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Monday, July 30, 2018

Immigration & Today's Reality - Part 02


We Are a Nation of Immigrants
One segment of society says, “We are all descendants of immigrants; we have always welcomed them.” There is a lot of truth to this perspective. One can find strong evidence to substantiate that argument. From the beginning, we have indeed been a nation that welcomes immigrants. 
·      Before the Constitution was written, “The United States had already earned a reputation as an immigrant haven…”[i] Later, an understanding of the U.S. as being a welcoming country was being used in the 1780s.[ii] 
·      The phrase, e pluribus unum, “out of many one,” made its first appearance on the back of the $5.00 gold coin, first minted in 1795. They are the only words on the front of the great seal of the United States.
·      The often quoted “The New Colossus,” by Emma Lazarus, attached to the Statue of Liberty in the late 1800s, a century later, articulates that sentiment, 
"…Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp!" cries she
With silent lips. "Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!"[iii]
In the beginning, our country was, indeed, a welcoming place for immigrants of White European Protestant ancestry. Historically, it has represented one of the basic core values of who we are as a nation. How are we doing today?
Later, the enduring “melting pot”, yet no longer seen as accurate metaphor, was first used in 1908, by a British writer Israel Zangwill. His stage play entitled, The Melting Pot, sparked its adoption as a metaphor for America. Interestingly, both ends of this continuum refer to this metaphor as being the reasoning for their argument. More about the metaphor later.
Significant Is: Who Are Not Included
The reality is that from the very beginning there were significant numbers of people who were not included in the “Melting Pot.” It seems to me that this layer is one of the most pivotal in the debate about immigration. In 1964, Glazer and Moynihan, in their groundbreaking work, Beyond the Melting Pot: The Negroes, Puerto Ricans, Jews, Italians, and Irish of New York, challenged this metaphor. "As early as 1882, the Chinese were excluded, to say nothing of women, Native- or African-Americans, or other non-European immigrants".[iv] Even though outdated, the metaphor still persists. 
Beyond New York, there are other examples of the lack of inclusion. These include wars fought to drive Mexico out of the Southwest, broken treaties and forced dislocation of Native Americans, and treatment of the Japanese during WWII. Each of these peoples, and others, were historically excluded, to one degree or other from the “melting pot.” Inclusion is improving (with enforcement), and to a lesser degree attitudes are improving for those Moynihan cites. However, we have a long way to go. 
When Glazer and Moynihan published their book in 1964, the Reform Act was not yet in force. Since its enactment, however, the issue has become considerably more acute for us today. Countless cultures and subcultures, hundreds of languages, scores of non-Christian religions, ideologies both conventional and “alternative,” have been added to our nation. Almost 37% of our population is now included in those whom Glazer and Moynihan identified as being excluded from the Melting Pot. All these diverse peoples, most of whom live here legally, have already changed the traditional cultural map of America, and will continue to do so. They are here; they are not going away; and they are most often our most loyal Americans. They know from whence they have come. Can our nation ever get “Beyond the Melting Pot”?
You can argue that, at one point only a few decades ago, our culture was at the same time becoming homogeneous and heterogeneous (or what I call complex culture) in nature. Several alternative metaphors have been proposed: a salad bowl, a stew, a mosaic, where each new addition, lends its own flavor to the blend, texture or color to the whole, while keeping its own identity. However, no one metaphor has yet captured the full extent of our reality.
There are those who would divide us. Would our energies and resources not be better allocated focusing our energies on reuniting behind “e pluribus unum,” and start attempting a new approach in which everyone is included? We are desperately in need of leadership that would lead us toward that end. 
So far, in this post, we have only focused on the 37% people of color who are here legally. We do need to address the issues of the border and the undocumented, but there is much more to it than that, and needs more time and space. At this writing, the flow at the border is only a bit more than those going back home. National security and drug trafficking are still an issue. Given the broad spectrum of strongly-held ideological opinions on the subject, it seems that no wide-ranging solution will fully satisfy anyone. However, it appears that the former cannot truly begin, until the latter is dealt with in a comprehensive manner. The Senate passed a bi-partisan bill several years ago that the House Leadership never allowed to see the light of day. Here we are.
I am an anthropologist. However, the issues at hand are many layered, touch on so many fields of study, and elicit numerous ideological and personal emotional responses. Any attempt on my part to do more than offer a personal opinion is way beyond my pay grade. 

