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Fear of commitment(Immigration)
WORLD Magazine ^ | February 1, 2003 Edition | Anne Morse

Posted on 01/24/2003 9:51:31 AM PST by Remedy

Leading academics and immigration lawyers want to drop the requirement that new citizens renounce allegiance to foreign nations and pledge allegiance to the United States

A HODGEPODGE OF HUMANITY, 260 strong—red and yellow, black and white—stood before a judge on a rainy day in Baltimore, reciting a pledge of single-minded allegiance: "I hereby declare on oath that I absolutely and entirely renounce and abjure all allegiance and fidelity to any foreign prince or potentate, state or sovereignty... "

Onlookers watched, spines tingling, as the oath grew ever more serious: "... that I will support and defend the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America against all enemies, foreign and domestic ... that I will bear arms on behalf of the United States when required by law ... that I take this obligation freely without any mental reservations or purpose of evasion, so help me God."

Moments later, the auditorium erupted in applause and the newly minted Americans turned the place into a gigantic kiss-and-cry zone. New citizens sworn in—like Thavisith Boriboune, a slender Buddhist whose job is installing insulation in Baltimore neighborhoods—spoke happily of their changed status. Mr. Boriboune arrived in the United States with his parents as a little boy, fleeing the communists of Laos. "I always wanted to be a citizen," he confided, but he failed the citizenship test a few years ago. This time, he said with a smile, he passed it.

The scene was sweet and moving. But if disturbing new trends hold steady, the citizenship ceremony may increasingly become a ritual of irrelevance, a setting for counterfeit commitment.

Leading academics are demanding that the United States stop asking new citizens to "commit." They want to drop the requirement that naturalized Americans renounce allegiance to all other nations. In The Wall Street Journal, law professors Peter Schuck and Peter Spiro recently argued in favor of allowing new citizens to retain old loyalties, and in 1998 Mexico passed a law enabling Americans of Mexican descent to retain or regain Mexican nationality. Countries such as Ireland and the Dominican Republic "no longer denationalize their emigrants when they naturalize here," Profs. Schuck and Spiro noted.

But how can immigrants promise complete allegiance and fidelity to the United States while retaining citizenship and even holding public office in the country they (theoretically) left behind? More ominously, in the event of a war—say, between the United States and Iraq—which country would "dual citizens" from Iraq side with?

One immigration expert says they shouldn't be forced into making that choice. Washington University law professor Stephen Legomsky told WORLD he believes the United States should not obligate dual citizens "to take up arms against one's country of nationality," and points out that since 1907, international law has prohibited countries from requiring anyone to do this. But this law has not always been respected. Some 60 years ago, many Americans who claimed dual citizenship with Japan were caught in Japan after Pearl Harbor—and forced to fight for Emperor Hirohito.

While dual citizenship is becoming more popular, America seems to have lost its ability to Americanize its newest citizens—to instill the love and loyalty so eagerly absorbed by earlier generations of newcomers. A study from the 1990s reveals that half of all Mexican-Americans and Filipinos, after four years in American high schools, were less, not more, likely to identify themselves as Americans.

Others seem determined not to assimilate: An Iranian doctoral student at Harvard found that just one of 10 Muslim immigrants he surveyed felt more allegiance to the United States than to their country of origin. That's in striking contrast to earlier generations of immigrants from Japan and Germany and Italy, who willingly took up arms against the countries they, or their parents, came from. Clearly, America is failing to pass on love of (adopted) country as well as it once did.

We also don't ask as much of would-be citizens as we once did. In recent years, the citizenship test has been "dumbed down." It now includes such questions as "How many states are there?" "What are the colors of our flag?" "Who is the president today?" Test-taking guidelines suggest would-be Americans need pass a mere 60 percent of the questions correctly. Even so, some activists want the test eliminated.

If our failure to Americanize newcomers is one culprit, modern technology is another. Earlier immigrants might never again have seen their former country an ocean away. Modern immigrants can easily keep in touch by telephone, e-mail, and cheap air travel—making it harder to permanently break ties.

