Let's cut through all the bullshit re: immigration.
No big surprise here that these are not my own words, but anyway, here is a quote from a recent posting on Alternet. Here is almost but not quite the entire piece:
Amen to that! Or, as Robert Orben put it: "Illegal aliens have always been a problem in the United States. Ask any Indian."
That is not to say that there may not be valid debates to be had regarding our immigration policies, but there is no reason to be smug just because you were born in the U.S., and there is no reason to think that your ancestors came here "legally" if such a concept did not exist when they came here.
Enough with the "my ancestors did it the legal way" argument! Of course your grandparents came here legally 50-300 years ago; no real immigration laws existed at that point. Unless you were a criminal or Chinese (re: Chinese Exclusion Act), once you landed in America, you were legally here. Sure, there were ethnic groups in the early 20th century that entered illegally due to the racist immigration quotas against them. So what did the American government do when 1.2 million of these immigrants were found living here illegally? Well, something that would be called amnesty today.
The 12 million that arrived at Ellis Island between 1892 and 1954 mostly stayed put for only 4-5 hours before they were dispersed to other parts of the country. Only 1-2% of immigrants were turned away due to insanity, criminal offense, or medical reasons.
So yes, most of the "grandparents waited in line and came here legally" after some hours, compared to the minimum of 10 years it takes a U.S. citizen today to petition for a married son or daughter (and twice as long if the married son or daughter is from Mexico or the Phillipines). And immigration laws forbid (not), if you petition for your child, grandchild or niece/nephew when s/he is 12 and s/he is well over 21 by the time her/his priority number becomes current, s/he is no longer eligible in the same category!
The strict and rigid immigration game of today cannot be compared to simply boarding a ship and landing in America like most ancestors of U.S. citizens did in the yesteryears. Therefore, please, no more family histories of legal immigration from an era when legal/illegal didn't matter. It is irrelevant and nonsensical.
Amen to that! Or, as Robert Orben put it: "Illegal aliens have always been a problem in the United States. Ask any Indian."
That is not to say that there may not be valid debates to be had regarding our immigration policies, but there is no reason to be smug just because you were born in the U.S., and there is no reason to think that your ancestors came here "legally" if such a concept did not exist when they came here.


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