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- <text id=93TT0416>
- <title>
- Dec. 02, 1993: Not Quite So Welcome Anymore
- </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
- Not Quite So Welcome Anymore, Page 10
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As reflected in a TIME poll, the public mood over immigration
- is turning sour again
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by David Aikman/Washington and David S. Jackson/San
- Francisco
- </p>
- <p> After New York's World Trade Center is rocked by a thundering
- explosion, police round up a string of Arab immigrants as suspects,
- including an Egyptian radical who was admitted to the U.S. by
- mistake. Off the shore of New York's Long Island, a rusty tramp
- steamer called the Golden Venture runs aground, disgorging nearly
- 300 frightened Chinese trying to enter the country illegally;
- 10 die. Newly elected President Bill Clinton, reneging on a
- campaign promise, denies entry to Haitian boat people, then
- is blindsided by hostile public reaction when his first two
- choices for Attorney General turn out to have hired illegal
- immigrants as household help. When Texas border patrols mount
- a round-the-clock blockade along 20 miles of the Rio Grande,
- hundreds of Mexicans, many of whom commute illegally to day
- jobs in El Paso, angrily block traffic on a bridge between the
- U.S. and Mexico, chanting, "We want to work."
- </p>
- <p> The incessant drumbeat of episodes like these has Americans
- increasingly concerned that their country is under siege and,
- in the popular phraseology, "has lost control of its own borders."
- In a study published last June, Bard College economist Dimitri
- Papadimitriou concluded that new laws were needed to head off
- "a bitter struggle between these new immigrants and disadvantaged
- segments of the U.S. population for increasingly scarce low-skill,
- low-wage jobs."
- </p>
- <p> These sentiments recall a judgment voiced in a New York Times
- editorial: "There is a limit to our powers of assimilation,
- and when it is exceeded the country suffers from something very
- like indigestion." That observation was not made recently, however,
- but in May 1880, when anti-immigrant sentiment was also on the
- rise. Then too there was no effective limit on the number of
- immigrants entering the U.S. The hard fact is that when times
- are good, few worry about how many newcomers arrive; when times
- are tough, as they are now, cries of opposition invariably rise.
- </p>
- <p> Many Americans are confused about whether the continuous inflow
- of immigrants makes the country stronger or weaker. Economic
- studies abound claiming that immigration spurs new businesses
- and new taxpayers. With no less conviction, others contend that
- immigrants and their children evade taxes and overburden local
- welfare, health and education systems. To compound the confusion,
- many Americans believe--wrongly--that more foreigners enter
- the country illegally than do legally. As the doubts grow, so
- does the potential for backlash. Polls show that almost two-thirds
- of Americans favor new laws to cut back on all immigrants and
- asylum seekers--legal as well as illegal. Though immigration
- is often regarded as a single issue, some distinctions are important:
- </p>
- <p> Legal immigrants. More than 1 million people are entering the
- U.S. legally every year. From 1983 through 1992, 8.7 million
- of these newcomers arrived--the highest number in any 10-year
- period since 1910. A record 1.8 million were granted permanent
- residence in 1991. Because present law stresses family unification,
- these arrivals can bring over their spouses, sons and daughters:
- some 3.5 million are now in line to come in. Once here, they
- can bring in their direct relatives. As a result, there exists
- no visible limit to the number of legal entries.
- </p>
- <p> Illegal immigrants. This is what makes Americans almost unanimously
- furious. No one knows the numbers, of course, but official estimates
- put the illegal--or "undocumented"--influx at more than
- 300,000 a year currently and almost 5 million over the past
- 10 years.
- </p>
- <p> Asylum seekers. Until a few years ago, applications were rare,
- totaling 200 in 1975. Suddenly, asylum is the plea of choice
- in the U.S. and around the world, often as a cover for economic
- migration. U.S. applications were up to 103,000 last year, and
- the backlog tops 300,000 cases. Under the present asylum rules,
- practically anyone who declares that he or she is fleeing political
- oppression has a good chance to enter the U.S. Chinese are almost
- always admitted, for example, if they claim that China's birth-control
- policies have limited the number of children they can have.
