. Don’t give these guys your information guys.

They also have continues their evangelical crusade to colonize the “savages” here and abroad. Trusting these people with your info is like handing over all your secrets and your family’s secrets to the devil.

Canada is using ancestry DNA websites to help it deport people

The Coming Era of Forced Abortions

schraubd:

“We can’t restore our civilization with somebody else’s babies.”

That is a direct, verbatim quote from a sitting member of Congress – namely Representative Steve King (R-IA).
The “somebody else” King was referring to was immigrants – specifically, brown immigrants from Latin America. Them and their children, for King, represent an existential threat to the American republic. And while King stands apart for the explicitness with which he indulges in racist rhetoric, he is not alone in the construction of immigrant births as threat. The term “anchor baby” – used by Donald Trump, yes, but also Jeb Bush – also presents it as illicit, even dangerous, when immigrants give birth inside the United States.
This is not a post about immigrants, exactly. It is a post about abortion. And particularly, it is a post about the possibility of government actors coercing or compelling women (particularly women under the custodial authority of the state) to have an abortion.

People scuff at this prospect – less based on law than based on their own lack of imagination. Who in government might want mandatory abortions? Why, the pro-life movement wouldn’t stand for it!
Which is why I bring up the view of Mr. King and his cohort. It is entirely plausible that King and his cohort could come to believe that it is permissible – even a national security imperative – that immigrant women not be allowed to birth their “anchor babies” on our shores. They already possess and wield the language that presents the prospects of such births as a wrong, even a threat. Do you really think him and his would really have a problem with someone forcibly terminating an immigrant mother’s pregnancy? Do you really think they’d even struggle to justify it? The only question would be whether they’d politely avert their eyes or outright endorse the practice.
Everything about the contemporary state of right-wing politics suggests that this is not an idle fear. The average conservative hardly bats an eyelash if horrific conditions in ICE custody cause immigrant women to miscarry. Pro-life has never extended that far, after all – it is a movement primarily about controlling women, not saving babies. Forcible births and forcible abortions are two sides of the same coin; the preference depends on the woman involved.
Or take it another step: Remember that infamous case where the Trump administration tried to prevent an undocumented immigrant teenager from procuring an abortion? Judge Kavanaugh’s dissent assumed for sake of argument that the girl had an abortion right, but argued that the government could temporarily refuse to honor it if it could secure her an immigration sponsor with sufficient rapidity. But one Judge, Karen Henderson, went further – in her opinion, undocumented immigrant minors exist in a lawless space, devoid of any rights over their own body at all by virtue of their illegal entry (Judge Kavanaugh, for his part, did not join that opinion). The logic of Henderson’s dissent, at least, would apply equally if the government – whipped into a hysteria that “demographics are destiny” (to use another Steve King-ism) – sought to compel her to abort her child.
The thing is, Roe v. Wade does not protect, or does not solely protect, a woman’s right to an abortion. It protects a woman’s right to choose an abortion – or not. And in a world without Roe, it isn’t clear what judicial doctrine would render it unlawful for a government actor to compel or coerce a woman (particularly a woman under custodial authority of the state) to have an abortion.
Indeed, it’s far from clear what legal principle absent Roe would or could give a woman – again, especially women under the custodial authority of the state (which might include the incarcerated, immigrants, and some minors) – a constitutional right to continue her pregnancy as against a state official claiming authority to compel her otherwise. Roe answers that women have a right to bodily autonomy which vests in them a private right to make reproductive decisions for themselves. Knock off Roe, eliminate the constitutional reproductive autonomy right, and it’s replaced by … what exactly? 
I don’t think there’s an answer – at least, not one that doesn’t swing entirely in the other direction and say that abortion is constitutionally impermissible (which, of course, would remain blissfully apathetic regarding the rights of women in favor of waxing lyrical over the rights of blastulae). So imagine this: Roe is overturned. The issue of abortion is, as promised, “returned to the states”. A few months later, a prison guard rapes an inmate and then, to cover up the crime, forces her to terminate the ensuing pregnancy. Is the latter act a constitutional violation? I don’t know that it is. Is it a clearly established constitutional violation (thank you, qualified immunity)? I don’t see how. The constitutional underpinnings that say women cannot be forced to involuntarily terminate their pregnancies rest entirely on Roe v. Wade – if that’s overturned, the best you can say about the state of that right is that it is up in the air.
It’s well known by now that the end of Roe will fall hardest on the poorest, most marginalized, and most vulnerable women – not surprisingly, the ones for whom “liberty” is barely given the pretense of acknowledgment whilst government authority is allowed near-boundless jurisdiction. But even this gives contemporary conservatism too much credit, as it suggests that ending abortion is the point. The fact that pro-life politics virtually never come tied to any sort of tangible commitment to expanding pre-natal care is a clue that the birthing isn’t the key variable – the control is. Sometimes you want to control women via compulsory motherhood, and sometimes … you don’t – but “pro-life” isn’t going to do any real work one way or the other. The tides of the contemporary right – replete with White nationalist themes, anxious to the point of obsession about becoming a minority in “their” nation – hardly are ones inclined to respect the rights of “someone else’s babies.”
Think I’m being hyperbolic? Answer me this: If reports emerged of ICE agents forcing immigrant women to abort their children, would Steve King utter a word against it? Would his “pro-life” instincts kick in? Or would he find that he’s … fine? Okay, even?
We know the answer. And the thing is, you don’t have to think Steve King is the be-all end-all of modern conservatism to concede that he represents a real and growing portion of it – a portion that no doubt has adherents amongst ICE enforcers, amongst authoritarian prison guards, amongst certain extreme (but less so everyday) pockets of fanatical racist and xenophobic authoritarians. If you don’t think some among them aren’t going to start endorsing “extraordinary measures” to ensure no babies get anchored, if you don’t think some among them aren’t going to turn to forced abortions as a means of covering up their own rape culture, you’re deluding yourself.
And ultimately, that’s all that’s necessary, because we won’t be talking about forced abortions as some sort of nationwide policy. We’d be talking about a patchwork of incidents and abuses and cover-ups and “oversights” that just so happen to fall upon the sort of women that the right doesn’t care about in the first place. It will be so easy to ignore them, so easy to say they brought it on themselves, so easy to let the majestic lattice of qualified immunity and formalist textualism conclude that they have no remedy.
I think we’ll see it. I really do (I know that if we do, the great bulk of the American conservative movement will not care one whit about it). It’s not going the only part of a Roe-less future, but it will be a part. Because when your jurisprudence denies that pregnant women have the right to choice what happens to their own body and your politics grows ever more ravenously xenophobic and your acknowledgment that immigrants, the poor, and the incarcerated nonetheless have rights shrivels into nothingness – the result of that cocktail isn’t any mystery.

