How Immigrants Shape(d) the United States | Nalini Krishnankutty | TEDxPSU

00:16:04
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=irtxoIPBVWs

Summary

TLDRThe speaker examines societal perceptions of immigrants, emphasizing the persistence of negative stereotypes despite the significant contributions immigrants have made to American society. Drawing from historical examples, the speaker illustrates how immigrants have been viewed with suspicion and disdain over time, yet have also played pivotal roles in shaping the nation. Notable individuals such as Elizabeth Blackwell and Elon Musk are highlighted for their contributions to various fields. The speaker calls for a shift in perception, urging society to embrace immigrants and acknowledge their humanity and resilience, ultimately advocating for an inclusive approach to immigration moving forward.

Takeaways

  • πŸ—£οΈ Immigrant perceptions often focus on negativity.
  • πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ Immigrants have shaped U.S. history and culture.
  • πŸ’‘ Positive contributions include innovation and diversity.
  • πŸ“Š Today, immigrants make up 14% of the population.
  • ✍️ Notable figures: Blackwell, Muir, Berlin, Brin, Musk.
  • βš–οΈ Historical fears about immigrants reflect ongoing trends.
  • πŸ“… Immigration patterns have evolved, impacting societal views.
  • 🌍 The need for immigrants in today's economy persists.
  • 🀝 Embracing immigrants promotes inclusivity and understanding.
  • ✨ Fresh perspectives on immigrants can change narratives.

Timeline

  • 00:00:00 - 00:05:00

    The speaker discusses the common negative perceptions associated with immigrants, emphasizing that words like 'illegal' and 'refugee' dominate the narrative. Positive examples from history, like Elizabeth Blackwell and John Muir, who were immigrants that significantly contributed to society, highlight the dichotomy of perception. Today, first-generation immigrants like Sergey Brin, Jerry Yang, and Elon Musk continue to drive innovation in the U.S., yet immigrants still face discrimination despite being a fundamental part of America's identity as a 'land of immigrants'.

  • 00:05:00 - 00:10:00

    The speaker reflects on the history of immigrant sentiments in the U.S., detailing how negative reactions towards newcomers, particularly after events like 9/11, have only intensified in recent years. Historical figures like Ben Franklin expressed similar anxieties about immigrants impacting the national identity. Despite this, immigrants have historically contributed significantly to American culture and society, such as introducing new traditions and influencing public education, showcasing the paradox of needing immigrants while simultaneously harboring resentment towards them.

  • 00:10:00 - 00:16:04

    Current trends show that, despite a consistent influx of immigrants, negative sentiments have resurfaced, particularly towards groups coming from Latin America and Asia. The speaker urges the audience to reconsider their views on immigrants and proposes the need for a generational shift towards acceptance rather than tolerance. By highlighting various immigrant success stories, the speaker promotes the idea that embracing diversity is beneficial, hoping to shift perceptions and encourage communities to welcome immigrants without prejudice.

Mind Map

Video Q&A

  • What is the common negative perception of immigrants?

    Words like 'illegal', 'refugee', 'poor', and 'desperate' are often used.

  • Can you name some notable immigrants mentioned?

    Elizabeth Blackwell, John Muir, Irving Berlin, Sergey Brin, Jerry Yang, and Elon Musk are examples.

  • What historical patterns of immigrant perception does the speaker address?

    The speaker notes that negativity towards immigrants is not new and has persisted throughout American history.

  • How have immigrants shaped American culture?

    Immigrants played key roles in various sectors, contributing to education, industry, and culture.

  • What do the statistics say about today's immigrant population?

    Today, immigrants account for 14% of the U.S. population, approximately 43 million people.

  • What did Ben Franklin fear about immigrants?

    He expressed concerns about German immigrants and their potential influence on the country.

  • What does the speaker suggest about the future of immigration in the U.S.?

    The speaker advocates for embracing immigrants and recognizing their contributions.

  • What challenges do immigrants face today?

    Many face hostility, discrimination, and violence despite their contributions.

  • How can we change perceptions of immigrants?

    By recognizing their resilience and contributions, and viewing them as part of the American experience.

  • What was the impact of the 1965 immigration act?

    It allowed immigrants from all countries based on skill or family reunification.

