What is a current topic that you would like to learn
more about? With immigration constantly
in the news, I thought it was a great time to read Dear American, Notes of an
Undocumented Citizen by Jose Antonio Vargas.
Jose Antonio Vargas was sent by hist mother from the Philippines
to America to live with this Grandfather at the age of twelve. He later discovers that he is not a legal immigrant
and that there is no pathway for him to become a legal citizen. In this memoir, he details his journey.
My thoughts on this book:
· This
is a book that all Americans should read.
· Most
Americans don’t realize that our immigration system is so broken that there is
no “line” or easy or straightforward way to become a legal citizen. If you grew up in the United States, but you
weren’t here legally, you have to leave and go to another country for ten years
to start the legal process.
· Rhetoric
that really bothers me is “my ancestors came here legally.” I’ve noticed that most of the folks who say
this have not actually researched how their ancestors came here or whether it
was legal. They are white, and they just
assume it was legal. They also minimize
the fact that until the 1920s, you just had to show up, pay a minimal fee, and
be healthy, which is not the process now.
· I
like how Vargas ponders that it is just fate where you are born. You don’t work to be an American citizen if
you are born here. Why is there so much
hate and anger against those born in different places?
· I
displayed my own bias while I read this book.
I thought that Jose Antonio Vargas was Hispanic by his name. I didn’t think about how Spanish colonization
in the Philippines resulted in Spanish names for the population.
· It
is hard to make it as an undocumented immigrant, but Vargas has people who
cared about him and helped him out. He
has spent his life thinking that he can’t ever settle down because of his
status.
· He
became a prominent journalist.
· Jose
Antonia Vargas is illegal, but the rest of his Filipino family came here
legally. It stinks that his grandfather
and mother had him brought illegally as a child and put him in this legal limbo.
· Illegal
immigrants pay taxes, but don’t get any of the benefits.
· It
is good to read about people’s experiences as it helps to put things in perspective.
· As
a gay man, Jose Antonio Vargas would be persecuted in the Philippines.
· Will
we ever actually try to fix our immigration laws and the process to become a
citizen?
Overall, Dear America, Notes of an Undocumented
Citizen by Jose Antonio Vargas is a book that all United States citizens should
read for a good perspective on the broken immigration process in our country.
Favorite Quotes:
“What you done to earn your box? Besides being born at
a certain place in a certain time, did you have to do anything at all?”
“I had to interrogate how laws are created, how illegality
must be seen through the prism of who is defining what is legal and for
whom. I had to realize that throughout
American history, legality has forever been a construct of power.”
“The Naturalization Act of 1790, our country’s first
set of laws dealing with citizenship, said that an applicant had to be a ‘a
free white person’ of ‘good moral character’ to be a US citizen.”
“Our country’s mainstream news organizations often
fail to report basic facts about how much undocumented workers pay into a
government that vilifies us. Whether because of ignorance or indifference, or
both, failure to report these facts and provide context has perpetuated the myth
of the ‘illegal’’ and who is taxing social services and taking away from ‘real
Americans.’”
“According to the SSA itself, unauthorized workers
have paid $100 billion into the fund over the past decade…Annually,
undocumented workers pay $12 billion to the Social Security Trust Fund.”
“The mainstream media’s coverage of immigration is
lackluster at best and irresponsibility at worst, promoting and sustaining
stereotypes while spreading misinformation.”
“Between 1965 and 2015, new immigrants and their
offspring accounted for 55 percent of US population growth, according to the
Pew Research Center.”
Book Source: Thank-you
to #morrowpartner @deystreet for a review copy of this book.

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