Long Island Wins provides resources and insight to promote
immigration solutions that include and work for everyone.

Our Blog

Home > Our Blog > Baseball Feels the Social Media Heat on Arizona’s Immigration Law

Blog Post

Baseball Feels the Social Media Heat on Arizona’s Immigration Law

Posted May 5, 2010 by Tom Watson
Categories: National

Share

Talk about a “flash cause.” The blowback over Arizona’s strict new anti-immigrant legislation is firing up protest on Facebook and Twitter – and the target of opportunity for activists is the country’s National Pastime. Online organizers – and Major League players themselves – are putting the heat on Major League Baseball and Commissioner Bud Selig to boycott Arizona as the host for the 2011 All Star Game and the site of a large portion of spring training facilities unless the state overturns the controversial new law, which makes it a state crime to be in Arizona without proper documents and requires local police to check the legal status of suspected undocumented immigrants. One campaign is using baseball card images of popular stars like Mariano Rivera and Albert Pujols with the word “suspect” stamped in red across their pictures.

That particular campaign – Move The Game – is  run by Presente.org, a Latino-led online organizing initiative, which is dedicated to “an end to immigration policies that exploit workers and tear apart families.” And there are others: “10,000 Mets Fans for Boycotting Arizona’s 2011 All-Star Game” is a Facebook group sponsored by the Working Families Party in New York (there’s a Yankees version as well) – it already has 286 members. The biggest group (also led by Presente) – 1 MILLION Strong AGAINST the Arizona Immigration Law SB1070 – has already signed up 1.3 million people on Facebook.

Meanwhile, the Major League Players Association has strongly condemned the law and a wide range of players, including the Mets catcher Rod Barajas, Padres closer Heath Bell, Oriole shortstop Cesar Izturis, White Sox manager Ozzie Gullen, and Padres first-baseman Adrian Gonzalez have spoken out strongly. Last week, the opening game in a weekend series between the Arizona Diamondbacks and Chicago Cubs included a rousing street protest outside (the D’backs may face protests around the league, even through team ownership does not support the legislation). And on the hardcourt, the Phoenix Suns planned a Cinco de Mayo playoff protest against their home state law, wearing jerseys that read “Los Suns” in a show of support for the Latino community.

This post originally appeared May 5 on On Philanthropy.



Tags : arizona, mlb, sb 1070, tom watson

Permalink   Comments



Comments

Recent Blog Posts

Immigrant Workers and Small Business Owners March in Babylon for a Higher Minimum Wage
May 23, 2012
TONIGHT: Bilingual Welcoming Circle and Book Club in Brentwood
May 23, 2012
Koreans on Long Island Show Support for the New York DREAM Act
May 22, 2012
Apply for a Movement Building Fellowship in Brentwood
May 22, 2012

Category Listing


Monthly Archive


Keywords



Connect With Us

  • Youtube
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Stay Informed

 

Our Bloggers

Ted Hesson
Online Editor
Patrick Young, Esq.
Blogger
Ana Llácer
Reporting Fellow

Get Involved
Visit the Action Center to find out how you can effect change in your community.
Learn More
See the Media & Resources available to help you get the facts about immigration on Long Island.
Support Long Island Wins
Your donations and financial support keep us going. Every bit helps. Donate today!
Connect with Us
Stay Informed!