On the
stakes of 2012 for a core American issue of immigration policy, law, and
narratives.
I’ve
written a good deal on the
DREAM Act and concurrent contemporary
issues and public
figures in this space (more than most other current events/issues, I’d say),
and I don’t want to repeat myself. I also hope to have a book coming out at
some point in the not-too-distant future on parallel historical and national issues
(watch this space!), and so I don’t want to steal my own thunder. So for today
I’ll simply say this: I think there are few 21st-century issues more
crucial than the question of how we treat undocumented immigrants, and more
exactly those undocumented immigrants who exemplify the very best of what
America has been and can be. The DREAM Act is designed to benefit precisely
that latter category, and its failure to pass the Senate (including one of its
Republican co-sponsors voting against it) last year represented the triumph of
bigotry and xenophobia over logic, empathy, and American community.
President
Obama hasn’t always gone with those more positive perspectives on this issue
either, but this past week, he definitely did so: issuing
an executive order version of the DREAM Act that, as I wrote in a Facebook
post on it, seems to me to be one of the boldest and best things an American
president has ever done. While it’s unsurprisingly difficult to pin Mitt Romney
down on this issue, there’s no question that during the Republican primaries, and
particularly in arguments with Texas Governor Rick Perry, Romney staked out a
far more anti-immigrant position than either Perry or Obama, suggesting
for example the ludicrous concept of “self-deportation” as a viable option for
undocumented immigrants. Since Obama’s act was an executive order, it would
be instantly reversible by a future such order—and there’s no reliable reason
to think a President Romney would not take that step.
So that’s
one pretty clear American Studies stake in this election, I’d say: whether we
continue to pursue a more empathetic, logical, and genuinely American policy
toward kids like these (and, hopefully, toward
their older peers); or whether we give in to the kinds of bigotry and
xenophobia that have driven so many of the Republican-controlled state
legislatures in their anti-immigration efforts over the last couple of years. Some
of the issues and stakes I’ll address in this week’s series are pretty complex,
but I’ll be honest: when it comes to the DREAM Act, and to the attitudes to
which support or opposition for it connect, I don’t know if a contrast gets
more simple and stark than this.
Next issue
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What
do you think?
6/18
Memory Day nominee: James
Montgomery Flagg, the talented
child prodigy and turn of the 20th century artist and
illustrator whose most lasting legacy is his creation
of an iconic, definitely patriotic, perhaps jingoistic and disturbing, and
certainly striking and memorable American figure.
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