“Repentance is more than merely being sorry,” the Rev. Joyce Antila Phipps, the executive director of Casa de Esperanza,
a community organization working with immigrants, told the gathering.
“It is an act of turning around and then moving forward to make change.”
The majority of those we incarcerate in this country—and we
incarcerate a quarter of the world’s prison population—have never
committed a violent crime. Eleven million undocumented immigrants face
the possibility of imprisonment and deportation. President Barack Obama,
outpacing George W. Bush, has deported more than 400,000 people since
he took office. Families, once someone is seized, detained and deported,
are thrown into crisis. Children come home from school and find they
have lost their mothers or fathers. The small incomes that once
sustained them are snuffed out. Those who remain behind often become
destitute.
But human beings matter little in the corporate state.
Common Dreams
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