December 13, 2006
Tom Tancredo’s Statement Regarding The Cancellation
Of His 12/14/06 Miami Speech
[VDARE.COM
note: The statement below and the speech that
wasn't given were taken from
Tancredo's congressional website.]
[Original in
PDF,
audio of Tancredo. (MP3)]
I'm obviously
disappointed that a radical element in Miami was able to
intimidate the hosts into rescinding their invitation
for me to speak. I can understand the decision of the
hosts to put public safety before public discourse
today. But it is regrettable in 21st century America
that they were forced to make that choice.
One of America’s most
important values is
the right to free speech. It’s unfortunate that
threats of violence were successful in trumping that
right today. I knew speaking your mind could be
dangerous in Havana— I guess it’s equally dangerous
to do so in Miami. Apparently there isn't much of a
difference between the two anymore.
I wish everyone in
Florida a
Merry Christmas. I hope that someday in the future
there will be an opportunity to engage Miami in this
important dialogue about protecting and preserving the
unique values and culture that make America what it is.
The
Speech Not Given: Renewing America: The Need for
Assimilation.
[Original in
PDF]
Remarks by
Representative Tom Tancredo
Miami Rotary Club
Miami, Florida
December 14, 2006
Thank you for the kind introduction.
[VDARE.COM note:
Which never took place, of course] Your own
congressional representative, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen,
wanted to be here and was the first Miami resident to
invite me to visit. I would love to have her visit
Colorado, but first she has to do or say something
controversial. If, for example, she would propose new
federal legislation that prohibits Californians from
emigrating to Colorado, she would be very popular in
Colorado. Probably Denver Rotary or Kiwanis would invite
her to speak.
I appreciate the invitation and the opportunity to speak
to Miami Rotarians today. I am very familiar with the
traditions of this organization and the numerous civic
contributions of Rotary International.
I think it is fair to say that I was invited here
because of my recent reported remarks calling Miami a
"Third World country." The remark did receive a lot
of publicity, and I have now become
pen pals with Miami-Dade Mayor Alvarez
[send him
mail] and Governor Bush,
[send him
mail] among other Florida residents.
[See
Tancredo's letter to Jeb Bush (
PDF)]
Seriously, I do appreciate the opportunity to visit
Miami again and to explain why I said what I said and
what I meant by it. I hope that after hearing my views
more fully, you will agree that the issues of cultural
assimilation and bilingualism deserve a more serious
public debate than they have received to date.
Miami is certainly a unique place in some respects.
Since 1960, our nation has welcomed the refugees from
Castro's communist dictatorship, and Miami has been a
natural destination for untold thousands of those
refugees since then.
But Miami is unique in a deeper sense as well. Most of
the first generation Cubans who fled Castro's tyranny
and settled in Miami thought of themselves not as
immigrants but as exiles. They maintained their identity
and their language and community because they intended
to return to Cuba someday. Thus, since 1960 Miami has
been both a new home and an exile community, and
Americans accommodated to it.
I have three concerns about the evolution of this Miami
experiment over the past half-century, the magnet it has
become for illegal immigration, and the dangers that
multiculturalism poses for our future as a nation.
My first concern is that we must understand the limits
of American generosity and the need to enforce those
limits through immigration laws and secure borders. We
cannot simply open the doors to everyone who wants to
come to America, because without limit and without a
viable system of assimilation, America will cease to be
America.
Without secure borders, America will come to mirror the
problems of poverty and corruption that afflict so much
of the world from which people wish to escape. America
has welcomed the refugees from the communist tyranny in
Cuba, just as it
welcomed refugees from the Hungarian Revolution in 1956
and from the
communist take over in
Vietnam and Laos. Those are
POLITICAL refugees, people fleeing out of fear for
their lives and for religious freedom.
But America cannot be a sanctuary for the literally
billions of people who may wish to flee poverty or
simply want a better life than can be found in other
nations. America cannot even be asked to open its doors
to EVERY person in the world fleeing political
persecution….After all, there are more than a billion
people in China alone living under the yoke of
totalitarianism, not to mention North Korea and Iran.
