Sorting out and integrating millions of illegal
aliens is no easy matter, too long delayed, but John Boehner and Ted Cruz are
taking off the masks that Republicans donned after losing the White House in
2012 largely because of the minority vote.
Shackled by his right-wing caucus, the House Speaker
is having trouble selling members even a narrow punitive path to citizenship he
has outlined, while Cruz wants the Senate to turn away from the issue altogether
until after the November elections.
Those of us who grew up on “God Bless America”
(written by a Jewish immigrant) can barely recognize a nation of people whose
forebears came here in the last century or the one before to escape tyranny and
make a better life for their children.
In its details and implementation, immigration reform
is a massive undertaking but not for a nation built on the principle of freedom
and opportunity for all, even though it took a Civil War and a post-World War
II outpouring of protest to move forward to the point of having an
African-American president.
What is most troubling is the meanness of today’s
debate. After demonizing Barack Obama for five years with undisguised racism,
the GOP Right can’t bring itself, even in the face of its self-interest at the
ballot box, to honor the tradition of inclusiveness that built America.
Boehner’s plan wants Latinos to pay fines and back
taxes, submit to criminal checks, study civics and go through other mea culpas before even being considered
for citizenship, but even all that is not enough to overcome the barrier of racism
for some of his members.
As usual, all this will be seen through the prism of
getting and holding political power but, even by that standard, the Republican
resistance to a start on immigration reform is senseless. Yet for a party that
was making the likes of Michele Bachmann, Rick Perry and Rick Santorum front
runners for the White House four years ago, anything is possible.
As the GOP struggles with the issue, Boehner may want
to think about his German “barkeep” father’s immigration and Cruz about his
family who had to move to Canada to escape Castro tyranny even more recently
before settling in Texas.
Yes, they played by the rules, but those old rules can’t
deal with millions who came here not only for their own freedom but to provide
cheap labor for America’s sacred free
enterprise. The principles haven’t changed, even though the skin color has.
Unfortunately, our history is rife with resistance to much of our immigration. Resistance to the Irish and Italian eras of mass immigration. In WWII, so many Jews escaping the Holocaust had to enter by way of South America, due to quotas imposed. Same with the Chinese and Japanese migrations. Nothing's new here - same old sense of provincialism and "I got mine, so Pooh on You" by those who consider themselves and their tribe to be the only True Americans.
ReplyDeleteMy ethnic group, French Canadians, are STILL being beat up on (figuratively) in some quarters here in dear old New England. I'm 4th generation American and my ancestors worked and contributed but we're still not okay according to some. Old hatreds die hard. The craziest thing though, is how some of us just barely off the bottom rung are anti-Latino, or anyone else for that matter. I often wonder how that works in their heads.
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