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Unintentional
Immigrants
by
Parrish W. Jones
©2006.
All rights reserved.
Immigration
reform is on the debate logs of congress and nearly every pundit these days.
Few distinguish an immigrant from a migrant, a distinction that is quite necessary
for understanding the issues. An immigrant is one who goes from one country to
another with the desire to remain semi-permanently if not permanently and, in
most cases, to seek citizenship. A migrant can be either an internal or
external migrant. A migrant is one who moves about, often across national
boundaries, for various reasons, in most cases to find work.
Present
debates completely obscure the distinction and ignore the fact that a large
majority of undocumented Latino persons in the U.S. never intended to stay
here. Most would like to simply come and go to find work for a time so they may
provide a better living for their families and villages back home. Present law
makes such migration impossible.
In
order to migrate into the U.S. from the south persons must cross the U.S.
Mexico border. In the last 10 to 12 years such a crossing has become more dangerous
and more expensive. In 2004-05 fiscal year 279 persons have died coming to
"America" according to official records, which does not account for
all deaths. Many migrants who planned to come and work for a time and return
home have become unintentional immigrants because they dare not return home because
they know the perils of crossing the border today.
The
reason the risks have increased is that the Immigration and Naturalization
Service and its successor the Department of Homeland Security through the
Border Patrol have built miles of fences, installed listening and video
monitoring devices along the border and deployed aircraft, horsemen, cyclists,
and armed vehicles to discover and apprehend migrants. The fences and
monitoring equipment have forced the migrants to go farther and farther into
the desserts to begin their journey. The result has been escalating deaths of
men, women and children from scorching heat and freezing cold, injury, snake
and insect bites, and animal attack. The trek across the dessert takes 3 to 7
days, a journey that requires carrying enough food and water for the trip, an
impossible task as adequate water for the trip often weighs more than the
person.
Once
a person has made that journey, they are reluctant to ever make it again
because of the danger. Economics also plays a role. Increased surveillance
creates greater risk for those who aid the migrants in their journey. A
practice that was once made up of families with deep connections to villages is
increasingly becoming the enterprise of organized, well funded criminal elements
who do not depend on their reputations for business. Unlike the families who
were assisting friends and relatives, the organizations are in it purely for
the money. So the migrant feels a greater threat on two fronts: the imposing
U.S. militarization and the growing criminal crossing system.
Few
of us who work on immigration issues believe in throwing the borders open. That
is no more practical than the attempt to completely close them off. Nor is it
likely that most U.S. citizens would find closing the borders suitable. We simply
depend too extensively on migrant labor to support our more and more ravenous
lifestyles.
Reform
we need, but, if we are serious about immigration reform, we will recognize the
distinction between migrant and immigrant. Once the distinction is made, we can
reform the law to make migration possible while still protecting our borders
from terrorists. Senators Kennedy and McCain have introduced legislation that
goes a long way toward writing the distinction into law. Under their
legislation migrants already in the U.S. would be able to acquire a worker visa
by paying a fine for crossing illegally (that is not amnesty). Through that law
we would have a means to know who is in the country, where they are and for
whom they worked. Today, we know none of that about the 12 or so million who
are here undocumented. Knowing who they are would leave resources to track
those who do not want to be found out because they wish us harm.
Second,
the law provides for new work visas for persons who wish to migrate, thus assuring
that our appetite for their labor will be met as others return home for a
while. With the new work visas, there will be less pressure on the border a
fact that will free up more money to spend on real security threats like hurricanes.
Let's
be reasonable and do the right thing for us and for the migrant laborer who
wants to come here to work for us and support his family.
RESUME:
Parrish
W. Jones, 33 Franklin St. NE, Washington DC 20002, 202-262-1850, parrish.jones@starpower.net
Dr.
Jones is a Minister of the Presbyterian Church (USA) and has served as a
volunteer in mission with Presbyterian Border Ministry, led numerous mission/study
groups to the Border, and volunteered with the Border Working Group, a
coalition of faith based organizations, to advocate for more humane Border policy.
He lives and writes from Washington, DC.
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