|
|
May 19, 2013
|
|
America’s Love-Hate Relationship With ImmigrationPosted on May 24, 2007By Marie Cocco WASHINGTON—The great immigration debate will continue after this Memorial Day—and Memorial Day next and the one after that. It is not to be settled with this or that piece of legislation which pleases the right or the left, or allows one political party or the other to claim credit or assign blame. All this howling about border guards and amnesty, all the arguments over good immigrants versus the bad may seem like fresh fodder for the unceasing talkers of cable television or for candidates during the presidential debates. It is not. America’s love-hate relationship with immigrants is nearly as old as the republic, and the contours haven’t changed much. If history is a guide, then this latest political spasm over immigration will turn out, eventually, like all the others: with more immigrants coming to the United States and assimilating enough to be seen eventually as just another thread in the social and cultural fabric that we know as America. This is, after all, how the bagel became ubiquitous and the taco gained fame through a fast-food chain. “I have trouble seeing these people as anything other than potential Americans,” says Daniel Soyer, a Fordham University historian who specializes in immigration. From the 18th-century Alien and Sedition Acts to the formation of ad-hoc militias that now try to enforce border regulations on their own, a fear of foreigners has coexisted in uneasy tension alongside a desire for cheap labor—and a yearning among those who would provide that labor to better themselves in a place where the heights to be reached exceed those anywhere else on Earth. Advertisement The great wave of European immigration of the late 19th and early 20th centuries has been romanticized to the point of mythology. Descendants of these immigrants often claim their forebears came the “right” way—legally. In truth, there were few restrictions on who could come and no quotas until the 1920s. Then nativism and racial animosity again drove immigration policy with enactment of a quota system meant to keep out southern and eastern Europeans—Italians, Poles and Jews were the main targets. “They weren’t viewed as fit material for citizenship. The thinking was very racial,” Soyer told me. “The idea was that these people could not become good American citizens, because they just didn’t have it in their blood.” The Depression brought immigration to an ebb because there were so few jobs to be had. But it, too, foreshadowed the current debate. In the 1930s, Mexicans, including legal residents and U.S. citizens, were removed from the Los Angeles area in a repatriation program driven by a sense that economically stressed Americans shouldn’t have to compete for jobs and dwindling resources. While southern and eastern Europeans had been kept out a decade earlier, Mexicans had been welcomed then for their cheap labor. “The railroads, mining companies and agribusinesses sent agents to greet immigrants at the border, where they extolled the rewards of their respective enterprises,” author Steve Boisson wrote last September in American History magazine. As it was then, so it is now. Those who promote the roundup and deportation of 12 million illegal immigrants currently thought to be in the U.S. should consider the crude Depression-era lesson. The repatriation of Mexicans then didn’t stop California from becoming a haven for succeeding generations of immigrants from across the border. Nor, says Soyer, are current distinctions between legal and illegal immigrants of much long-term significance. “They come from the same places and they do the same jobs,” he notes. It all reminds him of a recent conversation he had with a friend whose grandmother, illiterate at the time, emigrated in 1916 from Europe. A year later, Soyer notes, a literacy test was imposed and she would have been considered illegal. “What difference would it have made in her life?” he asks. “And what difference would it have made to America?” Marie Cocco’s e-mail address is mariecocco(at symbol)washpost.com. © 2007, Washington Post Writers Group New and Improved CommentsIf you have trouble leaving a comment, review this help page. Still having problems? Let us know. If you find yourself moderated, take a moment to review our comment policy. |
By Zena, June 4, 2007 at 1:57 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
The nature of reality is this: Everything in this world has it’s limits. Period. The more indiscriminate collecting of immigrants from anywhere, but especially Mexico is destroying what little was left of the American dream.
Report thisEvery group of Mexicans swarming across the border is pushing another group of Americans who are already citizens into misery and poverty without hope.
These people do not want to assimilate. In fact, they are very much condescending, conceited and arrogant toward American citizens.
If I wanted to hear their marachi bands and speak spanish, I’d go to mexico. Which I DON’T. Or I would move there. It’s just another one of the elite’s tools to destroy our soverignty among their other financial considerations….
Mexicans are NOT our friends.
By Dawn, May 27, 2007 at 9:41 am Link to this comment
Rodney’s comment is spon on. The “guest worker program” is just another word for slavery. These people are brought here under false pretenses. They have no rights. They are physically locked up in many cases. Their wages are totally at the whim of the employer who is unregulated. Their fate is grim and miserable. And Bush wants to increase this program? And congress is thinking about it???
Report thisBy P. T., May 26, 2007 at 10:49 pm Link to this comment
If the United States had a shortage of low-wage workers, the monetary gap between the people at the top and those at the bottom would not be getting wider. The politicians say foolish things on the topic of economics.
