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An Open Letter to Pat Buchanan

As a non-White American, I feel the need to address the opinions of those who seem to think that diversity has lead to the downfall of American society.

In his May 1 article, "The Dark Side of Diversity," Pat Buchanan opines that the Immigration Act of 1965 is an assault on the United States, that it was “an invasion” against those who have already lived here. He further states that those immigrants who end up on these shores have never fully assimilated.

According to Mr. Buchanan, these immigrants “seek community in their separate subdivisions,” and because of this, “Americans no longer share the old ties of history, heritage, faith, language, tradition, culture, music, myth or morality….”

It is extremely incredulous that someone who once ran for the President of the United States, knows so little about American history.

So the following is a refresher course for Mr. Buchanan who seems to think that closing our borders is the best policy for America:

Those you refer to as immigrants are the ones that built transcontinental railroads, tended to Hawaiian sugarcane plantations, and worked on Californian farmlands.

Those you refer to as strangers canned fish in Alaska, picked cotton in Louisiana and grew tobacco in Virginia.

Those you refer to as aliens fought (and died) in the American Revolution, the Civil War, the Spanish American War, World War I, World War II, Korean War, Vietnam War, Dessert Storm, and Iraqi Freedom.  (Many were denied U.S. citizenship even as they gave their life to this country.)

As for those that “seek community in their separate subdivisions,” many of these subdivisions were created because “the national community” as you put it, lynched African Americans in the South, rounded up Japanese Americans into internment camps, and forced Chinese Americans into zoned areas.

Are these egregious acts not, as you say, an invasion against those who have already lived here?

Are non-White Americans held to a different standard just because we have fat folds in our eyelids, speak Spanish, pray to Allah, or listen to hip-hop?

With the case of Seung Hui Cho, let’s make one thing clear: having been in the United States since he was 8, (which makes that 15 out of 23 years of existence), Cho was less an immigrant and more an Americanized individual.

Cho’s violence mimicked those of cowboy westerns, where gun-slinging characters portrayed by John Wayne, Charles Bronson and Clint Eastwood went on shooting rampages. He went through legal means of purchasing weapons for his heinous acts, means that were protected by an Amendment in the Constitution.  

While in no way am I condoning the atrocious acts of a mentally ill person, I do have to stress that our mainstream media does not need to highlight the fact that he was not a U.S. citizen.

A person’s status is simply not in the equation of those who are disturbed enough to kill.

If that were the case, how would you explain Timothy McVeigh, a decorated Army veteran who was born and raised in New York? Or Terry Nichols, the FBI official who helped McVeigh plot the terrorist act in Oklahoma?

Let’s not forget that it was these U.S. citizens who were behind the second deadliest act of domestic terrorism in history, killing 168 people including 19 babies.

Let’s not forget about Chicago-born Ted Kaczynski who was behind a 20-plus year terror spree, sending bombs in the mail that killed three and wounded 23.

Let’s not forget about Florida native Eric Robert Rudolph, the Olympic Park bomber that planted bombs all over the South, killing three and wounding 111 others.

Again. A person’s status is simply not in the equation of those who are disturbed enough to kill.

But we’re not here to talk about terrorists.

We’re here to talk about immigration.

We’re here to talk about what you coined “the dark side of diversity,” the so-called “invasion” the majority is “opposed to”. Is that majority opposed to people who come here, taking on backbreaking labor for less pay, people who contribute to the economic viability of this nation while being denied access to create their own American dream?

Are we as a nation supposed to turn our backs on the Statue of Liberty's credo and forget that the very identity of America is that of an immigrant nation? Should we all forget that many of those “huddled masses yearning to breathe free” were our own ancestors looking for better opportunities?   

So for you Mr. Buchanan to say, that “Americans no longer share the old ties,” is misleading at the very least.

There’s no denying this one fact: with the exception of the indigenous natives, we are all a bunch of immigrants.

That is our history. That is our heritage. That is our culture.
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