Tonight was time well spent, a 90 minutes film/documentary, "Harvest of Empire" that systematically unravel all my doubts and questions about illegal immigration here in America. On the other hand, it brings more questions and doubts I have about this nation, the United States of America.
My initial reactions towards illegal immigrants are somewhat similar to the ignorant TV commentators: "They came with criminality; they came here to steal American jobs." Not to such an extreme, but along the same line. I thought to myself: my parents spent $200,000 in total to get me a 4-year American College education, and there is no guarantee that I would be able to stay in the country legally after I graduated, if I don't get a job I will be rushed out of the country like a dog, even though I will by then hold a college degree and is decently knowledgable. At the same time all these South Americans who illegally entered the country, without a lot of education, are getting jobs and feeding their kids. I felt discriminated, I really did.
I also used to think they contribute very little to the prosperity of the country, because they are not well educated and a lot of them engage in illegal criminal activities such as drug trafficking. However, I failed to recognize when they were not granted the equal access and opportunity, when they are faced with humongous amount of hostility and prejudice, of course they could not live up to the expectation.
But, as the sentence "people don't leave their homeland unless they really have to." kept being repeated throughout the film, I understood why they came. Take examples of Puerto Rico, I used to think Puerto Ricans are lucky enough to be born with U.S. citizenship and are free to live and work in the mainland. I overlooked the fact that their poverty still exist and initially they were granted citizenship because U.S. needed troops for the WWI. I tend oversimplify things and look at it from just one angle. People in Puerto Rico, came to United States because of the destitute economic situation in Puerto Rico as a result of U.S.'s industrial exploitation. People in Guatemala, Nicaragua, Dominican Republic and Cuba came to the U.S. because their lives were threatened, they were being electrocuted and one woman from El Salvador even had a snake stuck in her rectum. The torture and pain that we cannot even began to imagine. Coming to the United States, to them is truly a matter of LIFE and DEATH. How many of the anti-immigrant activists actually acknowledge that? Or do they want to acknowledge that?
When U.S. are welcoming the loaded Chinese corrupted officials and successful individuals like Pierce Morgan or Ken Robinson with open arms, U.S. is also shutting the ice-cold gate to the immigrants fleeing for their lives. U.S. is giving out more greencards to businessmen who made significant investments than giving out political asylum. Are all these right especially when the U.S. government's hands aren't clean in all these atrocity, and almost every single one of the dictators had the help from the U.S.
At this point I have came to the end of my reflection from the film. However, this film brought me into thinking about something else, like the reason why I came to the United States. Even though China is not a free country, the severity is still incomparable to what's in the film.
Back home in China, I had no fear of losing my life as long as I keep my mouth shut and doesn't talk critical of the government in a public space. My parents aren't rich but they are taking vacations every year and don't have to work from 9 to 5, for the very least they have times and resource to provide the best educations and opportunities for their children. Coming to the U.S. for me it is a brand new experience for me and helps my personal advancement, but my starting point has already been set high, so that's it.
I don't understand, and I never will understand what these immigrants are going through, constantly living in fear and dehumanization even after they came to the U.S. However, there is something that I really appreciate about America, it is its people.
The people in the U.S. care about social justice, not just theirs but also others. There are always those Americans who don't categorize people by different race but by one human race. They see these problems and they address the problems and bring them to light to the public. To me, that is truly amazing. Seeing university professors supporting the cause of these people and having open discussions in a hundred people auditorium about issues that don't look good to the U.S. Government, this is AMAZING. This country is blessed with people full of talents and compassion to carry out their causes, their missions. That is something that China is lacking, we have grave issues, but we don't have the human resource and capacity to address them in such a powerful yet explicit way. We simply don't have those people, and I think I just found the cause of me being here in America and what I can do for my country, just like what Dr. Juan Gonzales and Prof. Jeff Cohen did for their country.
What an educational experience. That's what I like about America, not the prosperity and not the wealth, but this richly nurturing fields of inspiration and deliberation.
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