via The Debate Link https://ift.tt/2NDViWJ

‘I’ve never seen that before’: Activists marvel as calls for immigrant rights enter the mainstream

solacekames:

amimijones:

Maybe I’ll get back to this later, but I have an issue with the framing in this I can’t even start to articulate rn.

It’s a very pragmatic and calculated framing, but familiar. I talked about this on my last podcast. On one hand it’s great to see all these white people showing up, when say eight years ago, I’d go to an immigration protest and there’d be hardly any. On the other hand, what is that going to translate to? To really help immigrants and refugees in the here and now, we need to translate all this energy into policy proposals and successful bills and so on. If you’re a refugee family and you’re trying to get your mom into the US from somewhere like Dadaab none of this protest stuff means jack shit to you unless it produces a positive change in your life. And for that to happen, Democrats need to get back some degree of power AND there needs to be a concerted effort to make them keep their immigration promises. The fact that there are so many Democratic politicians with deep ties to immigrant communities makes this project possible, but it still can’t be ignored or taken for granted. 

I can’t read the article because it’s behind a paywall but what you said on the podcast reminded me of when I went to a meeting about helping out undocumented people in my local community. There were a lot of immigration activists and faith leaders there. One thing that was emphasized repeatedly by the people who had been going to the meetings for years was that they were happy everyone was there (we were in an Elementary school classroom and it was so crowded that about half the people there couldn’t find seats) but disappointed that only a handful of people had been putting in the work during Obama. They also reiterated that White English speaking citizens needed to stay active in the fight and not disappear when there is a Democratic administration again.

‘I’ve never seen that before’: Activists marvel as calls for immigrant rights enter the mainstream

deweydecimalchickens:

rush-keating:

wodneswynn:

wodneswynn:

So a lot of American xenophobia is informed by the fact that our news over-reports crimes committed by immigrants in Europe to such an extent that if you watch a lot of cable news you’ll deadass get the impression that every major European city is full of gangs of immigrants who just run around killing people all day and the European cops just watch it happen like “Alas, because of political correctness I can do nothing, if we try and stop and bloodbath we’ll be executed for racism.”

Which is of course, like, not true even a little bit, but it’s such a strongly-held belief that I’m not sure how to combat it.

I got into it the other day with a dude who was all like, “Yeah, it’s horrible that ICE is putting babies in baby jail and selling them for money, but isn’t it a necessary step to prevent the streets running red with blood like what’s happening in Europe??”

