[On February
5, 1917 Congress passed the influential and exclusionary Immigration
Act of 1917. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy that Act and other stages
across the history
of immigration laws, leading up to a weekend post on where our laws and
narratives stand in 2020.]
On the specific
contexts for and broader implications of a particularly xenophobic 1930s law.
The anti-Filipino
prejudice that developed in America across the first few decades of the 20th
century is perhaps even more egregiously hypocritical than racism always
already is in a nation founded upon “all men are created equal.” After all, throughout
this period the US
was occupying the Philippines (and for much of it fighting a war
against Filipino rebels seeking independence from that imperial
occupation), which meant that the tens of thousands of Filipinos who immigrated
to the US during the period were likely fleeing a conflict of our own creation
and definitely moving to a nation of which they were already part. Moreover,
many of those Filipino arrivals contributed
immeasurably to their new nation, from military heroes like Vicente Lim to
community activists like Agripino and Florence Jaucian. Yet despite those
realities (if not, indeed, because of them) anti-Filipino racism emerged as a
prominent national force during these same decades, one that culminated in
numerous hate crimes and acts of racial terrorism (such as the horrific 1930
Watsonville, California “riots”) and, most relevantly for this week’s
series, in a pair of interconnected, xenophobic 1930s laws: 1934’s Tydings-McDuffie
Act and 1935’s
Filipino Repatriation Act.
The Repatriation
Act was a particularly telling reflection of the strength of these
anti-Filipino sentiments, as it revealed that Congress was willing to grant the
Philippines eventual independence (again, a concept against which the US had not
too long before fought a 15-year war) in exchange for the “repatriation” of all
Filipino Americans back to the islands. But the Tydings-McDuffie Act was even
more egregious for one particular reason: it was quite possibly illegal. As I
mentioned in yesterday’s post, Filipino immigrants were not part of the “Asiatic
Barred Zone” created by the Immigration Act of 1917, because they could not be—since
the Philippines were a US territory/colony at the time, Filipino nationals
could not be restricted from coming to the United States. But by the 1930s,
giving in to the increasing anti-Filipino sentiments, Congress sought to impose
such a restriction nonetheless, and found a backdoor way to do so: agreeing to
grant the Philippines independence in 1945 and then claiming that this future independent
status made it legal to immediately restrict Filipino immigration to 50
arrivals per year (a quota so small as to make this an exclusion act by another
name). I suppose if Congress passes a law that makes it by default “legal,” but
this particular law at best created a loophole and at worst made an end run
around both the Constitution and legal traditions.
So the
Tydings-McDuffie Act reflects the strength and sway of such xenophobic
sentiments—but it also and perhaps even more importantly exemplifies the ways in
which immigration laws have been both created and manipulated in service of
such exclusionary attitudes. I’ve argued since at least my Chinese Exclusion Act book that one of the most pernicious
American myths is the narrative that our immigration laws have ever represented
a set of “rules” which arrivals could “choose” to follow. But over time I’ve
come to understand even more clearly that those laws were not just nonexistent
(at first) and then created in arbitrary, haphazard, and discriminatory ways,
although both those things are true and significant. Instead, perhaps the most
fundamental truth of virtually every American immigration law (with the partial
exception of the 1965 Act, on which more tomorrow) is that they had much less
to do with immigration and much more to do with enforcing and extending an
exclusionary narrative of American identity. That doesn’t mean that they don’t
also create various systems that affect other (and often all) groups of
immigrant arrivals, but such effects are secondary to the fundamental,
exclusionary purpose of most of these laws. A stark and crucial truth revealed
with especial clarity by the Tydings-McDuffie Act.
Last law and
stage tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think?
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