Today we share a border with the country that sends us more immigrants than any other: Mexico. And some countries, particularly Mexico, see clear advantages to having a base of influence in the United States—having its citizens living here, and even becoming citizens, but retaining loyalty to their country of origin.

As Northwestern University law professor Rob Sobhani notes, Mexican politicians consider naturalized Americans from Mexico "bi-nationals" and even campaign for their votes during Mexican elections. Jorge Amselle, a Latino Republican activist, warns that "The Mexican government through its promotion of bilingual education and of dual nationality and voting is actively subverting the assimilative process of Americanization."

Just why activist immigration lawyers think all this nonassimilation is good is perplexing. Part of the answer, John Fonte of the Hudson Institute says, is that America's legal and scholarly elites see patriotism as cornball. Many view the powerful nation-state as passŽ or negative, preferring an ideal in which we are all citizens of the world.

Some immigration activists also claim that making newcomers learn English is "discriminatory." And they're pushing for non-citizens to have many of the same rights—including the right to vote—as citizens. Louis Henkin, a scholar who writes about immigration law, disdains "archaic notions of sovereignty" and wants to jettison nearly all differences "between a citizen and a non-citizen permanent resident" in all federal laws.

And yet, despite the best efforts of anti-assimilation elites, most Americans say they back patriotic assimilation and most immigrants stubbornly insist on becoming Yankee Doodle/Norman Rockwell stereotypes. According to the research firm Public Agenda, 87 percent of foreign-born parents and 88 percent of all parents agree that "schools should make a special effort to teach new immigrants about American values."

Those polled also agreed, 65 percent to 26 percent, that America's schools are a good place to "help new immigrants absorb America's language and culture as quickly as possible, even if their native language and culture are neglected."

When parents were asked which should be a higher priority—teaching children to be proud of being part of America and learning the rights and responsibilities of citizenship, or focusing on pride in their ethnic group's identity and heritage—parents of all races overwhelmingly chose "pride in and learning about America."

So much for "dual loyalties."

Most of those newly minted Americans in Baltimore would surely have agreed with the majority of poll respondents. Before taking the oath of citizenship, one of the speakers—a grizzled black man named Wilhelm Joseph, himself an immigrant from Trinidad some four decades ago—gave the crowd a final pop quiz on what America is all about. With a huge American flag behind him, and three enormous, candy-striped cardboard letters propped in front of him, he held up the first letter.

"What does the letter R bring to your mind?" he asked in a lilting, Caribbean-accented voice.

"Rights!" the audience cheerfully shouted back at him.

"Rights!" he agreed. "You enjoy certain rights: the right to vote, the right to practice your religion, the right to free speech, the right to criticize your government, the right to protest, the right to change. But R also stands for something else, because where you are given rights, you are also expected to exercise ... what?"

"Responsibilities!" the crowd hollered back.

Moments later, they were pledging to defend and protect America, and singing "God Bless America" for good measure. Zubair Khan, the former Pakistani stockbroker, was a jubilantly kissing his wife and two children. WORLD asked him the same question it asked several other immigrants: Would he be willing to have his young son one day take up arms on behalf of America—even if it were against the country his father once called home?

"Absolutely," he replied.

As President Bush noted in his inaugural address, every immigrant makes our country more American, not less—but only if he embraces our ideals. For as long as the world keeps giving America her poor, tired, huddled masses yearning to breathe free—or at least, breathe the air of American opportunity—we must do our best to see that this happens.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: immigrantlist
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ADMINISTRATION CITES RECENT SURVEYS SHOWING LACK OF BASIC KNOWLEDGE OF U.S. HISTORY

 

Western values under assault

Western values are by no means secure. They're under ruthless attack by the academic elite on college campuses across America. These people want to replace personal liberty with government control; they want to replace equality with entitlement; they want to halt progress in the name of protecting the environment. As such, they pose a much greater threat to our way of life than any terrorist or rogue nation. Multiculturalism and diversity are a cancer on our society, and, ironically, with our tax dollars and charitable donations, we're feeding it.

