Arizona Boycott Takes a TollSaturday, November 27, 2010 at 06:50 AM
EST
In an article that was overwhelmingly critical of the boycott of
Arizona over its draconian immigration law, AP writer Bob Christie points out
that there is now an estimate for the financial impact of the boycott on the
state.
Businesses have lost lucrative contracts and conventions have
relocated, performers called off concerts, and cities and counties in about a
dozen states passed resolutions to avoid doing business with Arizona. A report
released Thursday says the boycott has cost the state $141 million in lost
meeting and convention business since Republican Gov. Jan Brewer signed the
law
in April.
As Bloomberg News explains:
Convention bookings for July and August fell 35 percent from a
year earlier, cutting lodging revenue by $45 million, the Center for
American Progress said in a report
today. Lost spending on food, beverages, entertainment, local transportation
and retail goods brought the total cost to $141 million, the report
said.
Last month, Zack de la Rocha, frontman for Rage Against the Machine, and
Salvador Reza wrote a piece for the Huffington Post, in which they made
it clear that despite the fact that the federal government won an injunction
blocking the worst parts of SB 1070, the boycott must continue.
So long as there is a 287(g) agreement with local police; So
long as the Federal Secure Communities program is in local jails; So long as
federal programs are used to make Arizona a modern apartheid state empowering
the governor and state legislature to violate civil and human rights. The
resistance of organizations, artists, writers and governments will continue.
The boycott of Arizona will not stop, and we will expand our struggle locally,
nationally and internationally asking all peoples of conscience to join. La
Lucha Sigue (The Struggle Continues).
This article originally appeared on Waging Nonviolence. |