Incidental Findings

Medicine, Culture, and Life

Danielle Ofri

Danielle Ofri
Location
New York, New York,
Title
Physician
Bio
Danielle Ofri, M.D., Ph.D. is Associate Professor of Medicine at New York University School of Medicine and an internist at Bellevue Hospital, the oldest public hospital in the country. She is co-founder and Editor-in-Chief of the Bellevue Literary Review. Her newest book, Medicine in Translation: Journeys with my Patients--is about the experience of immigrants and Americans in the U.S. health care system. She is the author of two collections of essays about life in medicine: Incidental Findings: Lessons from my Patients in the Art of Medicine and Singular Intimacies: Becoming a Doctor at Bellevue. Danielle Ofri's writings have appeared in the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the New England Journal of Medicine, the Lancet, and on National Public Radio. Danielle Ofri is currently working on a set of essays about medicine, while several unfinished novels in various states of disrepair gather prime New-York-City dust under her bed. Ofri lives with her husband, three children, cello, and black-lab mutt in a singularly intimate Manhattan-sized apartment. Danielle's homepage is www.danielleofri.com

MY RECENT POSTS

APRIL 24, 2010 12:13PM

Arizona—The Newest Soviet Republic

Rate: 2 Flag
handcuffs

In a move that would fit right in with Stalinist governing style, Governor Jan Brewer signed bill SB-1070 into law, making it a state crime to walk the streets of Arizona without papers proving one’s immigration status.

A person could be detained by police and charged with a misdemeanor for forgetting their wallet. Let’s only hope Arizona starts building its own Gulag Archipelago for contain all these new arrests.

What happens to citizens or legal residents of Hispanic descent who happen to go to the grocery store without their passports? Will they be arrested too? Ms. Brewer said that police would have proper training so as to avoid racial profiling, but how exactly are the police going to pick out the immigrants from the natives strolling the streets?

In a chilling quote, Ms. Brewer said, “We have to trust our law enforcement.” Ask any young black and Hispanics in New York City about that. Ask anyone who lived under Stalin, Ceausescu, Tito, Pol Pot, or Milosevic about how law enforcement should be trusted when it comes to interrogating civilians about “carrying their papers.”

Yes, illegal immigration across the US-Mexican border is a problem. Our society needs to face this and start dealing with it. But casting a net so wide as to dragoon scores of innocent people hardly seems the most efficient way to deal with it.

Given all the crime that is occurring, let’s let our law enforcement spend their energy going after criminals committing actual crimes. For immigration issues, we need our elected officials—and our society in general—to get serious about how to reform immigration so that legal immigration is a realistic possibility, not a Byzantine impossibility.

Until then, anyone wanting a reality tour of Stalinist society should fly into Pheonix and try out their Spanish.

 

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Danielle Ofri is a writer and practicing internist at New York City’s Bellevue Hospital. She is the editor-in-chief of the Bellevue Literary Review. Her newest book is Medicine in Translation: Journeys with my Patients. Her book is about the medical care of immigrants and Americans in the US health care system.

 

View the YouTube book trailer.

 

You can follow Danielle on Twitter and Facebook, or visit her homepage.

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Comments

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After Ms. Brewer's press conferenced autograph, I was reminded of the image of an east german guard asking for the "papers" of anyone boarding a train... political machines can sometimes be the worst enemy of democracy. Arizona sets a new standard of absurdity.
There's a simple solution to the problem. All legal citizens of Hispanic decent just need to wear a brown triangle on their clothes. It worked in Nazi Germany, why not here?