Multiculturalism and the Fall of Western Civilization

...The Founding Fathers saw diversity as a reality and as a problem: hence the national motto: e pluribus unum, chosen by a committee of he Continental Congress consisting of Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and John Adams. Later political leaders who also were fearful of the dangers of racial, sectional, economic, and cultural diversity (which indeed, produced the largest war of the century between 1815 and 1914), responded to the call of "bring us together," and made the promotion of national unity their central responsibility. "The one absolutely certain way of bringing this nation to ruin, of preventing all possibility of of its continuing as a nation at all," warned Theodore Roosevelt, "would be to permit it to become a tangle of squabbling nationalities." In the 1990s, however, leaders of he United States have not only permitted that but assiduously promoted the diversity rather than the unity of the people they govern.

A multicivilizational United states will not be the United States; it will be the United Nations.

SYMPOSIUM Q: Is Multiculturalism a Threat to the National Security of the United States?

The basic message of "multiculturalism" is that all cultures are equally good and beneficent — except Western culture, which is violent and oppressive.

Disarmament through psychological conditioning takes place endlessly in America's public schools, colleges and universities and, most powerfully, in the products of the entertainment industry, which now is the dominant force in American culture. The result is evident: While many average Americans recognize American Muslims as a dangerous fifth column, the multiculturalist elite demands a "tolerance of diversity" that Islam itself does not know. A Republican administration invites mullahs to the White House to celebrate Islamic holidays.

On the one side are the forces of fourth-generation war, led by Islam. Arrayed against them are the final dregs of the modern age, sometimes called the New World Order but more accurately named Brave New World. The latter combines the anti-Western ideology of cultural Marxism with manipulative technologies: the virtual realities of the video screen, mind-altering drugs (Ritalin is soma for kids) and, most dangerous of all, genetic engineering. While each of these contenders is bitterly hostile to the other, they agree on one thing: Western culture's got to go. The 21st century promises to be an interesting time.

The Multicultural Theocracy: An Interview With Paul Gottfried

What are the prospects for containing or rolling back the multicultural theocracy?

Note I do not think these battles will solve long-term problems; unless Western peoples start having families again, the social unit and population base needed for a civilization will be lacking.

While societies can assimilate, there are three presuppositions that must obtain: a core population that carries a distinctive culture that it hopes to preserve; a minority that is accepted on the condition that it eagerly embraces that majority culture; and a sufficiently controlled immigration so that assimilation is possible.


1 posted on 01/24/2003 9:51:31 AM PST by Remedy
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To: Remedy
I am not a citizem of the world.
2 posted on 01/24/2003 10:16:42 AM PST by freekitty
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To: Free the USA; B4Ranch; FITZ; Tancredo Fan; Fish out of Water; seamole; Ajnin; agitator; Tancred; ...
I pledge allegiance ping
3 posted on 01/24/2003 12:48:42 PM PST by madfly
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To: *immigrant_list
http://www.freerepublic.com/perl/bump-list
4 posted on 01/24/2003 12:56:19 PM PST by Free the USA (Stooge for the Rich)
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Comment #5 Removed by Moderator

To: Remedy
"The Mexican government through its promotion of bilingual education and of dual nationality and voting is actively subverting the assimilative process of Americanization."

Hear that, mass immivasion enthusiasts? It's the truth. No ifs, ands, or buts. That is what is happening NOW.

Want the U.S. to end up being the dog that gets wagged by the tail in Mexico (i.e., the corrupt, despicable Mexican oligarchy)?

6 posted on 01/24/2003 1:14:53 PM PST by Regulator
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To: Remedy
A study from the 1990s reveals that half of all Mexican-Americans and Filipinos, after four years in American high schools, were less, not more, likely to identify themselves as Americans.

I think this is indicative of a much deeper problem, namely that a lot of American high school and college students do not learn and do not carry American values as well any more.

