What a spectacle! The streets of U.S. cities filled with illegal immigrants by the hundreds of thousands. Dub and his ilk can no more halt the stream of humanity heading north than Canute could still the ocean waters. Dub and his brain ("Turd Blossom") thought that immigration reform would reverse Dub's downward slide in the polls. Instead, Dub is still doing his impression of Wile E. Coyote as all of his schemes blow up in his face. Most recently, Dub's fatuous flirtation with "guest worker" passes is as popular as gay marriage among his Protestant Right base. Most of the illegals are Roman Catholics and Dub's born-again supporters who make up the 38% who think Dub's "doin' a heckuva job" don't want more papists in our midst. I wish I could tell Dub to go back home, but there isn't a nation known as Dumbassia. If this is (fair & balanced) xenophobia, so be it.
[x Salon]
Immigration nation
By Richard Rodriguez
The crowds parading up the streets of America on Monday, and for the last two weeks, have been telling us with their bodies, if not always in English, that illegal immigrants are not alone in the United States of America.
Indeed, illegal immigrants, who were supposed to live a shadowy existence, belong to neighborhoods and to church congregations that were willing to stand alongside them. And most important: Many millions of illegal immigrants have U.S. relatives, sons and daughters, in-laws, cousins, grandchildren.
That family tie is the lesson of these parades. In Houston and Boston, in Phoenix and in San Jose, Calif., what we saw were not exactly "protests," nor were they political demonstrations, primarily. We were seeing huge family gatherings, celebrations of the clan.
In Los Angeles, I saw a veritable platoon of young women with baby strollers, the babies asleep or not, the women chatting, as though they were headed to the grocery store. I saw carnival balloons and comic oversize sombreros. I saw the Mexican Virgin of Guadalupe floating on somebody's shoulders. I saw the flags of several nations, often, of course, Mexico's. On one Mexican flag, an old man with an Indian face had taped the photographs of his sons, serving in Iraq.
In generations past, for example during the Depression, once America had done with the eager hands of Mexico, there were mass deportations. Send the Messicans back!
But now, how do you deport so many millions who belong to even more millions?
After the early parades, some Americans (who never complain about Irish flags on St. Patrick's day) complained to Sean Hannity about all those damn Mexican flags. (If they love Mexico so much, why'n't they go back?) In Dallas on Sunday, some mad-as-hell Texans decided to burn the Mexican flag.
Yesterday, it was clear that the crowds had heard the complaints. On extravagant display were yards and yards of red, white, blue. And thus the irony was deepened: The happy parade of outsiders was waving American flags.
For years, the wisdom in political circles was that Mexicans do not vote, are apathetic, too busy or lazy. Mexicans, after all, are not Cubans; they lack the political savvy or will.
The giant was sleeping in Phoenix and Chicago and throughout North Carolina. And the Democrats were just as happy to leave the snoring undisturbed, because of the unhappiness of trade unionists and of the complaints of African-Americans against illegal migrant workers who undercharge America for their labor, then work with third-world fury.
Some Republicans, including the president, saw signs of the giant stirring. George Bush is the first American president to speak Spanish and to run a reelection ad in which he is pictured waving a Mexican flag. His is that portion of the Republican Party that understands big business has a lot to gain from cheap labor.
But then there is the Republican Party of Pat Buchanan and Tom Tancredo -- a party that now mixes hysteria with patriotism and wars against any notion that America exists within the Americas.
Buchanan likes to portray the brown (suspiciously Indian-looking) Mexicans crossing our Southwestern border as "foreigners." Pat Buchanan, with his rifle butt, may end up responsible for stirring the giant awake.
In the end, however, the gatherings all over America these last days were not most importantly political events.
Their scale has been epic, but their meaning is intimate. No coincidence is it that they were not organized by politicians, but were the result of grass-roots passions -- the encouragements of local radio DJs, nuns and neighbors.
Before these mass gatherings began, two weeks ago, I would have told you that I feared that the increasingly virulent rhetoric against illegal immigrants would end up causing the "Arab-ization" of millions of Hispanic children -- an alienation on a scale comparable to that suffered by Islamic youths in Paris or Amsterdam.
No other children in America hear what the children of illegal immigrants now regularly hear on angry-white-guy talk radio or from the likes of Lou Dobbs on CNN or Bill O'Reilly on Fox.
From the Congress came daily calls for a vast new Wall of China, mass deportations. And a litany of complaints: Illegal immigrants take, take, take from America. They pose a burden, a drag on the country; they are welfare cheats, criminals, drug dealers, thieves.
No one in public mentioned to their children what their parents and grandparents have done for America for over a century -- and at what a cheap price.
What, I wondered, would the children think about their parents?
I got my answer in the huge family gatherings.
Richard Rodriguez is a graduate of Stanford University and spent two years in a religious studies program at Columbia University. Hunger of Memory, Rodriguez's autobiography, was greeted with great acclaim upon its publication in 1982. The book won several awards, including the Gold Medal for non-fiction from the Commonwealth Club of California, the Christopher Prize for Autobiography, and the Ansfeld-Wolf Prize for Civil Rights from the Cleveland Foundation. His second book, Days of Obligation: An Argument with my Mexican Father, was published in 1992 and was one of three finalists for a Pulitzer Prize in the non-fiction category in 1993. More recently, Rodriguez has published Brown : The Last Discovery of America (2003).
Rodriguez is an editor with Pacific News Service in San Francisco, an essayist for the "MacNeil/Lehrer News Hour," and a contributing editor for Harper's Magazine, U.S. News and World Report, and the Sunday Opinion Page of The Los Angeles Times. Rodriguez has produced two documentaries for the BBC, and was the subject of a two-part profile on Bill Moyers' "World of Ideas" television program. His articles appear in numerous publications, including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The American Scholar, Time, Mother Jones, and The New Republic.
Copyright © Salon Media Group
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