Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,505,807 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Flag daze: oh say can you see the red, white, and green? Let's wave-off immigration hysteria.


SCREAMING EAGLE Screaming eagle may refer to:
  • "Screaming Eagles", the nickname of the United States 101st Airborne Division
  • Screaming eagle (wave), a tropical wave that resembles the head of an eagle
 EMBLEM AMIABLY WAVED IN street demonstrations all over the country recently, but this flagging eagle didn't make Americans' chests swell with pride; it made a lot of their faces contort con·tort  
v. con·tort·ed, con·tort·ing, con·torts

v.tr.
To twist, wrench, or bend severely out of shape: pain that contorted their faces.

v.intr.
 in anger. Turns out it was the wrong eagle. Not the beloved, purple-mountain scaling raptor raptor

In general, any bird of prey, including owls. The raptors are sometimes restricted to eagles, falcons, hawks, and vultures (birds of the order Falconiformes), all diurnal predators that “seize and carry off” (Latin raptare) their prey.
 who accompanies the flag of the United States of America UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. The name of this country. The United States, now thirty-one in number, are Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, , but its snake chewing, rio-skimming southern cousin, the Azteca birdie who screeches across the banner of that other U.S., the Estados Unidos de Mexico.

Nanoseconds after the predominantly Mexican demonstrators paraded for immigration reform Immigration reform is the common term used in political discussions regarding changes to immigration policy. In a certain sense, reform can be general enough to include promoted, expanded, or open immigration, but in reality discussions of reform often deal with the aspect of  in their variant of March madness March Madness may refer to:
  • NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship
  • NCAA March Madness series, an EA Sports basketball video game series
  • Mega March Madness, pay-per-view package
, the sputtering A popular method for adhering thin films onto a substrate. Sputtering is done by bombarding a target material with a charged gas (typically argon) which releases atoms in the target that coats the nearby substrate. It all takes place inside a magnetron vacuum chamber under low pressure.  classes erupted in a patriotic, saliva-drenched frenzy, denouncing any who dared fly the red, white, and green within our freedom-loving borders. This may have been the first time mass flag burning has ever been promoted by conservative media.

I find myself wondering, however, if it wasn't the colors on the flags they carried but the color of the skin on the faces of most of the protesters that propelled the outrage among America's talk radio and cable news demagogues. Aren't these the same guys you have to elbow out of the way on St. Patrick's St. Patrick's or Saint Patrick's may refer to:
  • Saint Patrick's Day, named after the saint
  • St. Patrick's Purgatory, an ancient pilgrimage in Lough Derg, County Donegal, Ireland
 Day? Columbus Day? Fill-in-your-favorite-European-descent-group-celebration day?

Our occasional attempts at "fixing" immigration immigration, entrance of a person (an alien) into a new country for the purpose of establishing permanent residence. Motives for immigration, like those for migration generally, are often economic, although religious or political factors may be very important.  do tend to bring out the worst in our political culture, generating the strangest of historical memory lapses, as the by-now well-heeled great-grandchildren of people abused by the "Know Nothings" of America's past step forward to berate whatever new generation of migrants land, tired and tempest-tossed, on these shores. Economists seem capable of reviewing the same data before informing us that immigrant masses are both a drain and a boon while usually dependable xenophobes, dazzled by the prospect of all that desperate, low-cost labor, transform into immigration cheerleaders Notable cheerleaders
  • Paula Abdul, Los Angeles Lakers, Van Nuys High School
  • Christina Aguilera, North Allegheny Intermediate High School[]
  • Kirstie Alley
  • Ann-Margret
  • Toni Basil
  • Kim Basinger
  • Halle Berry
  • Sandra Bullock[0]
.

Ultimately all the rhetoric from both sides of this particular political line is likely to be irrelevant. Movement is part of the history of humanity, migrations in search of food, water, safety, peace. Long before the advent of something called borders and entities called nation-states, people have been on the move from somewhere worse to somewhere better. Throwing up pathetically transitory obstacles in the face of such movements is likely futile. As long as bread won't come to the people, the people will come to the bread.

If we were to get serious about the so-called problem of immigration, we wouldn't be debating better border barriers or new ways to repackage re·pack·age  
tr.v. re·pack·aged, re·pack·ag·ing, re·pack·ag·es
To package again or anew, especially in a more attractive package.



re·pack
 indentured servitude servitude

In property law, a right by which property owned by one person is subject to a specified use or enjoyment by another. Servitudes allow people to create stable long-term arrangements for a wide variety of purposes, including shared land uses; maintaining the
. We might begin, however, by trying to be better neighbors.

The political, cultural, and economic integration established in Europe in the weary aftermath of World War II worked over the long haul because the agreements that established the European community built in regional economic development as an integral part of the process. E.U. member states helped poorer neighbors grow their economies such that a historically impoverished nation like Ireland is now the economic powerhouse of the E.U. Its citizens are no longer emigrating to other nations, but returning home--from U.S. cities where they have lived as "illegals" for years without generating much ire--to join in the bonanza.

CATHOLIC LEADERS SUCH AS CARDINALS THEODORE McCarrick of Washington and Roger Mahony of Los Angeles have taken the lead in guiding the pilgrim church through this potentially divisive issue, calling for compassion and solidarity and recalling the Holy Family's long ago migration into Egypt. But our solidarity with our migrant brothers and sisters must be much more than spiritual.

In no other region in the world is so rich a nation as the United States pressed up against so poor a neighbor as Mexico. Our national fates are intertwined by geography, by treaty, and more and more by family. We in the north have not asked ourselves what we are prepared to sacrifice to be better neighbors to Mexico and the other poor nations of Central America where "our" immigration problem begins.

If the U.S. of A. wants citizens from the U.S. of M. to stop crossing the line, it needs to reach across the border to offer a hand up, to help build Mexico into a nation worth staying in and the U.S. into a neighbor that can be relied on.

KEVIN CLARKE, senior editor at U.S. CATHOLIC and managing editor of online products at Claretian Publications.
COPYRIGHT 2006 Claretian Publications
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Clarke, Kevin
Publication:U.S. Catholic
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 1, 2006
Words:719
Previous Article:My dear diarist: many secrets are revealed in a diary, only some of which are written down.
Next Article:All fired up: like the family hearth, the Holy Spirit is the church's bright center, inviting all of us to come closer to one another.
Topics:



Related Articles
Why control the borders? An immigration debate. (views by five leading experts on the subject with commentary on Peter Brimelow's June 22, 1993...
Controlling our demographic destiny. (impact of uncontrolled immigration on the United States population) (Demystifying Multiculturalism) (Cover...
INCULCATE KIDS WITH PATRIOTISM.(Viewpoint)
From coast to coast, immigrants stand up.(Minorities)(Local: Business owners and workers take time out to rally)
The new immigration politics: wherein, for example, the rich and the poor join hands.(PUBLIC POLICY)
Giant pickles and broken borders.(Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986)
Set abstractions aside, focus on the real issues in immigration.(illegal immigrants in poultry industry)
Immigration endgame: a high price to pay for the president's legacy.
THOUSANDS MARK RALLY ANNIVERSARY CROWDS IN L.A. SEEK IMMIGRATION REFORM.(News)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles