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Freedom
Herbert
E. Meyer:
"Why
Americans Hate This 'Immigration' Debate"
April 3rd, 2006
One of the most striking features of the immigration
debate now raging in Washington is that none of the Democratic or Republican proposals
seem to hold any appeal for ordinary Americanswhich is why this debate is generating
so much frustration among voters that no matter which proposal Congress adopts, the issue
itself threatens to shatter both parties bases and dominate the November elections.
Simply put, the debate in Washington isnt about
immigration at all and thats the problem.
To ordinary Americans, the
definition of immigration is very specific: You come here with absolutely
nothing except a burning desire to be an American. You start off at some miserable,
low-paying job that at least puts a roof over your familys head and food on the
table. You put your kids in school, tell them how lucky they are to be here
and make darn sure they do well even if that means hiring a tutor and taking a second, or
third, job to pay for it. You learn English, even if youve got to take classes
at night when youre dead tired. You play by the ruleswhich means you pay
your taxes, get a drivers license and insure your car so that if yours hits mine, I
can recover the cost of the damages. And you file for citizenship the first day
youre eligible.
Do all this and you become an American like all the rest
of us. Your kids will lose their accents, move into the mainstream, and retain little
of their heritage except a few words of your language and if youre
luckyan irresistible urge to visit you now and then for some of moms
old-country cooking.
This is how the Italians made it, the Germans made it,
the Dutch made it, the Poles made it, the Jews made it, and more recently how the Cubans
and the Vietnamese made it. The process isnt easy but it works and
thats the way ordinary Americans want to keep it.
The Two Hispanic Groups
But the millions of Hispanics who have come to our
country in the last several decades and its the Hispanics were talking
about in this debate, not those from other culturesare, in fact, two distinct
groups. The first group is comprised of immigrants just like all the
others, who have put the old country behind them and want only to be Americans. They
arent the problem. Indeed, most Americans welcome them among us, as we have
welcomed so many other cultures.
The problem is the second group of
Hispanics. They arent immigrants which is what neither the
Democratic or Republican leadership seems to understand, or wants to acknowledge. They
have come here solely for jobs, which isnt the same thing at all. (And many
of them have come here illegally.) Whether they remain in the U.S. for one year, or ten
years or for the rest of their lives they dont conduct themselves like
immigrants. Yes, they work hard to put roofs above their heads and food on their
tables and for this we respect them. But they have little interest in learning
English themselves, and instead demand that we make it possible for them to function here
in Spanish. They put their children in our schools, but dont always demand as
much from them as previous groups demanded of their kids. They dont always pay
their taxes or insure their cars.
In short, they arent playing
by the rules that our families played by when they immigrated to this country. And to
ordinary Americans this behavior is deeply very deeply offensive. We
see it unfolding every day in our communities, and we dont like it. This is
what none of our politicians either understands, or dares to say aloud. Instead,
they blather on and on about amnesty and border
security without ever coming to grips with what is so visible, and so offensive, to
so many of us namely, all these foreigners among us who arent behaving like
immigrants.
The phrase we use to describe foreigners who come here
not as immigrants but merely for jobs is guest workers. And
we are told incessantly that we need these guest workers because
they take jobs that Americans dont want and wont take themselves. This is
true, but its also disingenuous. Throughout our countrys history,
immigrants have always taken jobs that Americans dont want and wont take
themselves. For crying out loud, no foreigner has ever come to our country out of a
blazing ambition to dig ditches, mow lawns, bag groceries, sew clothing or clean other
peoples houses. If we hadnt always had a huge number of these miserable
jobs available that none of us would do there wouldnt have been a
way for immigrants throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries to step off the boat
and find work.
A willingness by immigrants to start at the
bottom so they can move up the economic ladder or at least give their kids a shot
at the higher rungs is precisely how the system is supposed to work. And it
always has. (My own family is one of the tens of millions that did precisely this.
My grandfather came from Poland and found work as a pocket-maker in New Yorks garment
district. The pay was low, the hours were long, and when the old man finally retired
he could hardly move his fingers or see without thick glasses. Yet one of his sons,
my uncle, became a lawyer with a fancy practice on Manhattans Upper East Side. His kids did even better; his son wound up chairman of Stanford Universitys history
department, and his daughter became a famous art critic, moved to London, and married an
Englishman who became a member of the House of Lords. What is astonishing about this
story is that it isnt astonishing. Its the sort of thing that
happens all the time, and its why ordinary Americans dont want to change the
system that made it possible.)
Blame the Birth Rate
One fact that hasnt been part of the immigration
debate is this: During the past two decades our national birth rate has dropped to
just below the 2.1 births-per-woman replacement rate. So we really do need to
import people because to put it bluntly we havent bred
enough of them ourselves to do all the work that needs to be done in an affluent, ageing
society like ours. But then, weve always needed more people to do
the work we want done. And weve always brought them in from elsewhere as
immigrants.
Yet today we have millions of foreigners among us who
have come here to work, but not to immigrate. Our politicians tell us that we must
accept this because for the first time in our historyweve reached that
point when we need guest workers who arent immigrants to keep our
economy growing. If this is trueand isnt it odd that no one has troubled
to explain why its true then we must find some way to distinguish between
immigrants and guest workers so that they arent treated the
same just because they both are here. And if it isnt true that our continued
economic growth requires guest workers who arent immigrantsthen
the entire concept of guest workers that lies at the core of virtually every
proposal now before Congress, including amnesty for those who are here illegally, must be
abandoned in favor of something that makes sense.
Until our elected officials come
to grips with the real issue thats troubling ordinary Americans not a growing
population of foreigners among us, but rather a growing population of foreigners among us
who arent behaving like immigrants public frustration will grow no matter
what bill Congress passes in the coming weeks. It could lead to the kind of political
explosion that none of us really wants.
Herbert E. Meyer served during the
Reagan Administration as Special Assistant to the Director of Central Intelligence and
Vice Chairman of the CIAs National Intelligence Council. His DVD on The Siege of Western Civilization has become
an international best-seller.
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