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Immigrants To America, People With or Without Papers ©

[Demonstrators gather in front of City Hall in Los Angeles, Saturday March 25, 2006, to protest federal immigration legistlation. AP Press, Photograph by Ann Johansson]

They are white and bright, Brown, and well read. They are your neighbors, your servants, and working to better your life and their own.

Please review the statistics. Pages 15 and 16 may be most interesting to you.
Estimates of the Unauthorized Immigrant Population Residing in the United States: 1990 to 2000 Office of Policy and Planning U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service

I am choosing to share some statistics that may be less well-known . . .
Approximate Number of Undocumented Immigrants in the United States as of the 2000 Census. . .
Formerly Czechoslovakia 7, 000 - 83,000 Total Foreign Born Residing in the United States
Ireland 3,000 - 156,000 Total Foreign Born Residing in the United States
Italy 10,000 - 473,000 Total Foreign Born Residing in the United States
Netherlands 3,000 - 95,000 Foreign Born Residing in the United States
Formerly Soviet Union 46,000 - 839,000 Foreign Born Residing in the United States
Poland 47,000 – 467,000 - Foreign Born Residing in the United States
Other European Countries 21,000 - 1,104,000 Foreign Born Residing in the United States
China 115,000 – 1,519,000 Foreign Born Residing in the United States
Japan 14,000 – 348,000 Foreign Born Residing in the United States
Korea 55,000 – 864,000 Foreign Born Residing in the United States
Philippines 85,000 – 1,369,000 Foreign Born Residing in the United States
Other Asia 74,000 – 1,801,000 Foreign Born Residing in the United States
Australia 1,000 - 61,000 Foreign Born Residing in the United States
New Zealand currently 0 known - 23,000 Foreign Born Residing in the United States
Canada 47,000 - 821,000 Foreign Born Residing in the United States

• Please note, more recent articles state there are 50,000 Irish immigrants in the USA without documentation . . .
Irish Illegal Aliens Win Clinton as Ally of ImmigrationLaw Change, By By Daniela Gerson New York Sun Times. Sunday, March 9, 2006
An Irish Face On the Cause Of Citizenship By Nina Bernstein, Matthew Sweeney. New York Times

For many of these populations, the numbers vary from year to year. Often, immigrants without papers return home. [Please see the articles below on the Irish and the Russian.] Many migrants, we know, stay successfully underground; census counts do not capture their numbers. In addition, as we ponder these statistics, we must consider that this information is now six years old; numbers have likely increased. We must ask ourselves, “Do we know how many of these that are now, here legally, were not originally; however, after time, they worked to obtained citizenship?” In my experience, often, this is the case.

Decades ago, even centuries earlier, they were your great grandparents, grandparents, parents. Now, possibly they are you. The “majority” of people name you, or them, illegal; however, you know that you or they are only without documents. Immigrants are as legitimate as the next human being.

In a world proud of the prosperity and profundity that a global village creates, it seems odd that there is so much discrimination and resentment. Might we, as a larger community, realize that times have changed, technology has altered our reality? Nationally, or internationally, we are all connected.

President Bush, the United States Congress, and Americans are struggling to come to terms with this truth. You might wish to read . . . President Bush Talks Immigration at Naturalization Ceremony, Transcript Washingtonpost.com Monday, March 27, 2006; 10:57 AM. Might we have amnesty, a guest worker program, or close the borders? Perhaps, we could consider possibilities that have yet to be discussed.

During the Ice Age, land joined us. We roamed freely; yet, not easily. Then, the Baring Strait, the Pacific, and the Atlantic Oceans became our divides. However, the ingenuity of humans untied us again. Yet, we are not united. We are not attached. Our disconnection is more emotional than physical. On the issue of immigration, rational, reasonable human beings are anything but.

Might we not better serve ourselves by realizing that, what divides us is our minds. We, as modern beings, are frozen. We cannot even accept what was true in the Ice Age; people migrate.

There are persons in America from most every country, all without papers that permit their presence in the United States. Legal status does not equate to legitimacy.

