一本hardcore美国无证移民生活实录,记录了很多令人心碎的故事,但作者还挺风趣的:“I am their child, if I wasn’t their child I should be patented and mass-produced and distributed to undocumented immigrants at Walmarts. I am a professional immigrant’s daughter.”
作者在自己长期遭受精神疾病的折磨的同时,还为帮助这个边缘化的群体付出了大量的精力和财力,着实impressive。就可惜没往更深的地方写,要是再升华一下会更值得读。
worth reading. otherwise I wouldnt know the undocumented were the first group after the first responders arriving at the 9/11 world trade center to save lives and clean up under suffering conditions, only to be stiffed by subcontractors and denied of the 911 funds.
The unabridged, uneuphemized undocumented experience that's rarely discussed in popular media. The few lines on "a little bit above the law" despite "law-abiding" and "unjust law" vs "higher moral law" is illuminating. When we take a look at who makes the law and who is governed by it, the answer to questions such as the undocumented becomes clear.
Eye-opening learning about the lives of undocumented immigrants, but not resonating much with the author’s sense of privilege mixed with self-pity. It is mentioned in the book that many undocumented immigrants do not think of the U.S. as home, and it is unimaginable working oneself to death in a situation like this. Wish the book had given answers.
Immediately after 9/11, “the first responders were firemen and EMT workers. The second responders were undocumented immigrants. … Many of them have developed cancer. They have rhinitis, gastritis, arthritis, severe acid reflux, asthma... Their psychological symptoms are triggered by…, by darkness, by any news coverage of natural disasters.”