And you can’t just be all simplistic high-school-debate-team about it and just tell the poor fool that, no, that isn’t happening, because real-world political work is more complicated than that, but I ain’t yet got the hang of it.

California too for non-Californians. News reports California like it’s an apocalyptic wasteland. California also is “minority-majority” and conservatives link the two even if they’re not explicitly linked in the reporting.

It’s like when they claimed Muslims had filled Birmingham with no-go areas. Like, I LIVE HERE. I know that is simply not true. I grew up in a majority-Muslim area of Birmingham. It was fine. I was the only white girl in my primary school. We went to the mosque on a school trip. My parents still live there and I’m only a couple of miles up the road. Until this year the main site of my work was there. AND NOBODY DIED OF THE MUSLIMS. Calm down. Have a Rescue Remedy. 

But it’s really hard to argue with someone who has said something so ridiculous it’s Not Even Wrong. There’s not a great a deal of credibility to be had in just staring at someone with your jaw dropped and finally managing a “but… whuh… what the fuck?” Oh god, I’m actually supposed to debate that like it’s a reasonable proposition? Ah fuck, let me just recalibrate my brain… uh, I don’t think it dials back that far. The bit’s snapped off and now it’s just sparking. 

ok but how is jokes about cocaine even racist

skylikethat:

because you’re stereotyping a country with something incredibly incredibly negative and acting like it’s what represents them in the world.

associating colombia with cocaine and the cartels is like associating every single muslim with ISIS. do you get how racist that would be? because the cartels are literally ISIS in colombia, they were the biggest users of modern day terrorism originally. bombs, kidnappings, public killings, they’ve used it all.

it’s also a very personal situation.

you know how nobody makes any jokes about 9/11 in the US? that’s because 3,000 people were killed.

over 500,000 people have been killed in colombia over the drug wars.

because what cocaine for colombia is is a “war”. it’s not a drug, it’s actual warfare that has been going on for over 60 years. there were over 5 million refugees having to flee their homes at one point because of it. the people most impacted are indigenous people who live in the mountains and jungles (a good place to originally hide from the conquistadors) but are where the drug traffickers hide.

one of our own players cuadrado had to hide under his bed when guerillas came and shot and killed his father in another room. that’s something he lived through.

so i know westerners think it’s cute and funny and seem to enjoy this idea we live in these weird backwards ways and do nothing but fight each other for drugs because we’re “monkeys” and “animals” and “thugs” according to tweets i saw yesterday, but this issue has had a huge impact on colombia and we don’t think it’s funny. we’re not proud of cocaine, we don’t use it the way england does (third on the list of users and we’re somewhere at the bottom), and if you think think it’s funny it only shows you’re really ignorant and have no respect for the devastation it’s caused our country.

Walk or die: Algeria strands 13,000 migrants in the Sahara

dagwolf:

ASSAMAKA, Niger (AP) — From this isolated frontier post deep in the sands of the Sahara, the expelled migrants can be seen coming over the horizon by the hundreds. They look like specks in the distance, trudging miserably across some of the world’s most unforgiving terrain in the blistering sun.

They are the ones who made it out alive.
Here in the desert, Algeria has abandoned more than 13,000 people in the past 14 months, including pregnant women and children, stranding them without food or water and forcing them to walk, sometimes at gunpoint, under temperatures of up to 48 degrees Celsius (118 degrees Fahrenheit).

In Niger, where the majority head, the lucky ones limp across a desolate 15-kilometer (9-mile) no man’s land to Assamaka, less a town than a collection of unsteady buildings sinking into drifts of sand. Others, disoriented and dehydrated, wander for days before a U.N. rescue squad can find them. Untold numbers perish along the way; nearly all the more than two dozen survivors interviewed by The Associated Press told of people in their groups who simply could not go on and vanished into the Sahara.

“Women were lying dead, men….. Other people got missing in the desert because they didn’t know the way,” said Janet Kamara, who was pregnant at the time. “Everybody was just on their own.”

Walk or die: Algeria strands 13,000 migrants in the Sahara

EU condemns rescue boats picking up drowning refugees in Mediterranean

cocainesocialist:

The European Union has condemned rescue boats picking up drowning refugees in the Mediterranean, in a dramatic hardening of the bloc’s border policy that brings it in line with the continent’s anti-immigration populists.

After a summit in Brussels EU leaders backed the approach of Italy’s new government to the boats, suggesting the vessels should stay away and could be breaking the law by picking up those in distress.

bun the eu

EU condemns rescue boats picking up drowning refugees in Mediterranean