If America was to open its doors to every person seeking
a better job or a more favorable business climate or a
better political system, literally billions of people
will come – and we cannot accommodate them all.
Humanitarian values must be tempered by prudence.
My concern here is that because of the generous
treatment of
Cuban exiles and refugees, Florida and Miami have
become magnets for illegal aliens fleeing dozens of
countries for purely economic reasons. Thousands also
come to engage in criminal activities, and Florida
taxpayers in 2004 were hit with a bill of over $120
million for the cost of incarcerating illegal alien
criminals. The total taxpayer cost of social services
provided to illegal immigrants in Florida in 2005 —in
public schools, hospital emergency rooms, and law
enforcement—was estimated at over one billion dollars.
The high crime rate in Miami is a major factor driving
native-born residents out of the city.
Yes, I know, there has always been some corruption in
every large city and in many small towns as well. The
difference is this. In a Third World country, corruption
is a way of life, it is accepted, it is routine way of
doing business.
Mexico has its "mordida" and Russia has a
violent mafia and so forth. In America by contrast,
it is a scandal and someone is thrown out of office.
So I ask you: Is corruption becoming a way of life in
Miami?
Undoubtedly, many of Miami’s problems are derived from
its high poverty rate. The 2002 Census found Miami to
have the highest poverty rate in the US for cities of
its size—31%. For all of Miami-Dade it is 18%. That
ranking has improved modestly, but Miami is now
attracting more low-wage immigrants than high-tech
workers, so what is the trend line?
The illegal immigrants of today are not the doctors and
lawyers and engineers of the Cuban exodus of the 1960s,
and our open borders are in fact "importing poverty"
as a national policy.
Forbes
magazine
reports in a recent edition that since 2002, a net of
151,000 Miami residents, most of them middle-class, have
left Miami for other parts of the country, and 238,000
new Miami residents have arrived from other nations,
mostly Central and South America. Miami-Dade County now
has a foreign-born population of 51.4%, the highest in
the country for a large city.
The Inter-American Development Bank reports on
remittances sent home by immigrants working in the US.
In 2004, 47% of Florida’s adult immigrant population
sent $2.45 billion to relatives and friends in Latin
America. Remittances have been increasing at more than
10% annually, so by 2006 almost three billion dollars in
earnings are leaving Florida and do not contribute to
the Florida economy. Thus, if Miami-Dade has 20% of the
state’s immigrants, Miami’s economy is exporting about
$600 million annually through remittances.
My second concern is for our nation's security with open
borders and a broken immigration system. We must
recognize we live in a different world than the 1960s.
And we must adjust our approach to immigration
accordingly.
In public policy, many times the appropriate solution to
a problem in one era is the cause of problems in
another. Today we have real enemies in the world of
Islamo-fascism, enemies who are actively planning acts
of terror against our cities and our monuments and our
people. The FBI says Hezbollah is active in Mexico, and
we know that networks used to smuggle drugs and
Guatemalan workers can also be used to smuggle
terrorists and weapons of mass destruction. We cannot
continue our lackadaisical approach to border security
in this environment.
My third concern is actually my main worry, and it goes
beyond numbers or threats to our national security. When
millions of people are coming to the United States each
year – many of them from the same geographic area and
without any desire to become Americans– how do we
preserve and perpetuate the "American identity"?
By the American identity I mean those qualities that
make us Americans, make our country the envy of the
world and the beacon of hope for freedom loving people
everywhere. If we lose those qualities, if we start to
look like and act like the rest of the world, where will
the next generation of political refugees seek asylum?
Throughout history, America has absorbed waves of
immigration and preserved a shared national identity by
assimilating newcomers into the great "melting pot."
But many Americans have begun to wonder whether or not
the "melting pot" is still melting—or if it has
been replaced by a "salad bowl."
Indeed, your current mayor was for many years an active
member and advocate for the "SALAD"
organization—the
Spanish American League Against Discrimination. His
first job out of college was serving as that group’s
paid executive director. That organization has
explicitly rejected the melting pot in favor of the
"salad." In a salad, each ingredient retains its
unique flavor instead of blending into the melting pot.
