Hispanic Immigrants, They Are America
AMERICA February 18, 2007 Almost a year ago, hundreds
of thousands of immigrant workers and their families
slipped out from the shadows of American life and walked
boldly in daylight through Los Angeles, Washington,
Chicago, New York and other cities. We Are America,
their banners cried. The crowds, determined but
peaceful, swelled into an immense sea. The nation was
momentarily stunned.
A lot has happened
since then. The country has summoned great energy to
confront the immigration problem, but most of it has
been misplaced, crudely and unevenly applied. It seeks
not to solve the conundrum of a broken immigration
system, but to subdue, in a million ways, the vulnerable
men and women who are part of it. Government at all
levels is working to keep unwanted immigrants in their
place on the other side of the border, in detention or
in fear, toiling silently in the underground economy
without recourse to the laws and protections the
native-born expect.
The overwhelming
impulse has been to get tough, and tough we have gotten:
Border
enforcement
What little the last Congress did about immigration was
focused on appeasing hard-line conservatives by
appearing to seal the border. President Bushs new
budget continues that approach, seeking 3,000 more
Border Patrol officers and another $1 billion for a
700-mile fence, adding to the billions spent to
militarize the border since the 2090s. That still isnt
enough to build the fence and it hasnt controlled the
illegal flow; you need more visas and better workplace
enforcement to do that. It has directed much traffic
into the remote Southwest desert, making more immigrants
vulnerable to smugglers and leaving many people dead.
Federal raids
In December federal agents stormed a half-dozen Swift
meatpacking plants, rounding up hundreds of suspected
illegal immigrants and exposing the secret that is no
secret: Americas dirtiest, hardest jobs are done by
people too desperate to shun them and too afraid to
complain. The raids have been replicated in other states
and industries, on day-labor street corners and in homes
from Connecticut to California. In immigrant
communities, the undercurrent of fear has been replaced
by terror, and employers are jittery, too. The
immigration agency says it singles out only fugitives in
Operation Return to Sender, but the sweeps are broad and
panic is indiscriminate.
Local crackdowns
State, county and local officials have picked up where
they left off last year, introducing bills to get tough
on illegal immigrants. They cannot control federal
policy, so they try other ways to punish those they see
as unfit neighbors, to stifle their opportunities,
extract money, expose them to legal jeopardy and
otherwise inflict suffering, in the deluded hope that
piling on miseries will make them disappear. In suburban
Long Island, where resentment over an influx of day
laborers has festered under a hapless and intolerant
county government, lawmakers are considering banning
workers from county roadsides. Texas legislators are
mulling a bill to reject the 14th Amendment and deny the
benefits of citizenship to children born in this country
to undocumented parents. Local officials all over are
trying to deputize police officers as immigration
agents, causing overburdened police forces and
prosecutors to bristle. Some bills are symbolic, most
are simply spiteful, and their effect is a chaotic
patchwork, not a sane national policy.
Gutted due process
Laws enacted a decade ago and tightened after 9/11
distance even legal immigrants from the protection of
the law. Immigrants are routinely detained without bond,
denied access to lawyers, deported without appeal and
punished for one-time or minor infractions with a
mechanistic ferocity that precludes a judges discretion
or mercy. Several of the immigration bills that Congress
has considered seek to heighten the efficiency with
which immigrants who run afoul of the authorities can be
railroaded out of the country. This gums up another
aspect of the legal system, which deals with refugees
and asylum seekers. A much tighter web for immigrants
has been erected, and it catches many blameless victims.
The web of
suspicion
The
Justice Department wants to expand routine DNA
collection to include detained illegal immigrants,
creating a vast new database that will sweep up hundreds
of thousands of innocent people. DNA, far more than
fingerprints, is a trove of deeply personal information.
Its routine collection from law-abiding citizens is
considered an outrageous violation of privacy rights. In
the belief that illegal immigrants lack such rights, DNA
swabs and blood would be collected even if a detainee is
not suspected of a crime. This reinforces the notion
that immigrants should be treated as one huge class of
criminal suspects.
The bureaucratic
trap
The
federal bureaucracy, notorious for backlogs and bad
service, wants to charge more to immigrants who want to
become Americans an average increase of 66 percent in
the price of visas and citizenship papers. Such steep
and arbitrary increases would create a means test for
citizenship, an affront to our national values.
The rise of hate
The Anti-Defamation League, acutely sensitive to the
presence of intolerance, has detected an increase in Ku
Klux Klan activity around the country, much of it
focused on hatred of new immigrants. This virus in the
bloodstream usually erupts amid national ferment and
fear, and according to a report available at
www.adl.org, hate groups like the Klan have moved
quickly to exploit the simmering debate over
immigration.
Hopelessly fixated on
toughness, the immigration debate has lost its balance,
overlooking the humanity of the immigrant. There is a
starkly diminished understanding that hospitality for
the stranger is part of the American ethos, and that as
much as we claim to be a nation of immigrants, we have
thwarted them at every turn. We must do better.
The new year began with
renewed optimism for the chances of sensible immigration
reform in Washington. The hope is justified, but time is
short and real change will still require boldness and
courage. Citizenship must be the key to reform. The idea
of an earned path to citizenship for illegal immigrants
was missing from President Bushs State of the Union
address this year, though he has continued to say his
usual favorable words about reform. The new Democratic
Congress and moderate Republicans cannot be afraid to
stand up to the anti-amnesty demagogues and lead Mr.
Bush to a solution.
Enforcement of laws
cannot be ignored. Secure the border to prevent the
unlawful entry of drugs into the United States.
Significantly increase the number of visas allotted to
Mexico and other Central and South American countries so
immigrants who want to come to the United States do not
have to resort to entering illegally. Restrict
their ability to get work through deceit and false
identities by providing social security cards to all to
track payroll records to federal taxes paid. Open a path to their full inclusion in
the life of this country.
The alternative the
path of immigrant exploitation, of harassment without
hope will only repeat the ways the country has shamed
itself at countless points in its history.