| As 
              the new Executive Editor of BlackCommentator.com, I would like to 
              thank my predecessor for the leadership and vision he has provided 
              to a crucial resource at a crucial time.� I aspire to fill his shoes.� 
              And of course, my plan is also to continue writing the commentaries 
              that you have so graciously read on these pages for the past three 
              years.�  We 
              live in gravely serious times, to be sure, and BC will continue 
              to serve as the drum that transmits crucial information to this 
              online village.� This publication continues on through the tireless 
              efforts of its Publisher and Managing Editor.� BC depends on your 
              continued support and readership, but will also thrive because of 
              your input, ideas and suggestions.� We will remain relevant to the 
              extent that we, as always, reflect the truly important issues out 
              there, and can adapt to new ideas and changing circumstances.� And 
              we will continue to provide a critique of an imperfect society and 
              world that scream for justice.� I begin in my new capacity with 
              a commentary on immigration reform.�����������  President Obama has set his sights on immigration reform, and that�s a good thing.� The issue 
              has been a political lightning rod, with demagogues exploiting the 
              issue of so-called �illegal aliens� for political gain.� They conjure 
              up the image of the Mexican worker who steals all the jobs from 
              honest, hard-working Americans, and brings crime and disease across 
              the border.� Another popular stereotype is that of the Muslim immigrant 
              with an Arab surname who is not to be trusted, coming to these shores 
              to plot and spread terror.  But this is nothing new, and throughout history the U.S. 
              has maintained a love-hate relationship with immigrants.� Without 
              question, immigrants have been vital to the growth of the nation.� 
              But many were treated like dirt when they first arrived.� Ethnic 
              whites such as Irish, Italians, Jews and Eastern Europeans were 
              regarded with disdain for their poverty, their culture and religion, 
              and where applicable their darker skin.� I.Q. tests were designed 
              in an attempt to prove their mental inferiority.� They were excluded 
              from employment and educational opportunities, and formed their 
              own institutions in response.� Of course, these were the days when 
              the concept of �whiteness� was far less inclusive than it is today, 
              and some European immigrant groups were rendered the functional 
              equivalent of people of color. 
 As for immigrants of color, such as Asian-Americans, there 
              was a fear of the �yellow peril� and the �brown hordes� that fueled 
              a racist exclusionist immigration policy, culminating in the internment 
              of Japanese-Americans in concentration camps on U.S. soil.� And 
              Mexican-Americans have been on this soil longer than Anglos, yet 
              they are branded as aliens and exploited for cheap migrant labor.� 
              What an inglorious history we have to confront. The Tea Party movement, a twenty-first-century incarnation 
              of the angry white mob�with corporate backing no less�exploits the 
              fear of the foreigner.� They and their cohorts in the anti-immigrant 
              movement stoke the fires of hatred and resentment, among a population 
              hit by recession and searching for the enemy.� There are those who 
              want the U.S. to build a giant fence on the border with Mexico, 
              not unlike the Berlin Wall or the Israeli security fence.� History 
              has shown us that this is not a good idea.� Meanwhile, the more 
              extremist elements take the law into their own hands and commit 
              acts of anti-Latino violence, as the Southern 
              Poverty Law Center 
              has so capably documented.� And how ironic, or fitting perhaps, 
              that Tom Tancredo, one of the most vocal and visible spokespeople 
              for the immigrant-hater crowd, is himself the grandson of Italian 
              immigrants.� How soon people forget! And for the Teabaggers, President Obama�s foreign affiliations�as 
              someone who had a Kenyan father and lived in Indonesia during his 
              childhood�provide a bonus which allows them to express their xenophobic 
              sentiment.� Visiting other countries, understanding other cultures 
              and speaking foreign languages are an anathema to some among us.� 
              All the talk about Obama�s birth certificate is really racist and 
              xenophobic code language.� It reflects their desire to return to 
              a time, presumably the good ol� days such as the fifties, when whites 
              had it all, and people of color were invisible� except when they 
              were serving someone food or cleaning a toilet.� Meanwhile, Latinos 
              are the largest �minority� group in America, a reality which unsettles 
              a segment of the population.�   There 
              are 12 million undocumented immigrants, and they are not going anywhere.� 
              They are a group with third-class status, lurking in the shadows 
              of civic life devoid of rights.� Because of this, businesses are 
              more than eager to exploit their cheap labor.� And yet, though many 
              have lived in America for years and raised their children here, 
              they often must face deportation and separation from their family 
              members who have U.S. citizenship.� A nation that purportedly stands 
              for �family values� cannot tolerate such a state of affairs.
 Yet, the undocumented make for a good scapegoat because they 
              are powerless.� How easy it is to blame your troubles on a migrant 
              farm worker who makes cents on the dollar, rather than the banks 
              that robbed you and all of us blind, then were rewarded by the government 
              for doing it?� And what of the age of globalization and outsourcing, 
              and the globetrotting transnational corporations that search for 
              the nations with the lowest cost of labor, driving wages down in 
              the process?� Simple minds and simple people search for the easy 
              answers, afraid to get their feelings hurt if they stumble upon 
              the truth.� So, they blame it all on the farmworker picking oranges, 
              as if that was a job they really wanted in the first place.���� ��  Indeed, there is a moral justification for immigration reform 
              and putting people on a path to citizenship.� It is the right thing 
              to do, so that people can live with dignity and raise their families 
              with security.� But even if you don�t care about the moral component, 
              perhaps you wish to hear the economic reason for immigration reform.� 
              According to the Center for American Progress, comprehensive reform would add 
              $1.5 trillion in additional GDP over 10 years.� Meanwhile, an enforcement-oriented 
              strategy of mass deportations costs the U.S. $2.6 trillion in GDP 
              over ten years.� For a nation running out of money, continuing to 
              pursue the current misguided policies amounts to cutting off our 
              nose to spite our face.�  So, it is good that the President is looking at immigration 
              reform.� In the meantime, let us ignore the Tea Party people and 
              let their mentality die a natural death.�� BlackCommentator.com 
              Executive Editor, David A. Love, JD is a journalist and human rights 
              advocate based in Philadelphia, and a contributor to The Huffington 
              Post, theGrio, 
              The Progressive 
              Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune News Service, In These Times 
              and Philadelphia Independent 
              Media Center. He also blogs at davidalove.com, 
              NewsOne, 
              Daily Kos, 
              and Open Salon. 
              Click here 
              to contact Mr. Love. |