Thursday, July 13, 2006

A smart aleck’s view of immigration

By Drew Millard


I feel slightly silly being a seventeen-year old and writing about political issues — I can’t even vote, you see — but I feel that since everyone in the entire world has an opinion on immigration, I should throw my two cents in, at the risk of losing my hard-earned credibility as your favorite farcical bimonthly columnist.

I have a policy of trying to take the long view on every political issue, and to remain stoically without an opinion on many matters. To illustrate my point, I quote pop-culture guru Chuck Klosterman: “You want to have an abortion? Fine; take my car keys. You think abortion is murder? Well, you’re probably right.” Both sides of an issue have valid points, or else they wouldn’t be presenting their argument. I just try to see these points, and then make judgment as I see fit.

Right now, there is what the pundits call a “crisis” regarding immigration. People are coming into the country in droves illegally from Mexico, and people in America are getting extremely angry about it. Some are even taking the law into their own hands by camping out and watching out for those durned Mexicans, possibly out of nativism or racism, or just good old-fashioned xenophobia. The Department of Homeland Security said in an official statement that “illegal immigration threatens our communities and our national security.” Now I don’t know about you, but I think that’s a little alarmist — I’ve never seen with my own two eyes an illegal immigrant commit a crime, other than being in America when they weren’t supposed to be. Our own U.S. Senate went so far as to officially declare that our national anthem was to be sung in English, which may show that racism, or at least nativism, is not dead in this country, especially in Washington.

Now that I’ve written that and lost my credibility as a columnist, I think that the issue as a whole is much, much too complicated to hold a concrete, partisan opinion on; as I hinted previously, both parties present partially valid arguments.

On the conservative side, I agree that we cannot just let anybody into the country who wants to come in, and the fact that people are coming into America and probably taking jobs from average, hard-working Americans, somehow tweaks that quintessentially nationalistic nerve that everybody has. I think that we need to have more strict enforcement of our borders to protect us from the drugs that are brought into America every day from Mexico, and I think that if someone is living in America, they need to pay taxes on what they earn.

But on the other, more liberal hand, for the most part, illegal immigrants take jobs that traditionally have been taken by, well, illegal immigrants. Undeniably, America is the land of freedom, and I also believe that if somebody wants to get in here, we should let them in, unless they give us a reason not to let them in, like having killed somebody or having ties with organized crime. We don’t need a fortified border to protect us from somebody who just wants to get a job, and in addition, many immigrate to America for the sole justification that they need to support their families, and in America, even working for a nominal wage can support a family in Mexico just as well as any middle-class American could support theirs. Just because somebody is trying to illegally enter a country does not automatically brand them a bad person — I know some illegal immigrants, and they are some of the most honest, hard-working people that I have ever met, and I do not see why we should be stopping people like that from entering this great nation of ours.

Now that I’ve stirred up some ire, there is one position that all Americans do agree on: something needs to be done. Right now, we don’t even know how many people live in America because there are so many undocumented illegals here that we can’t take an accurate census count. The government eventually issues green cards for many, but the only problem with that system is that it can take months to apply for and receive one of those magical green cards. What would probably need to be done is a DMV-type system of issuing Green Cards where you just show up, fill out a couple forms, smile for a picture, and in ten minutes, get one and get on your way. I think that this, however improbable it might be (being 17, I have no knowledge of how the logistics of such as system could be worked out), could, you know, be kind of a good idea.
But I’m just a kid, and this is just a newspaper, so feel free to write to them and tell the world why I’m wrong, which no doubt I am.
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4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Some are even taking the law into their own hands by camping out and watching out for those durned Mexicans, possibly out of nativism or racism, or just good old-fashioned xenophobia. The Department of Homeland Security said in an official statement that “illegal immigration threatens our communities and our national security.” Now I don’t know about you, but I think that’s a little alarmist

I don't think it's racism or xenophopia - It's the principle of the thing. Why should the majority of other immigrants make it an issue to become legal and learn about their adopted country and pledge their allegiance to us. The ones who have gone to the trouble to be "legalized" should feel outraged at those that just want to come here for the benefits and to hell with any loyalties. It's not the illegal immigrants that made our country great, it's the ones who came here to make this country a better place to live and worked at their part in making that happen. It's the UNITED States - become legal or get the heck out!

Anonymous said...

You have an excellent point my friend, but on a practical level, people in Mexico are struggling every day just to get by. A person can't support their family on wages in Mexico; they need to go into America where they can make a decent amount of pay. And if somebody has to go into America illegally in order to secure that money, then that's what they have to do. I'm not saying that this is right or wrong, but I'm saying that these people are not going to stick babies on spikes or anything horrible like that. They're just trying to get by, exactly like you and me.

America is a great nation, one founded on the principles of rich old white men who didn't want to pay taxes, and I think that another reason that so many are forced to go the illegal route is because every single person who becomes naturalized has to go through a long, arduous process involving English Language, Government, and History tests, as well as proof of "Good Moral Character," something that fewer and fewer born and bred Americans display each day.

Instead of showing hostility to these people, we should work towards making the process of naturalization much simpler than our current system and help them realize the American Dream.

Anonymous said...

It's not the American dream the illegals are after - it's the tax-free money they can send back to Mexico. They have no loyalty to the United States. If they were after the American dream, they would, at the very least, attempt to learn the language.

Anonymous said...

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