If we cannot accept the official status of certain human beings, could we please, at least honor them as humans? Might we consider our own past, digging through the papers of our ancestors, and accept that there is a similarity. People prefer to travel to a place where they might better their lives and those of their families.

For immigration information, here and abroad, please refer to . . .
Q&A: US immigration debate BBC News
Immigrant Union Members, Numbers and Trends The Migration Policy Institute
Groundswell of protests back illegal immigrants, By Nina Bernstein. The New York Times - International Herald Tribune Monday, March 27, 2006
Immigration Reform in Living Color, By Marc Cooper. AlterNet. Posted March 27, 2006.
Immigrants taking U.S. jobs, report says, By Hanah Cho, Baltimore Sun. Originally published March 23, 2006
Immigrants in Minnesota: An increasingly diverse population, By Barbara J. Ronningen. Population Notes
The Number of Israeli Immigrants in the United States in 1990, By Yinon Cohen, Yitchak Haberfeld Demography, Vol. 34, No. 2 (May, 1997)
The New Immigrant Survey Pilot, By Guillermina Jasso, Douglas S. Massey, Mark R. Rosenzweig, James P. Smith, Demography, Vol. 37, No. 1 (Feb., 2000)
Russia: Immigration Likely To Increase, Mitigating Population Deficit By Victor Yasmann. Radio Free Europe, Radio Liberty
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
Immigrants to U.S. by Country of Origin
Legal vs. illegal immigrants The American Immigration Home Page
The American Immigration Home Page
Encyclopaedia of USA History: Immigration to the USA 1860-1960

Posted by Betsy L. Angert on March 27, 2006 at 11:22 AM in Global Village, Immigration, Immigration Politics, Peaceful Protests, Technology Ties US Together, Workers' Rights | Permalink

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Tracked on May 1, 2006 7:56:11 PM

Comments

You reference the wrong column in the census report, so your above numbers are all wrong. Please correct your article, as it reflects poorly on your credibility, and it has already been referenced on Alternet.

The original PDF is below:
http://uscis.gov/graphics/shared/aboutus/statistics/Ill_Report_1211.pdf

There are not 850,000 unauthorized Canadians living in the US, as you indicate. That is ridiculous.

That is the total number of Canadian-born persons living in the US as of April 2000. This includes green-card holders, naturalized citizens, etc. The estimated number of unauthorized Canadians in the US is 47,000 (in the first column, of table 2 on p. 17)

Mexico dwarfs all other nations in this respect, with an estimated 4,808,000 unauthorized in the US, as of April 2000.

We can differ in opinion, but need to agree on the facts.

Posted by: Geoff | Mar 28, 2006 1:17:03 AM

Ok, you indicate 821,000 unauthorized Canadians, not 850,000. It's still way off from the actual 47,000. Enough so that your entire argument is undermined by the actual figures.

Posted by: Geoff | Mar 28, 2006 1:24:45 AM

Dear Geoff . .

I thank you for noticing my error. This has been corrected.

I am certain I was influenced by information my father shared during the Chicago, March 10, 2006 rally. A Chicago Tribune article cited numbers much higher than those I was able to locate. I am working to find that commentary. Once found, I will share it here, with you, and all others. I did call the newspaper and will continue to pursue the best of information.

Please also read my thoughts on the given statistics in the paragraph that follows.

Additionally, please consider the references offered in the post. I note editorials that mention immigration situations in Russia and Ireland. The Netherlands is struggling with this issue as well.

I believe, it is necessary for us to realize this is not an American puzzle; it is international. We are all interdependent, globally.

"All mankind is of one author, and is one volume; when one man dies, one chapter is not torn out of the book, but translated into a better language; and every chapter must be so translated...As therefore the bell that rings to a sermon, calls not upon the preacher only, but upon the congregation to come: so this bell calls us all: but how much more me, who am brought so near the door by this sickness.... No man is an island, entire of itself...any man's death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind; and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee." - John Donne

Please feel free to discuss this further. Again, I offer my gratitude for your observation.

Betsy

Posted by: Betsy L. Angert | Mar 28, 2006 2:12:32 PM

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