Re: Lincoln's emancipation issue similar to immigration issu
by
otter357
12/01/2007, 5:46 AM #
well written livy, arlington. worth the read. My two cents:
physically fence the border, for real
find a way to deport "the bottom 15%" ... people with drunk driving convictions, criminals, people likely to hurt the population body in some way.
install a clear and doable path to citizenship for the remainder.
I have many hispanic friends/acquaintances and many of these are illegal. My little company publishes drivers manuals in spanish, as our state refuses. My old Honduranian mistress is legal, and very social, so i know many of her friends.
While sometimes a help to them I criticize, too. I notice that they can be very insular, don't have any investment in the community, and learn english slowly (except for their little children that go to school, they speak unaccented english and prefer it, as the modern thing)
So I ask them, "Say I move to Mexico, but I live apart, I have only Yanqui friends, I don't take part in the community, I don't learn Spanish. What would you think of me?" They invariably answer that "We would think you are a snob, maybe a racist" Then I spread my hands and smile, "isn't that what you do here?"
Now let me say something else. Most of these people have no legal pathway to residency or citizenship. This is part of the problem. The Thailanders I know have worked very hard to assimilate, be a true part of the community. But they are legal and have a legal path to citizenship. They strive to be part of the action.
I live in GA and this state is very red and very hostile on immigration. This region has a horrible history of genocide and slavery, and half the population thinks its a virtue. But I don't want, I'm sick of looking at, a society where some are labor without any legal recourse and protections, rights to vote or the obligation to participate, and where others have all these rights and responsibilities.