- Joined
- Jun 16, 2019
Tell me a time when immigrants from Ellis Island and California tried to leech off their new country's resources. Although the Italian created the Mafia after Mass immigration, immigrants respected the chance to assimilate into the new lifestyle.
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Not to mention that they aren't contributing much to the well-being of the society they want to migrate to. Positively at least.
This is something that really annoys me. I am very firmly anti-illegal immigration, with the operative word there being illegal. I am also very supportive of legal immigration. The USA is a nation of immigrants, except for the small fraction of those who are Native American. I think the USA is the greatest nation on the planet, and I think it is for a variety of reasons, but mostly because it is a melting pot of thousands of cultures, nations, and ethnicities.
When a foreigner comes to America, they are coming here because they think that life, for whatever reason, will be better in the USA than wherever it was they were coming from. With that in mind, it behooves them to adapt to the culture they are entering, not maintain their old culture. By all means, they should put their own spin on it, but they should broadly conform to the American ethos. (This can also be applied to interstate travelers, looking at you California)
This is a main reason why I think all Americans should speak English. America is a land of free speech, enshrined into our Constitution by the 1st Amendment, but what is the use of free speech if those to whom you are speaking cannot understand you? Public discourse requires comprehension by all participants, else we are merely speaking into the void, validating our narcissism by the empty repetition of useless rhetoric.
Whenever I state this position however, I am called xenophobic and anti-immigration. (Typically by people who have never lived outside the US, which I find ironic, given that I have lived more outside the US than within.) Why should immigrants be required to obey the law of the land they wish to live in? Why should they need to speak the language of that same country? Both are questions that I have seen raised by (previously) respected institutions and are stated, though perhaps in modified language, even in the halls of Congress.
Increasingly I find myself more and more receptive to truly xenophobic positions, such as The Wall for example, since I will be grouped in with those in favor of them whether or not I subscribe to their tenets. I don't want to be isolationist, but every time Ilhan Omar opens her mouth, I feel a bit more Islamophobic.