Report thisBy rodney, May 26, 2007 at 11:59 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Let’s be real,illegal immigrants are the new slaves. America still love the idea of cheap labor so illegal immigrants are the next closest thing to slavery. The’ll plant and pick your crops,do your landscsping,build your homes,be your maids and provide cheap sex at minimal costs, all because blacks and other legal immigrants have rights and are allowed to sue if their rights are violated. No one is proposing any of American’s right’s for the illegals because we want our slavery back. The people who once did these jobs and were protected by America’s labor laws don’t want these folks here. The White Supremacist don’t want them here either because America is becoming less white and one day will the illegals may have the right to vote. The rich and elite want their slaves back,and since money talk’s it’s time to welcome the new form of slavery back to America.
Report thisBy diablo abogado, May 25, 2007 at 10:46 pm Link to this comment
The comments of P. T., DennisD, Skruff, LonewackoDotCom covered much of what I was going to say about Ms Cocco’s article.
Having read many posts on immigration, it seems that the Democratic/progressive base is as opposed to this new immigration/Amnesty bill as the Republican/conservative base. It seems that the political elite of each party are out of touch with the majority of the public.
It’s obvious that the rich Republican elite are motivated by the desire for cheap labor and higher profits. But, why are Democratic leaders selling out their working and middle class base?
Report thisBy P. T., May 25, 2007 at 7:43 pm Link to this comment
There is no such thing as a labor shortage. According to standard economic theory, if a business is too inefficient to pay prevailing market wages, then it should close down rather than squander resources that could be put to better use elsewhere.
Report thisBy DennisD, May 24, 2007 at 8:39 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Legal immigration built this country, illegal immigration is tearing it down courtesy of our corporately owned politicians. The fact is our government doesn’t know or care if there are 12, 20 or 100 million illegal immigrants here. The only think that matters is that real wages for the working person have been stagnant for 20 plus years. Big business has never been bigger or more profitable - it’s not hard to figure out why. There is no middle class south of the border and soon there won’t be one here either. NAFTA & CAFTA were supposed to raise the standard of living in other countries and both have been complete failures. SHAFTA has effectively lowered ours much to the delight of Wall St, its been a complete success.
What Marie “neglects” to mention is that during the immigration waves of the late 19th and early 20th centuries there were no free benefit programs for people to sign up for once they got here. The services available now are paid for by taxpayers and are supposed to be for the benefit of American citizens and aren’t in place to be bankrupted by an endless wave of illegals who contribute little or nothing to them.
Report thisTake away the jobs and benefits and it wouldn’t be necessary to round up anybody. They’d rather be home where there’s nothing for them than here when there’s nothing for them. Wouldn’t you.
By P. T., May 24, 2007 at 5:01 pm Link to this comment
Immigration in the U.S. is a redistribution scheme to drive down the wages of the working class. That makes the goods and services that they supply cheaper for the elite to purchase.
Note that the influx of foreign doctors was shut off several years ago. Doctors have political clout.
However, the elite thinks the U.S. working class is overpaid.
Report thisBy Skruff, May 24, 2007 at 2:19 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
All the spin by the fourth estate can’t override the fact that the people they defend, ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS (surprise surprise they are not all hispanic) have pushed law-biding potential citizens to the rear. Ms Cocco can not make me feel like a racist or a zenophobe by her claim that there were no immigration laws prior to 1920. That simply means that the folks whom arrived before 1920 are here legally.
Personally, I feel that capitalism and the corporate need to further reduce hourly wages will successfully lobby a fat, lazy, overpaid congress to admit these illegals.
My suggestion is that the rest of us use their game to win ours. replace our vastly overpaid elected officals with imported cheaper Mexican labor. So they are uneducated. It is impossible for them to do any worse than the congress has done over the past 30 years.
Report thisBy P. T., May 24, 2007 at 12:09 pm Link to this comment
Cesar Chavez Opposed Illegals
Cesar Chavez, in his day, was no more tolerant of illegal immigration than the Minutemen are now. Worried about the illegal immigrants driving down wages, Chavez-according to numerous historical accounts-instructed union members to call the Immigration and Naturalization Service to report the presence of illegal immigrants in the fields and demand that the agency deport them. United Farm Workers union officials were even known to picket INS offices to demand a crackdown on illegal immigrants.
In 1973 the union set up a wet line to prevent Mexican immigrants from entering the United States. Under the guidance of Chavezs cousin Manuel, UFW members tried at first to convince the immigrants not to cross. When that did not work, they physically attacked the immigrants and left some bloody in the process. It happened where the Minutemen now gather: the U.S.-Mexico border.
Report thisBy LonewackoDotCom, May 24, 2007 at 11:15 am Link to this comment
The essay is larded with so many logical fallacies I don’t know where to begin.
However: there aren’t too many people calling for “the roundup and deportation of 12 million illegal immigrants”. What many support is called “attrition”: enforcing the laws now to encourage many who are here to return home voluntarily over time. Combined with pressuring Mexico that would do wonders for the situation.
And, here are no less than nine differences between past immigration and the current variety.
Report this