long suffrin' boulez fan wrote:Induveca wrote:long suffrin' boulez fan wrote:
Nate. With respect, please tone it down. I appreciate a difference of opinion regarding immigration policy and even enforcement. But using terms like anchor babies and illegal aliens is a bridge too far.
I’m offended that your faux offense takes 50% longer to register as sarcasm.
Nothing faux here. I'm genuinely offended. Again, reasonable people can disagree on a complex issue like immigration.
But there is no excuse for calling a human being "illegal" or an innocent child an "anchor baby." Argue your position -- argue it with passion and conviction. But please leave this kinds of invective out of it.
I’m a son of immigrants and many of my friends/cousins are anchor babies. It’s not a personal thing, it’s just true. Amongst Dominicans it’s a joke, that’s how common the practice is...
And how is illegal alien a bad term? Extranjero ilegal is a common term in all Spanish speaking countries. Or immigrante ilegal. Just do a simple search in Spanish.
The person isn’t illegal but their status is? They agree to a contract when receiving a visa, break it and the status of the contract is no longer legal. It’s a legal term.
Anchor baby I get to a point, there are tens of thousand of Dominicans kids with this exact situation in NYC. But their parents knew exactly what they were doing, birth tourism is a common thing. Although even that term is new.
I’ve had family come up 3 months pregnant on tourist visas when not showing belly wise, and just stay. Or even more nefarious? Ask any Latino who has ties with the migrant community in Miami or NYC, there is a big trade in marriages. 10-15k, *usually* the migrant paying the us citizen.
Then there are the odd instances of the citizen paying the migrant in places like Colombia. They agree to go through the flights and paperwork to proclaim them as their love. Then agree to years of marriage to bring up extended family and help them get on government programs (housing, food stamps, healthcare etc). This is an old scam, and it requires a Spanish speaking Us citizen. The US consulate knows it exists but it’s hard to say they aren’t in love if the US citizen spends months at a time in the country and the guy flies back and forth completing the paperwork.
As a Latin immigrant (albeit arrived very young), I assure you the only reason the term can offend is because it’s actually revealing. It’s a perfect description, and jarring.
I’m only in the states for another day or so, but my few weeks back remind me how much I don’t miss the politically correct vibe.
