- </p>
- <p> Right now, once aliens enter the U.S., it is almost impossible
- to deport them, even if they have no valid documents. Thousands
- of those who enter illegally request asylum only if they are
- caught. The review process can take 10 years or more, and applicants
- often simply disappear while it is under way. Asylum cases are
- piling up faster than they can be cleared, with the Immigration
- and Naturalization Service falling farther behind every year.
- At her confirmation hearings at the end of September, Doris
- Meissner, Clinton's nominee as commissioner of the INS, conceded,
- "The asylum system is broken, and we need to fix it."
- </p>
- <p> With pressure rising to do something about immigration, Clinton
- felt he had to get out and lead--if for no other reason than
- to head off draconian legislative proposals already in the works.
- The President put forward measures last July to tighten screening
- of potential immigrants abroad, speed deportations of phony
- asylum seekers and add 600 officers to the border patrol. "We
- will not," he declared, "surrender our borders to those who
- wish to exploit our history of compassion and justice."
- </p>
- <p> The Administration has not, however, joined the national majority
- that now says it favors cutting back on legal immigration. Nevada
- Senator Harry Reid, a rising Democratic star in the immigration
- wars, has introduced a bill that would establish both an annual
- limit of 300,000 newcomers, including "immediate relatives,"
- and a national identification card.
- </p>
- <p> These measures, along with others from the House of Representatives,
- may come to life on Capitol Hill after the great debates on
- health care and the North American Free Trade Agreement are
- resolved. In fact, immigration questions already lurk beneath
- the surface of both these issues: should citizens carry a national
- medical identification card, and will the trade agreement lure
- more or fewer Mexicans north? Almost surely, Congress will try
- to reform immigration law again in 1994.
- </p>
- <p> Immigration backlash is particularly strong in New York, Florida,
- Texas and, most of all, California, which officials say contains
- more than half of all the illegal immigrants in the country.
- As the frequent bellwether of national changes, the state has
- already caught a low-grade fever from this issue. Governor Pete
- Wilson has won majority support for a proposed constitutional
- amendment that would prevent children born in the U.S. of illegal
- immigrants from automatically becoming citizens. Californians,
- more than most Americans, complain about special treatment for
- immigrants. TIME's poll indicates that 51% of Californians favor
- cutting off health benefits and public education to immigrants
- and their children, whereas nationally only 46% back such measures.
- </p>
- <p> Because there is no national consensus, political leaders and
- activists stake out unpredictable and sometimes contradictory
- positions. Many liberals believe the doors should be open to
- all who seek new opportunities and hope to escape persecution.
- Other liberals argue that while open immigration policies are
- intrinsically good, they must be tempered to prevent newcomers
- from not only taking away American jobs but also competing with
- poor, ill-educated minorities already here.
- </p>
- <p> Market-oriented conservatives still support immigration as a
- source of low-wage labor. But other conservatives call for immigration
- restrictions to halt the cultural transmogrification of American
- society. One of the most outspoken advocates for the latter
- is Daniel Stein, executive director of the Federation for American
- Immigration Reform, who favors a moratorium on all immigration,
- insisting that "nations do not have an unlimited capacity to
- absorb immigrants without irrevocably altering their own character"--an echo of a view enunciated more than a century ago.
- </p>
- <p> But for all the hand wringing, American resistance falls far
- short of the hostility evident in Western Europe. Gangs of racist
- thugs in Britain engage in "Paki bashing." France has officially
- declared a target of "zero immigration." Germany insists it
- is "not a country of immigration," and neo-Nazis have taken
- the dictum literally enough to set fire to hostels for foreign
- workers and asylum seekers.
- </p>
- <p> More than 100 million people around the world are currently
- displaced from their native land. Europe's xenophobia can only
- mean that more of them will want to come to the U.S. That is
- all the more reason for Americans to spend some time debating
- how many of them they are willing to take in.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-