Wednesday 09.25.19
‘It’ doesn’t thrill Review: “It Chapter Two” doesn’t scare like the first film
Page 4
C URRENT American River College Sacramento, Calif.
Vol. 71 Ed. 1
The
Child prodigy
Musician competed internationally at Carnegie Hall, NY
Page 5
(File Photo)
Art New Media student Miguel Gonzalez-Miranda, pictured here standing next to his work at the James Kaneko Art Gallery at American River College, was detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in June, 2019.
Art student detained by ICE
By Jennah Booth
jennahpage@gmail.com American River College art student Miguel Gonzalez-Miranda’s portrait “Inner Puzzle” has sat in a narrow closet in the back of the James Kaneko Gallery since early spring. Intended to hang in a student art show in February, the glassframed, mixed-media collage was too heavy to hang and needed to be returned to its artist, but messages to Gonzalez-Miranda from Brad Carps, vice president of the ARC Art Club, went unanswered. Gonzalez-Miranda’s silence continued because on June 4, he was detained by the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The ARC student is currently being
held at the Yuba County Jail, according to the Sacramento News & Review. Gonzalez-Miranda’ story is not unique. Throughout many states, including California, many students fear being detained or fear for those close to them who may be undocumented. In September 2017, Donald Trump ordered to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program. DACA protected young adults who were brought to the US illegally as young children, also known as Dreamers. A federal judge blocked Trump’s order to end DACA, and the Supreme Court is scheduled to begin considering the fate of the program in November. Gonzalez-Miranda is a Dreamer
who immigrated from Mexico to California as a child. According to SNR, Gonzalez-Miranda was looking into obtaining US citizenship last February, but his inability to pay legal fees related to a misdemeanor when he was a teen, ultimately led to his detainment. This news came as a shock to Carps, and many others in the ARC community, as Gonzalez-Miranda was well known in many ARC and Sacramento City College circles. While Carps says he knows multiple people within his personal circles who are undocumented, he was unaware of Gonzalez-Miranda’s status. “I know five people, including Miguel, whose immigartion status may be threatened in some way and … it’s pretty terrifying,” Carps
said. Gonzalez-Miranda’s sister Sandra Gonzalez-Miranda started a GoFundMe campaign in order to raise funds for legal expenses, as well as support for his family. Since June 21, people have donated nearly $12,000. “Not only has Miguel contributed so much to the community,” Sandra wrote for the GoFundMe. “But he also has become a great inspiration to our family through his support and encouragement to always keep moving forward in the ups and downs of life.” Here at ARC, feelings about Gonzalez-Miranda’s situation resurfaced in the days following his Sept. 9 birthday. Carps dragged the heavy, 24 inch by 36 inch collage out of the closet it’s been
kept in for the last six months. “I always admire him because he … was a very principled guy,” said Carps, who met GonzalezMiranda through the ARC Art Club and various art classes. “He always was very generous with his time and I think that’s a really important indicator of like really positive values.” Patricia Wood, the director for the Kaneko Gallery and faculty advisor for the ARC Art Club, says she’s known Gonzalez-Miranda for around two years as a part of the Kaneko gallery crew and an avid Art Club member. “He was just a fixture of the art community,” she said. “He knew a lot of people because he helped a lot of people. He was just involved.” Wood says she’s met many people at ARC who have faced similar complexities surrounding their or their family member’s citizenship. “I’ve met students who came here when they were two, and the rest of their siblings are documented … they know no other place except for the US,” Wood said. “It’s just really bizarre. People don’t really think of that … [they don’t] understand that history and complexity of the situations.” Gonzalez-Miranda’s involvement around campus extended to groups and clubs that focus on undocumented communities. Deborah Hernandez is a student personnel assistant for the UndocuScholar Resource Connection and co-founded the Undocumented and Unafraid Club while she was a student at ARC. Hernandez said Gonzalez-Miranda helped the club design posters and other artwork. Hernandez says when she found out about Gonzalez-Miranda, her initial reaction was to jump to how they could help him and his family. “I’m part of this community myself too. I’m a DACA recipient,” Hernandez said. “I was really angry and sad … but you know, with this administration, it’s really just like, not a surprise.”
ARC Dreamer | Page 2
What the Green New Deal could mean for ARC
By Oden Taylor
odenshawntaylor@gmail.com
Photo by Oden Taylor | Staff Writer
Hundreds of people gather at the California State Capitol to protest climate change on Sept. 20, 2019.
With next year’s presidential election rapidly approaching and global temperatures climbing on a yearly basis, questions about the effects and prevention of climate change are rising as well. What humanity will do to save itself is at the forefront of social and political conversation. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is a body of the United Nations dedicated specifically to providing the world
@ARCurrent
INDEX
@ARCurrent
2&3 News 4 A&C 7 Opinion 6 Sports 5 Feature
with an objective and scientific depiction of climate change. Its members believe that scientific data shows the effects of climate change are only going to get worse, especially if no action is taken. “The range of published evidence indicates that the net damage costs of climate change are likely to be significant and increase over time,” according to the IPCC’s website. On Friday, Sept. 20, students of all ages around the world united during the Global Climate Strike. The climate strike was inspired by
/ARCurrent.com
BEAVER BALL ARC kicks off
PAGE 6 & 8 2019-20 season with two wins
“Fridays for Future” creator Greta Thunberg, a 16-year-old Swedish climate activist who sailed across the Atlantic ocean in a solar-powered yacht as an act of protest against the harmful effects of air travel. Thunberg brought with her a message: climate change reform now.
Green New Deal | Page 2