7 posted on 01/24/2003 2:00:51 PM PST by dirtboy
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To: dirtboy
I think this is indicative of a much deeper problem, namely that a lot of American high school and college students do not learn and do not carry American values as well any more.

Thanks to "Social Studies", ie; US History, US Constitution courses, replaced by Global Sing-a-longs.

8 posted on 01/24/2003 2:18:36 PM PST by madfly
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To: Remedy
bttt
9 posted on 01/24/2003 2:21:03 PM PST by madfly
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To: Remedy
We have elected an open borders, new world order President, to my disgust. I voted for him only because I couldn't vote for Gore.

I think that if the right man campaigned for President on a platform strong on American sovereignty, tight borders and deportation of illegal aliens, he would win in a landslide. I think most Americans are fed up with what is happening to our country because of open borders.

10 posted on 01/24/2003 2:23:23 PM PST by janetgreen
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To: janetgreen
I think that if the right man campaigned for President on a platform strong on American sovereignty, tight borders and deportation of illegal aliens, he would win in a landslide. I think most Americans are fed up with what is happening to our country because of open borders.

Although I agree on many of those issues, single-issue candidates typically do not fare well in Presidential elections. But if a candidate ran on those issues plus restrictions on H1-B visas AND other labor issues, as well as health care reform, they might win. However, it would probably be an old-school Democrat running such a campaign.

11 posted on 01/24/2003 2:26:00 PM PST by dirtboy
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To: madfly
BUMP
12 posted on 01/24/2003 2:36:49 PM PST by Dust in the Wind
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To: Remedy
In The Wall Street Journal, law professors Peter Schuck and Peter Spiro recently argued in favor of allowing new citizens to retain old loyalties, and in 1998 Mexico passed a law enabling Americans of Mexican descent to retain or regain Mexican nationality. Countries such as Ireland and the Dominican Republic "no longer denationalize their emigrants when they naturalize here," Profs. Schuck and Spiro noted.

Looks like the "Anti-America" Open Borders Cabal are trying to find a way to legalize high treason. And you know what, given their treasonous set of politics, I can see why.

13 posted on 01/24/2003 4:37:58 PM PST by WRhine
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To: janetgreen
I am sure both parties know that, I am sure they both have the exact same reason they do not intend to offer that kind of candidate.

They fully intend to destroy our Constitution and sovereignty, both parties. I use to think people who said that should wear tinfoil. Not anymore, not after 9-11.
14 posted on 01/24/2003 4:47:48 PM PST by MissAmericanPie
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To: dirtboy
I agree on many of those issues, single-issue candidates typically do not fare well in Presidential elections

You're right, he would have to be strong on other major issues.

15 posted on 01/24/2003 5:09:28 PM PST by janetgreen
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To: MissAmericanPie
both parties

I agree, it isn't just the Dems anymore. Both parties ignore their constituents in favor of this immigration madness. I lost faith in George Bush when he didn't close the borders on September 12.

16 posted on 01/24/2003 5:12:39 PM PST by janetgreen
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To: janetgreen
I agree, it isn't just the Dems anymore. Both parties ignore their constituents in favor of this immigration madness. I lost faith in George Bush when he didn't close the borders on September 12.

That's why I believe the immigration nightmare in America will continue until a 3rd party candidate that runs on a platform of putting the interests of America and her people FIRST wins the presidency. Absent that, it's more of the same until America is no longer America. The Beltway Parties are too thoroughly corrupt and entrenched to change their well-worn path of treason.

17 posted on 01/24/2003 6:59:58 PM PST by WRhine
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Comment #18 Removed by Moderator

To: freekitty
I am not a citizem of the world.

No kiddin', only liberals would dream about the overseas powers and not the truth.

19 posted on 01/27/2003 3:29:23 AM PST by JudgemAll
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To: JudgemAll
Do not post VDare material here. Thank you.
20 posted on 01/27/2003 7:13:31 AM PST by Admin Moderator
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