Showing posts with label #USillegalimmigrants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #USillegalimmigrants. Show all posts

Sunday, January 24, 2021

‘They are so heartless’

“My folks came to U.S. as immigrants, aliens, and became citizens. I was born in Boston, a citizen, went to Hollywood and became an alien.”

Leonard Nimoy

 

By Alex P. Vidal

 

SOME Filipinos in a community in Queens, New York City who support the proposed measure by the Biden administration to give legal status to an estimated 11 million illegal immigrants, including some Filipino TNTs (“Tago Ng Tago”) in the United States, have blasted their fellow Filipinos who earlier deplored President Joseph Biden’s proposal.

“They are so heartless,” boomed Federico Catindig, 48, a nursing assistant from Tanauan, Batangas who became a U.S. citizen in 2015. “Hindi na sila nahiya kapwa nila Pinoy dina downgrade nila (they have no shame at all. They downgraded their fellow Filipinos)!”

He was referring to the Filipino-Americans who questioned the Biden administration’s plan to pave the path to citizenship for the immigrants who are here in the U.S. illegally.

Catindig said some of the 11 million illegal immigrants who will be benefited if Congress will soon tackle and approve the measure before being signed by Mr. Biden to become a law, are his friends and compatriots.

Most of those 11 million were Latinos and Asians, it was learned.

“They (Pinoy illegal immigrants) are not drunkards and lazy contrary to what those heartless Fil-Ams had alleged. In fact, they are some of the most productive and talented Pinoys here in the US; and, by the way, they have been paying their taxes even if they didn’t have the green cards yet,” Catindig said.  

 

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“They (fellow Pinoys who spoke harshly against Mr. Biden’s immigration plan) are so cruel and motivated only by envy,” Bacolod-born Jeprey Libdan (not his real name), 43, a part-timer construction worker who overstayed his temporary visitor’s visa since 2013, said in vernacular.

“They think we are like useless people who decided to stay in the U.S. for no reason at all. They disregard the fact the we also have families to feed in the Philippines. We work hard and are also willing to pay taxes that’s why we want to legalize our status.”

Simproniano “Bebot” Recate, a born again Christian who assists illegal immigrants obtain temporary shelters and part-time jobs in Long Island, said “it’s too premature” to criticize Mr. Biden’s proposed immigration reform “because it is still a proposed bill and was not even debated yet in Congress.”

“They (fellow Pinoy critics) claim that walang trabaho ngayon sa Amerika dahil sa pandemic at hindi dapat e legalize ang mga 11 million immigrants dahil maraming citizens ang walang trabaho. Bakit nakakasiguro ba sila na kung maging batas na ang bill na pino-propose ni President Biden, may pandemic pa sa Amerika?” asked Recate, a former accountant in Makati, Metro Manila.

“Paano kung matapos na ang pandemic at bumalik na sa normal ang ekonomiya ng Amerika? (What if the pandemic will disappear and the U.S. economy will be back to normal?)”

The citizenship process in Mr. Biden’s plan would reportedly take as little as three years for some people, eight years for others. 

 

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It would reportedly make it easier for certain workers to stay in the U.S. temporarily or permanently, provide development aid to Central American nations in hopes of reducing immigration and move toward bolstering border screening technology.

Under the immigration bill that President Biden was expected to send to Congress, known as the U.S. Citizenship Act, undocumented immigrants would be given an eight-year path to citizenship if they pass background checks and prove they have paid taxes.

Andres Oppenheimer of the Miami Herald wrote the issue “would be anathema for Republican anti-immigration zealots. 

But here are the reasons why Biden may succeed, according to Oppemheimer: 

“First, Biden will enjoy a big advantage over former President Obama on immigration issues, because public opinion has changed in recent years. Polls show that most Americans may be ready for more pro-immigrant policies.

“Perhaps it’s because Americans have grown tired of former President Trump’s and Fox News’ constant demonization of undocumented immigrants. Or maybe enough Americans have been shocked by the Trump administration’s cruelty when they saw pictures of immigrant children kept in cages or learned about the separation of babies from their migrant parents.”