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  • 00:00:02
    [Music]
  • 00:00:11
    what words come to your mind when you
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    see or hear the word immigrant when I
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    ask this question in my workshops on
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    immigrant history and contributions the
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    answers are always revealing illegal is
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    a common response as our refugee foreign
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    poor and desperate sometimes someone
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    will say family community freedom
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    borders or even languages but the
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    answers are mostly negative and this
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    negativity it's not unique to the United
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    States the migration observatory at the
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    University of Oxford studied the
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    coverage of immigrants in the British
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    press from 2006 to 2015
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    they found that illegal was the most
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    common word used to describe immigrants
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    it's really notable that there are no
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    words like smart creative pioneering
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    enterprising brave words that could be
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    used to describe doctor Elizabeth
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    Blackwell who was the first female
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    doctor in the United States or
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    environmentalist John Muir whose ideas
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    helped create our national parks or
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    composer Irving Berlin who wrote god
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    Bless America
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    Elizabeth Blackwell came from England
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    John Muir from Scotland and Irving
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    Berlin came from Russia they all came as
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    children when it was impossible to know
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    their skin or their potential and yet
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    they did go ahead and shape the United
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    States of America now these same
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    positive words could be used to describe
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    first-generation immigrants today
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    immigrants like Sergey Brin co-founder
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    of Google who came from Russia at the
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    age of six at the height of the Cold War
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    when we distrusted
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    anything Russian or Jerry yang
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    co-founder of Yahoo who came from Taiwan
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    at the age of 10 the only English word
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    he knew when he came here was the word
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    shoe or Elon Musk founder of SpaceX
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    co-founder of XCOM which became PayPal
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    CEO of Tesla associated with so many
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    other ventures he came from South Africa
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    via Canada to the United States as an
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    undergraduate student
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    now these visionary immigrants they use
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    their abilities and the opportunities
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    they had here to create companies that
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    shape not just the United States but the
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    whole world now we call ourselves a land
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    of immigrants Native Americans came here
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    tens of thousands of years ago in the
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    1500s they were first the French in the
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    Spanish followed by the British the
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    Scots the Dutch the Germans and then
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    people from many other countries most
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    Europeans came here as free people but
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    some were indentured servants for
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    centuries we also bought and transported
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    Africans to the United States as slaves
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    they surely did not have any choice and
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    when the United States annexed the
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    northern part of Mexico after the
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    us-mexico war the people who lived in
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    lands that later became California
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    Arizona New Mexico Utah Colorado and
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    Nevada they became Americans not by
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    crossing the border but because the
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    border crossed them all these people and
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    their descendants they did shape the
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    United States but as they did that they
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    took land away from the original
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    inhabitants the Native Americans cost
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    their numbers to shrink and they did
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    change their way of life forever today a
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    million people come to the United States
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    legally every year immigrants are 14% of
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    the population which amounts to about 43
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    million people we still are a land of
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    immigrants
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    yet we do treat immigrants as the other
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    now I myself came to the United States
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    as a chemical engineering graduate
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    student international students like me
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    are recruited even today to fill the
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    extreme shortage of American students in
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    STEM fields for the most part I've had
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    really positive experiences yet like
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    many immigrants I have had experiences
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    that remind me of my other nests I have
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    seen the hatred towards immigrants
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    escalate steadily after 9/11 and that
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    drumbeat increasing in peak and
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    intensity over the last few years many
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    immigrants face taunts of go back home
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    some are attacked and some have even
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    been killed immigrants are detained
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    deported denied entrance even as
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    discussions of immigration reform have
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    been filling our news media now these
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    reactions towards immigrants this so
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    visceral as if people don't know our
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    history of immigration or the
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    contribution of immigrants why this
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    negativity are we just a generation of
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    haters now if we look at history we find
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    that this tussle of hating immigrants
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    but still wanting them to be here
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    because we need them this is not new in
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    fact it is something as American as
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    apple pie
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    in 1751 inventor and later founding
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    father Ben Franklin did not want the
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    Germans coming to the English colony of
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    Pennsylvania he said the most stupid
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    sort of people were migrating to this
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    country but he said the Germans do have
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    some virtues they're hard workers
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    they're frugal they're good farmers we
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    do need them to grow the country Ben
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    Franklin also worried about the swarthy
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    complexion of the Germans the Swedes
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    Italians the French the Russians he said
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    they would just make the country less
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    white they were not as white as the
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    anglo-saxons then Franklin also worried
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    that Germans would come in such large
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    numbers they would German eyes the
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    country instead of getting anglicized
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    themselves now did Ben Franklin's fears
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    come true well the first kindergarten
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    was started in 1856 by a German
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    immigrant a first-generation German
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    immigrant German immigrants championed
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    universal education and they shaped the
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    public school system that we have today
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    German immigrants gave us that Christmas
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    tree they gave us Santa Claus and they
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    also gave us the Easter Bunny
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    how about jeans it was a first
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    generation German immigrant Levi Strauss
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    along with an immigrant from Latvia