The final part of this series will include some of my observations, comments about immigration policy, and an invitation to you, the reader, to take part in a brainstorming session about what can be done+.


[i] Wikipedia
[ii] Ibid.
[iii] https://www.nps.gov/stli/learn/historyculture/colossus.htm
[iv] Glazer and Moynihan, Beyond the Melting Pot: The Negroes, Puerto Ricans, Jews, Italians, and Irish of New York: (Harvard-MIT Joint Center for Urban Studies Series: Cambridge, MA), 1964.

Immigration & Today's Reality - Part 01

I’m not an expert, but like everyone else I have been following and attempting to understand the controversy surrounding immigration policy in the light of the shifting landscape of complex culture in the United States.
I am also aware that this subject demands a much longer post. Nevertheless, here are a few musings, divided into a three part blog. My intent is to approach this controversial topic as factually, fairly, and thoroughly as possible. Very few people are on the fence. It seems as though the bulk of the controversy finds itself on, or near, each end of a continuum.
On the one end, we have those who welcome these new immigrants from around the world, and see their presence as an enrichment of our society. They also consider them economically necessary to counteract the low birth rate of Anglos. They bring their skills, learn new ones, work hard, even in menial work (that is the way many of our immigrant forbearers started), value family, and pay taxes to produce needed revenue (local, state, and federal). On the other end, we find those who consider their presence to be a threat to their heritage, to their jobs (sometimes true), and what they believe to be America’s White Christian identity. In reality, this issue has many layers, all of which cannot be dealt with in this post.

There is a wide, seemingly unbridgeable chasm between the two most extreme sides of this contentious debate. It seems that the majority of Americans are forming opinions that are drifting slowly toward one end of this heated discussion or the other. It expresses itself in fear, anger, confrontation, inflexibility, and often violence.
At times, it seems as though each side is attempting to make its case; but the two sides are so far apart they are not communicating. The use of reductionist language to characterize the other side of the spectrum does not bring us any closer to a solution. The question is, how can such a chasm exist in our national debate, and how we can resolve it? Perhaps a brief historical perspective may help us understand how we got here.
Prior to 1965, a quota system allowed 300,000 immigrants per year, almost all from Europe. The Immigration Reform Act of 1965 abolished that quota system, and opened immigration to people from all over the world, and allowed for family reunification. Quite quickly, during the succeeding decades, a) the number of legal immigrants quickly rose to over a million per year, and b) the vast majority, who were people of color, came from all over the world. That Reform Act transformed the demographic profile of our country.
Since 1965, around seventy million[i] immigrants of color have come here legally. The vast majority have come to give their children a better future. They became U.S. citizens, provided sorely needed labor, brought vibrancy to our cities with their small businesses, were willing to work in entry level jobs, and many of their children have become professionals. Many of these immigrants have founded or become the CEO’s of Fortune 500 companies, generating jobs and revenue for local, state, and national treasuries.

However, the focus of the controversy has been on the approximately 11 million undocumented immigrants. “For the first time, the number of unauthorized immigrants living in the U.S. was lower in 2015 than it was at the end of the Great Recession in 2009. The origin countries of unauthorized immigrants also shifted during that time, with the number from Mexico declining and the number from other regions rising, according to the latest Pew Research Center estimates.[ii] Much to-do has been made of the evils “they” bring with them, along with the implications that the majority of the rest have less than honorable intentions, while saying nothing about the other half of those without documentation. Naturally, like any number of people this large, there will be some bad actors. However, many studies have shown that violent crime by the undocumented is less than in the general population. Nevertheless, a steady drumbeat of negative anecdotal information magnifies the significance of those few. One of the tenants of propaganda is, “tell a lie often enough and long enough, and in the end, the people will believe it.” Sadly, it goes farther than that. Sadly, the tendency then is to reduce all immigrants of color (almost 40% of our population) to be suspect and subtly tainted to be here illegally. All of this feels a lot like scapegoating.
The result has been a backlash that has exposed the persistent and ugly underbelly of resistance to inclusiveness, and to delegitimize all the immigrants of color. Doesn’t a national immigration policy based on false anecdotal evidence seem extremely short-sighted to you?
We have taken a very brief look at the current state of affairs. In the next post we will briefly examine the issue of U.S. immigration from an historical point of view. 


[i] An approximation based on personal calculation in census.gov.
[ii] www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2017/04/27/5-facts-about-illegal-immigration-in-the-u-s/