The
"melting pot" has taken on all comers since the
19th
century—and
the melting pot has always won. But the current scope,
duration, and wave of immigration (both legal and
illegal) presents a challenge for the melting pot like
none ever seen before. In the first place, never before
has America taken on such a disproportionate amount of
immigrants from one geographic part of the world. Nearly
half of our legal immigration and about 90% of our
illegal immigration is from
Central and
South America and is Spanish-speaking.
This is an important fact because a common language is
one of the few ties that bind Americans of vastly
different races, religions, creeds, educational and
economic backgrounds together. Advocates of
multiculturalism truly do not understand that a common
language is the cement that holds these different parts
together.
I need to explain this briefly, because my views on
bilingualism have been the target for much demagoguery
by the political correctness police who like to throw
around
such words as "racist" and "bigot" quite
liberally. The debate over bilingualism has nothing
whatever to do with race, but it does have something to
do with our ability to converse in the public square and
reason together about the future of our communities—the
future of our schools, our libraries, our hospitals, our
jobs, the direction of technology, and yes, our borders
and our national security.
If you want to see a nation that has a 200-year
experience with bilingualism and its consequences, look
at our neighbor to the north, Canada. I do not think we
want to follow that path and experience those
consequences. I think we want to remain a nation where
citizens in Miami can talk with citizens in Denver or
Duluth, Atlanta or Austin—where all citizens can debate
the great issues of our time because we all speak the
same language.
Before we can begin to articulate any notion of
"shared values," we must first have a shared
language. Bilingualism is an asset to an individual, and
people who can speak two or three languages have an
advantage in commerce and travel and trade – but it is a
great curse when imposed on a whole society.
About ten years ago, the
Miami Herald
launched a
Spanish language newspaper –
EL NUEVO HERALD—in
recognition of the fact that 30% of the 2.1 million
residents of Miami-Dade County either spoke only Spanish
or mainly Spanish in their homes. What made the Herald's
decision unusual was that it was not launching a new
paper or magazine to augment its daily newspaper. It was
launching a SUBSTITUTE newspaper, an alternative
newspaper that would compete with itself.
Pardon me, but I think it is a good thing if all the
citizens of a community can read the same newspaper. Is
it really a good idea to tell citizens they do not need
to learn English to be a full member of the community?
Twenty-five years ago, the mayor of Miami, Maurice Ferre,
predicted that in ten years Spanish would become the
dominant language of Miami and suggested that residents
who did not want to learn Spanish should leave.
Such statements by public officials do not encourage new
immigrants from New York, Michigan or Japan or Germany.
In fact, they suggest that the only immigrants Miami
wants are Spanish-speaking immigrants from Latin
America, and Miami's "sanctuary city" policy
tells illegal immigrants they will be treated as equals
to legal immigrants.
The eminent Stanford University sociologist Seymour
Martin Lipset
put it this way:
"The histories of
bilingual and bicultural societies that do not
assimilate are histories of turmoil, tension, and
tragedy."
He is right, and America is fast approaching the
crossroads where we must choose greater assimilation –
or greater fragmentation.
If we do not choose assimilation, and pursue aggressive
policies to accomplish it, we will continue to see
increasing alienation and fragmentation.
Assimilation must once again become a cornerstone of our
national immigration policy. We must encourage, nourish,
and support institutions that promote assimilation, and
a key pillar of successful assimilation is becoming
proficient in the English language.
Theodore Roosevelt understood the need for the
assimilation of the "melting pot." And Teddy knew
something about immigration – he served as both Governor
of New York and President of the United States during
one of America’s largest and most famous waves of
immigration.
"Let
us say to the immigrant NOT that we hope he will learn
English, but that he has GOT to learn it. Let the
immigrant who will not learn it go back. He must be made
to consider the interest of these United States or he
should not stay here. He must be made to see that his
opportunities in this country depend on it. He must be
made to see that his opportunities in this country
depend on knowing English and observing American
standards. And employers cannot be permitted to regard
him as only industrial asset."