A Gallup Poll reportedly showed that Americans’ support for pro-immigration policies is at its highest level in half a century.

(The author, who is now based in New York City, used to be the editor of two local dailies in Iloilo)

 

 

 

Monday, January 18, 2021

‘Build the wall first’

“The wide world is all about you: you can fence yourselves in, but you cannot forever fence it out.”

—J. R. R. Tolkien

 

By Alex P. Vidal

 

TRUMP loyalist Luis Lomuntad, leader of Filipinos in Queens, New York City who believe the rightful winner in the November 3, 2020 presidential election was President Donald Trump, said they are not against the decision of President-elect Joseph R. Biden to offer legal status to an estimated 11 million illegal immigrants, including some Filipinos.

But there is one fundamental issue that Mr. Biden should resolve first and foremost, asserted the 64-year-old Tondo-raised Lomuntad: “He should first build the wall or finish the wall that was started by President Trump.”


Lomuntad said “the system will breakdown” if the wall that separates the United States from Mexico and other Hispanic-speaking countries started by Mr. Trump in 2017 will not be erected.

He pointed out that 9,000 people from Honduras have already started stampeding the U.S.-Mexico boundary as Mr. Biden announced the proposed granting of amnesty to the illegal immigrants in the U.S. territory.

“It’s fine because the illegal immigrants have been here for so many years now at hindi naman sila aalis dito. But Mr. Biden must first prioritize the building of the wall,” Lomuntad suggested. “They should also see to it that all the bad people are deported and only the good ones will remain here.”

Bataan-born Peter Campomanes, 80, of New Jersey, also a Trump supporter, agreed with Lomuntad.

“They should fix the system first,” Campomanes, a relative of the late former World Chess Federation (FIDE) president Florencio Campomanes, remarked.

 

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Before Mr. Trump took office, there were reportedly 654 miles (just over 1,000km) of barrier along the southern border made up of 354 miles of barricades to stop pedestrians and 300 miles of anti-vehicle fencing.

According to the US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) in its 6 October status report, the southern border now has 669 miles of "primary barrier"—the first structure people heading from Mexico to the U.S. will encounter—and 65 miles of "secondary barrier", which usually runs behind the primary structure as a further obstacle.

This means that in areas where no barricades existed before, they have built 15 miles of new, primary barrier or "border wall system", as it is called by CBP.

CBP further said about a further 350 miles of barrier has been built made up of replacement structures and some new secondary barrier.

More is reportedly planned, too, with 378 miles of new and replacement barrier either under construction or in the "pre-construction phase". 

Less than half of this will be in locations where no barriers currently exist, added the CBP.

Mr. Biden’s decision to immediately ask Congress to offer legal status to an estimated 11 million people in the country has reportedly surprised advocates given how the issue has long divided Democrats and Republicans, even within their own parties.

It was reported that in his first day in office, Mr. Biden disclosed he would announce to provide a path to citizenship for millions of immigrants in the United States illegally.

 

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The Democratic president-elect campaigned on a path to citizenship for the roughly 11 million people in the U.S. illegally, but it was unclear how quickly he would move while wrestling with the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, the economy and other priorities. 

For advocates, memories were fresh of presidential candidate Barack Obama pledging an immigration bill his first year in office, in 2009, but not tackling the issue until his second term after the Republican-dominated congress blocked Mr. Obama’s legislative agenda.

According to the Associated Press, “Biden’s plan is the polar opposite of Donald Trump, whose successful 2016 presidential campaign rested in part on curbing or stopping illegal immigration.”

AP quoted Marielena Hincapie, executive director of the National Immigration Law Center, who was reportedly briefed on the bill, as saying: “This really does represent a historic shift from Trump’s anti-immigrant agenda that recognizes that all of the undocumented immigrants that are currently in the United States should be placed on a path to citizenship.”  

If successful, the legislation would be the biggest move toward granting status to people in the country illegally since President Ronald Reagan bestowed amnesty on nearly 3 million people in 1986. 

Legislative efforts to overhaul immigration policy reportedly failed in 2007 and 2013.

(The author, who is now based in New York City, used to be the editor of two local dailies in Iloilo)