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March 27, 2009
View From Lodi, CA Pittsburgh, PA:
Thin-Skinned Illegal Alien Apologists Can’t Stand The Truth
By Joe Guzzardi
In November 2008, I
wrote a column asking why, when I cite
statistics from the
Census Bureau, the
U.S. Department of Labor or the
California Department of Education that prove
that immigration adds dramatically to
overpopulation, depresses American workers’
wages or adds disproportionately to
classroom size, some readers label me a racist.
Others, even more vehement, call me a
hate-monger.
Why throw stones at me? After all,
I wondered out loud, my sources are beyond reproach. No
one challenges their methodology.
My purpose over the two decades
that I’ve brought
immigration facts into the greater light of day
is not to offend but to raise awareness. With every
passing year, my effort has become increasingly
politically incorrect.
But, although I never expect to be
canonized, I think of myself as a modern day
St.
Sebastian, the target of my enemy’s arrows. No
matter how many they shoot at me, I survive to battle
on.
Still, thin skins have a tough time
with hard facts.
A
recent letter to the News-Sentinel editor
proves my case.
Earlier this month in one of the
News-Sentinel’s mostly widely read weekly items, a
furious reader wrote that my continued use of
“illegal alien” is “dehumanizing”. According
to the livid correspondent, I am filled with “hate
and racism,” an “oppressor” that “spews”
anti-immigrant rhetoric.
While the News-Sentinel’s
feedback section comforted me with its nearly unanimous
support, my detractor’s allies included one reader who
said: “No person is illegal.” Another commented:”Everyone
deserves to have dreams.” These represent the
standard default arguments condoning illegal behavior.
Be that as it may, the reality is
that resentment toward me for using “illegal alien”
is misdirected. I didn’t coin the term and am powerless
to remove it from common vernacular.
Those
irate
readers who wish to protest “illegal aliens”
as terminology should contact the federal government to
ask that the words be removed from the
U.S. Code, Title 8, Section 1325 wherein it
states that “improper entry by alien" occurs
when:
“Any
citizen of any country other than the United States who
enters or attempts to enter the United States at any
time or place other than as designated by immigration
officers; or eludes examination or inspection by
immigration officers; or attempts to enter or obtains
entry to the United States by a willfully false or
misleading representation or the willful concealment of
a material fact.”
When “illegal alien” is
deleted from the official U.S. website that defines
immigration policy, I’ll stop using it in my columns.
In the meantime, I suspect that my
critics would like me to substitute
“undocumented immigrant” for “illegal alien”.
But if I acquiesced, I’d have to
compromise my journalism standards. According to my
fully revised and updated Associated
Press Stylebook,
“illegal”--not “undocumented”—is
the correct word to describe “a violation of the
law.”
And my New York Times Manual of Style and Usage states flatly: “Do not use the euphemism
‘undocumented’”.
Although “undocumented
immigrant” has only two words, both of them are
improperly applied. The phrase is intended, often
successfully, to mislead the uninformed.
Most--perhaps all—who enter the
United States either
have or quickly obtain documents. But the documents
are often
stolen,
forged or useless in terms of their genuine value as
real identification.
The most glaring example is
Mexico’s
matricula consular card, so easily
obtained that I have one even though I’m not Mexican and
did not have to provide a shred of evidence to prove who
I am. The only thing I had to show was $25.00.
And an “immigrant” is a
person who enters the U.S. with a
valid visa through a recognized
port
of entry.
In short, a so-called
“undocumented immigrant” is neither undocumented nor
an immigrant.
The message from
my adversaries to me is this: as long as I feel
compelled to tell the whole story, they’d prefer it if I
kept my mouth shut.
Sadly when the subject is
immigration, the truth is a lightning rod.
JOENOTE TO VDARE.COM readers:
I’m sure you
picked up on the irony that the
New York Times
officially
discourages using
“undocumented immigrant”—even though in practice the
term
routinely
appears in its
stories
and editorials.
Joe Guzzardi
[email
him]
is a California native who recently fled the state
because of over-immigration, over-population and a
rapidly deteriorating quality of life. He has moved to
Pittsburgh, PA where the air is clean and the growth
rate stable.
A long-time instructor in English at the Lodi Adult School,
Guzzardi has been writing a weekly column since 1988. It
currently appears in the
Lodi News-Sentinel.
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