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- Date: Sat, 23 Jan 1993 03:13:46 -0500
- Sender: International Intercultural Newsletter <XCULT-L@PSUVM.BITNET>
- From: Username was LODEESEN <LODEESENJ@ADMINB.RFERL.ORG>
- Subject: Re: introduction and Zoe Baird controversy
- Lines: 66
-
- Marc, on immigration--way back in the sixties I was Vice Consul in Belo
- Horizonte, Brazil, and one of the things I had to do was determine the
- suitability of applicants who wanted to emigrate to the US. On the one
- hand there were some extremely stringent rules, far moreso than the ones
- today, on the other hand the consular official had unlimited latitude in
- his right to refuse, and could not be required by anyone to issue a visa
- if he personally thought, without proof, that the applicant did not meet
- the criteria. Our immigration laws were to put it mildly highly peculiar.
- A couple of years before, when I was an entering officer, we all were
- taught about the application of the "Asian-Pacific Triangle" provision,
- something most of us had heard about in college but on which apparently
- none of us had focused in real terms. At that time an applicant who was
- by "blood" more than half from an ethnic group that came from the
- geographical area which is created by placing a traingle covering most of the
- Pacific Ocean and all of Asia, that individual, no matter where he was born,
- could not apply to come into the United States as a resident of the country
- of his birth, as could all other nationals, but only as a carrier of the
- genes of the Uzbek, Pathan, Chinese, Japanese, Malay, Burmese, etc. nation.
- It was so damned weird that my entire class of 27 said that we simply would
- not enforce it--and remember, this was not a rebellious group, we were called
- the "Quiet Generation". We then were given the pleasure of a lecture from
- someone from INS who said that he understood perfectly and that we had every
- right not to enforce it, though, of course we would have to give up our
- commissions since we could hardly expect Congress to employ us when we were
- in open rebellion. What did we do? Well, as I said, we were the Quiet
- Generation. Oh, there was not only a hideous racist component to the
- concept underlying the policy; there were real practical limitations. Whereas
- other people from the Western Hemisphere could come in without any quota and
- most European quotas were undersubscribed, quotas for "Chinese persons" were
- filled well past the year 2000 (40 years ago) and the date kept getting moved
- further into the future as illegal immigrants managed to get their status
- converted one by one. Uh, I'm really trying to focus on the worst aspect of
- it, but it was also true that it was really only the Northern European
- quotas which were undersubscribed, reflecting a "grandfather" point of some
- kind. Fortunately, the Triangle was shortly thereafter dropped and I never
- had to test my conscience.
- The issues for me:
- it was unquestionable that the law I was asked to enforce expressed the will of
- the elected representatives of a people and embodied a principle without which
- no nation can have any degree of sovereignty, that it has the right to determine
- who may enter to stay.
- it seems to me unquestionable that no elected representative today would
- publicly defend what was then the law of the land, and that those who would
- defend it privately could probably be counted on the fingers of one (well,
- maybe two?) hand(s).
- it continues to seem to me entirely proper that we should be able to legislate
- to limit numbers or exclude individuals as we see our national interest. Surely
- no one feels that we should be compelled to accept everyone who chooses to live
- here, particularly when one considers how much more each one of us burdens the
- taxes of each other one of us, whether or not we find gainful employment. But
- I continue to be concerned that there have to be, for a country like ours, some
- values expressed when making those determinations which come closer to the
- Universal Declaration of Human Rights than to the Asia Pacific Triangle.
- If there were once men who could pass that abomination, are there similar
- such things which we are doing today, for which we have reasonable explanations
- (the migrant worker is better off with work than with none) which will seem
- as ludicrous to the next generation as did what I experienced seem to mine?
- (I was also expected to ask applicants if they intended to earn any portion of
- their income through prostitution--that we were supposed to ask both men and
- women was perhaps a sign that we were getting less sexist even back then? I
- don't know of anyone who followed the letter of the law on that part of the
- questioning.)
- Would someone like to start a list of things which might seem reasonable to
- the legislature today because they exist, but will be universally recognized
- as abominations 40 years from now (to repeat myself--and I'm on line and so
- cannot go back to delete previous lines. Sorry)
-