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- <text id=93TT0414>
- <title>
- Dec. 02, 1993: America's Immigrant Challenge
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 02, 1993 Special Issue:The New Face Of America
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPECIAL ISSUE:THE NEW FACE OF AMERICA
- America's Immigrant Challenge, Page 3
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By The Editors
- </p>
- <p> Among the many promises a young upstart named Bill Clinton made
- to the voters as he campaigned for the presidency was that,
- if elected, he would produce an Administration that "looks like
- America." Whether or not he has succeeded in that aim--he
- has recruited many minorities, though critics say still not
- enough--his pledge was an acknowledgment of an important fact:
- the face of America has been dramatically altered in the final
- years of the 20th century. America's face is not just about
- physiognomy, or even color, although endless varieties of each
- can be seen throughout the land. It is about the very complexion
- of the country, the endless and fascinating profusion of peoples,
- cultures, languages and attitudes that make up the great national
- pool.
- </p>
- <p> That pool, constantly fed by new streams of immigrants, has
- produced in the U.S. of 1993 what author Ben J. Wattenberg has
- labeled "the first universal nation," a truly multicultural
- society marked by unparalleled diversity. It has also brought
- fresh challenges for the U.S.--and considerable doubts among
- Americans about the wisdom of continuing the country's traditional
- open-door policy toward new immigrants.
- </p>
- <p> A nation of immigrants from the beginning, the U.S. has welcomed
- most newcomers, grateful for any new pairs of hands to tame
- its vast interior or help stoke its huge industrial engine.
- For more than a century, most of the new arrivals were from
- Europe. But in the 1960s the U.S. undertook a basic shift in
- national policy, from one stacked in favor of European immigrants
- toward one that favored the rest of the world, particularly
- Third World nations. The full effects of that policy have exploded
- only in recent years. The past decade has seen the greatest
- rise in immigration since the great wave of 1901-10. Immigrants
- are arriving at the rate of more than 1 million a year, mostly
- from Asia and the vast Hispanic world.
- </p>
- <p> The impact of these new immigrants is literally remaking America.
- Today more than 20 million Americans were born in another country.
- Given that there are higher birthrates among the mostly young
- Third World arrivals, demographers are predicting that the U.S.
- before long will have to redefine just who its minorities are.
- In 1950, for example, 75% of all the minorities in the U.S.
- were African Americans. Hispanics now number about 24 million,
- and by 2010--little more than a dozen years from now--they
- will have surpassed blacks in number.
- </p>
- <p> Even more startling, sometime during the second half of the
- 21st century the descendants of white Europeans, the arbiters
- of the core national culture for most of its existence, are
- likely to slip into minority status. "Without fully realizing
- it," writes Martha Farnsworth Riche, director of policy studies
- at Washington's Population Reference Bureau, "we have left the
- time when the nonwhite, non-Western part of our population could
- be expected to assimilate to the dominant majority. In the future,
- the white, Western majority will have to do some assimilation
- of its own."
- </p>
- <p> That prospect hardly pleases everyone. The new immigrants enter
- a country whose population of 258 million has comfortably filled
- the land and is worried about overpopulation and a threatened
- environment. Many are alarmed by a projection that if the immigrant
- tide continues, the U.S. population will rise to 392 million
- by the middle of the next century. The sluggish performance
- of the American economy, accompanied by persistent unemployment,
- makes aliens once again appear a threat to jobs. In particular,
- the growth of illegal immigration and the government's inability
- to stanch the flow are a constant irritant to Americans.
- </p>
- <p> It is little wonder, then, that this latest wave of immigrants
- may become at least as controversial as any in U.S. history.
- Normally tolerant Americans succumb to complaints about the
- newcomers' contributions to crime and disease, about the burdens
- on schools and welfare rolls. The net cost of immigrants to
- the government could reach into the billions. In a poll conducted
- for Time by Yankelovich Partners Inc. this fall, three-quarters
- of those questioned felt that the nation's current policy has
- got out of hand and that the government should limit immigration
- more strictly.
- </p>
- <p> Does this mean the end of the American pact with newcomers to
- its shores? Almost surely not. Despite difficulties, recent
- immigrants have brought to the U.S. a diversity, a vitality,
- a freshness unseen since the great immigration waves of the
- 19th century. Though different and perhaps more problematic
- than those who have come before, the latest immigrants are helping
- form a new society, a variation and intensification of the great
- American experiment. Too complicated and diffuse to be described
- as a melting pot, or even a goulash or a mosaic, that society
- today is really a collection of intertwining subcultures, each
- contributing its own character to the nation's life--from
- food to fashion, from art to politics--while retaining its
- distinctiveness.
- </p>
- <p> Most of the newcomers share an enormously important trait with
- those who preceded them. They are self-selected self-starters,
- men and women who had the gumption to pick up and chase after
- their dreams. They are born optimists; otherwise, why come?
- Though some are poorer and have fewer job skills to offer than
- previous immigrants, an impressive number bring with them palpable
- contributions to American society. A great many new doctors
- today are foreign born. Immigrants rank high among the entrepreneurs
- who are making small businesses the core of recent economic
- growth. As the pictures on these pages demonstrate, the newcomers
- have also provided America with some startling images by replicating
- scenes from their own cultures across the country.
- </p>
- <p> The biggest challenge the U.S. faces on the immigration front
- is to ensure that these welcome differences are accompanied
- by a dedication to, or at least a healthy acceptance of, what
- unites Americans of every color and ethnic background: the host
- of values many still consider vital to the American character.
- Those values are embodied in such seminal documents as the Federalist
- papers and the Constitution. They presume active participation
- in the democratic political process, praised by Alexis de Tocqueville
- as the great educator and unifier. They include a respect for
- the rule of law, for the rights of others to succeed--or fail--and a shared responsibility to protect those who cannot succeed.
- These values are conveyed, eventually, in the English language,
- among people who share a cultural idiom that ranges from Bugs
- Bunny to baseball's seventh-inning stretch.
- </p>
- <p> Traditionalists, fearing the erosion of these values, decry
- the emergence of identity politics and the thought-control techniques
- popularly called "political correctness." Both of these intertwined
- movements create a tendency for minorities to place ethnicity
- above individuality and huddle under banners that label them
- as victims of, rather than participants in, the larger society.
- "The multiethnic dogma," writes historian Arthur M. Schlesinger
- Jr., "belittles unum and glorifies pluribus."
- </p>
- <p> But the process of assimilation, while perhaps a bit more hesitant
- and stressful than at times in the past, still marches on. It
- might skip a generation, revealing itself eventually, for instance,
- in the pure Valleyspeak of a young Chinese Californian. More
- often than ever before, though, assimilation in the 1990s arrives
- through the ultimate cultural immersion of interethnic marriage.
- In today's diverse America, such marriages are occurring at
- triple the rate of two decades ago.
- </p>
- <p> The present popular discontent may produce some needed changes
- in immigration laws and practices. But there is no turning back:
- diversity breeds diversity. It is the fuel that runs today's
- America and, in a world being transformed daily by technologies
- that render distances meaningless, it puts America in the forefront
- of a new international order.
- </p>
- <p> This issue of Time is devoted to American diversity, and thus
- by definition to the differences among Americans. Those differences
- gain their impact, however, from the bonds that unite them in
- one vast and variegated country. They are differences that should
- not divide or weaken America, but distinguish and strengthen
- it. They are the reason to keep the welcome mat, however worn
- and tattered at times, always ready at the door.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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