Roosevelt
went on to say:
"The effort to keep
our citizenship divided against itself by the use of the
hyphen along the lines of national origin is certain to
breed a spirit of bitterness and prejudice and dislike
between great bodies of our citizens."
So, when I look out on this audience, I do not see
"Cuban-Americans" or
Puerto Rican- Americans or Mexican-Americans, I see
only Americans, just as when I spoke
at a dinner commemorating the 50th
anniversary of
the Hungarian Revolution, I did not see
"Hungarian-Americans," I saw only Americans.
Previous generations of immigrants had to come a long
way to get to the United States. The option of returning
home for something like a family gathering wasn’t an
option. They had to completely embrace America and the
notion of becoming an American.
Most of today’s immigrants take a much shorter trip to
get here, and live close enough to their country of
origin that they can go home for the weekend. Some even
maintain dual citizenship and vote in American elections
as well as the election in their home country. This
phenomenon has become so commonplace that the President
of Mexico recently campaigned in U.S. cities in the lead
up to the Mexican election.
The pressure to assimilate that Roosevelt recognized as
so critical at the turn of the twentieth century has
nearly disappeared in some cities here in the
twenty-first. If we do not demand that immigrants get
into the great melting pot – if immigrants are permitted
to continue to form their own independent cultural,
political and linguistic enclaves – if we fail to
instill in new arrivals the language, culture, and
values that bind America together as a nation, we will
soon cease to have a nation. At best, we will be little
more than an economy. And at worst, the "melting pot"
will have been replaced with a "pressure cooker."
Governor Bush sent me a letter in which he bragged about
the high number of Advance Placement students graduating
from one of Miami's high schools. I do not doubt those
numbers. But his letter did not take note of the 55%
dropout rate for the Miami-Dade School District.
I challenge you to ask the schools to break that number
down and find out the true dropout rate for students who
are
not proficient in English. I assure you it will be
higher than the 55% average for all students.
My friends, I recognize that bilingualism in Miami has
its roots in the
Cuban exile community and that there are historical
and political reasons why those Cubans originally wanted
to maintain their identity and their culture.
But friends,
amigos,
this is
2006 and three generations of Cuban immigrants have
become Americans.
Even if Castro dies tomorrow and his brother Raul
transforms himself into a Cuban Gorbachev and institutes
economic and political reforms, the large majority of
Americans of Cuban extraction will not go back to Cuba.
They may invest there, may visit or vacation there, but
they will remain Americans because they have made
America their home.
I think it is clear that their future is in America, not
in Cuba, and in America, we speak English. We also speak
Italian, German, Chinese,
Vietnamese,
Hmong, Farsi, Bantu, Spanish and a hundred other
languages, but English is our language of commerce, our
language of education, our language of professional
sports, and most important of all, it is our language of
political debate and active citizenship.
It is the language of the American nation.
25 years ago, the Puerto-Rican born Mayor of Miami
Maurice Ferre predicted that "Cubans
will eventually have to decide to either become
Americans or remain an exile community."
He was right, and it is a mistake to think that
bilingualism allows a kind of dual loyalty or dual
citizenship. It does not. That is an illusion.
Bilingualism promotes disunity, ethnic resentments and
balkanization, and nowhere on earth has that been a
healthy or successful thing.
I do not think most citizens of Miami want it to be
mistaken for a
Third World Country, especially if that term is
interpreted to mean a city rife with poverty, crime and
corruption. Yet the dominance of Spanish as the language
of commerce, of entertainment, and increasingly the
language of the civic culture creates the impression
that you have some ambivalence about America and its
institutions.
A city populated by tens of thousands of newly arriving
immigrants needs to put ADDITIONAL value on learning
English, not less, so that new citizens can more fully
engage and interact with fellow Americans not just in
Miami, but across this great nation.
Like the
immigrants of the 19th century and the 20th century,
immigrants today must also choose, and when they choose
to become an American—no longer an exile or a guest
worker or a visiting sports superstar, but an American
citizen—they must also choose to speak the language of
America, not the language of the nations from which they
fled.
English is the language of American democracy, and for
that reason we should embrace it and use it to serve and
protect our precious heritage of freedom.