18
February 2013 –
President’s
Day. It was a normal day in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, however.
It started raining before sunrise and continued all through the day. Thunder and lightning preceded the
deluge. Nobody here was thinking about
our great presidents today, I am sure, as they tried to stay dry. Nonetheless, judging from the constant crowds
outside the consulate section of the US Embassy in Kinshasa, many Congolese would
like to be in America and learn about our presidents. Why aren’t there more Congolese in the United
States? One simple answer: The Atlantic Ocean is much wider and deeper
than the Rio Grande River.
I am reading a lot about
the history of immigration, deportation, and the societal issues surrounding
the movements across our borders since the start of the country. It is not now nor ever has been a simple
issue. It is and always has been a
volatile and visceral issue to all who discuss it. Virtually all of today’s arguments about
immigration are not new. They have been pitched
before. Different proponents in the
contest have gained temporary advantage based on the compelling domestic,
international, racial, ethnic, economic, religious, and economic issues of the
moment. In fact, even the specific definition
of who is and is not a citizen of the U.S. has changed over the generations. For example, based on our changing views on
women’s rights in society, women’s citizenship is no longer inexorably tied to
a husband’s status. Other questions,
such as what rights under the Constitution do illegal immigrants have, have been
debated for over a hundred thirty years in courts, in the newspapers and
journals, in churches, and in the streets and public houses of America. It should surprise no one that there is still
no clear, accepted answer to many of these questions. I suppose that our generation will add its
nowhere-near-perfect mitigation/reform to history’s list of attempts.
Two interrelated points
have glared at me from all the pages (or electronic screens) I have read on the
issue: 1) The players in the U.S. immigration
game are worldwide, both international and domestic; 2) Most all international
players, the immigrants and the countries whence they flee, have primary
interests that may indeed have little in common with the best interests of the
U.S. That is a fact of life in the international
community. Therefore, my questions for serious
contemplation are these: 1) Is our immigration policy—rather, our non-policy—being
dictated by illegal immigrants and the countries from which they come? 2) How do our law and policy makers convince
the American people—American citizens—that they have America’s vital interests
at the core of their immigration reform processes? If these decision-makers’ arguments cannot convince you that your interests as a
citizen are more important than those of the illegal immigrants, then I suggest
that their arguments are short-sighted and dangerous. This issue of who decides the make-up of the
United States for the generations that follow is of strategic importance to all
citizens. We need to make it.
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