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    Jacob Davis who created these jeans for
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    miners during the gold rush and how
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    about course past Miller and Heiser Bush
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    all these companies were started by
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    first-generation German immigrants not
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    their descendants but people who had
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    come from Germany and then started all
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    these enterprises that live here today
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    German immigrants were also the ones who
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    thought that the weekend should be for
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    recreation not just for rest and
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    relaxation and in fact one of the
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    caricatures that people had was about
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    Germans drinking beer on a weekend now
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    Ben Franklin and to be fair to him a lot
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    of people held his views his fears did
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    come true but for many of us today we
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    feel that the German experience is
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    really now the American experience they
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    are virtually indistinguishable how did
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    other groups fare the Irish when they
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    came were disliked for being poor and
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    Catholic and people worried that the
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    Pope would soon be influencing the
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    United States
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    the Irish have the distinction that the
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    first anti-immigrant party was formed to
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    get rid of them the American party or
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    the know-nothing party was formed on an
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    anti-immigrant anti-catholic platform
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    they elected governors had hundreds of
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    legislative seats ran a presidential
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    candidate and also managed to deport
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    hundreds of Irishmen from the country
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    now the Irish and the Germans they did
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    gain acceptance as Americans when people
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    began to arrive from Central Southern
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    and Eastern Europe and horror of Horrors
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    when Asians began to arrive from China
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    and India now the Chinese they first
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    came here during the gold rush but later
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    agents went all the way to China to
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    recruit them for projects like the
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    Transcontinental Railroad and other work
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    Asians faced intense hatred they were
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    attacked murdered the arson lynching
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    mass evacuations were all things they
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    experienced and as the diversity of
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    immigrants grew and the percentages went
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    very high to about 15% xenophobia in the
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    country peaked hatred became the new
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    normal and our laws were changed to
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    reflect this the Chinese Exclusion Act
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    in 1882 it did not allow Chinese
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    laborers to enter the country for the
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    next ten years more alien labor laws
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    were passed followed by a literacy test
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    for any immigrants over 16 finally in
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    1924 a law was passed which really
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    focused on national quotas to increase
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    immigration from Western Europe all
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    immigration from Asia was banned the
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    period after this the country did
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    experience quite a bit of labor
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    shortages and one way that we worked
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    around it was to have a guest worker
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    program with Mexico where we
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    intermittently got workers from Mexico
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    it took 40 years to correct this
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    discrimination on national origins but
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    in 1965 we did pass the immigration act
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    where people from all countries could
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    come in based on skill or on family
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    reunification one thing that was
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    discontinued at that time was the guest
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    worker program that we had with Mexico
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    so now the doors are open
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    immigrants are back in and today we are
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    back to the 14% that very high number
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    which is very similar to the percentages
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    we had in the 1890s when xenophobia had
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    peaked
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    so hatred is back in the United States
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    the issues are the same that people
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    can't handle the diversity of immigrants
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    the issues are also same that we do
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    still need immigrants but the players
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    are different in 1890 immigrants mainly
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    came from Europe and the five countries
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    that they came mostly from they were
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    Germany Ireland England and Canada and
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    Sweden today we have immigrants mainly
  • 00:12:19
    from Latin America and Asia and
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    immigrants come in from Mexico China
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    India Philippines and Vietnam these are
  • 00:12:28
    the top five countries that they are
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    coming from so we do have all that
  • 00:12:33
    hatred today but immigration still
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    remains a two-way street
  • 00:12:39
    we need the immigrants and immigrants
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    need us so what do we do now we do have
  • 00:12:48
    a choice are we going to be the first
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    generation that is going to break this
  • 00:12:53
    continuum of hate towards immigrants
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    that has lasted since the colonies are
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    we going to be the generation that
  • 00:13:02
    accepts immigrants not just tolerates
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    them because they have certain skills or
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    because they are going to revitalize our
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    towns or you know replace our aging
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    workforce are we going to be the
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    generation that stops shutting
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    bail out because they're poor or they're
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    stupid or maybe they're just from the
  • 00:13:23
    wrong countries well if we had done that
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    in the past we might have missed out
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    Andrew Carnegie who was just a poor kid
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    from Scotland we might have missed out
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    on Nikola Tesla who came from Serbia we
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    might have missed out on Secretary of
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    State Madeleine Albright who was a
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    refugee from Czechoslovakia or singer
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    Gloria Estefan who was a refugee from
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    Cuba not to mention we might have missed
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    out on a whole bunch of Nobel laureates
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    a large percentage of them are born
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    abroad we also might have missed out on
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    all American experiences of baseball
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    beer and hot dogs all of which were
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    created by first-generation immigrants
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    going to Zumba listening to hip-hop
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    eating Chobani yogurt or Kraft cheese
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    shopping at t.j.maxx or Kohl's forever
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    21 or Nautica going to Panda Express or
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    sweet frog the list goes on and on and
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    on now let me ask you that same question
  • 00:14:36
    again what words come to your mind now
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    when you see or hear the word immigrant
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    when I ask this question at the end of
  • 00:14:47
    my workshops on immigration history and
  • 00:14:49
    contribution the answers are again
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    revealing smart creative pioneering
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    risk-takers recruited Nobel laureates
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    professors students teachers farmers
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    construction workers taxi drivers the
  • 00:15:05
    words are many revealing both the
  • 00:15:08
    complexity of immigration and the
  • 00:15:09
    multifaceted humanity of immigrants now
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    the attendees and the workshops are
  • 00:15:17
    beginning to see immigrants with fresh
  • 00:15:20
    eyes admiring both their resilience and
  • 00:15:23
    their contribution to the American
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    experience we all of us will need those
  • 00:15:29
    fresh eyes in the days ahead
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    to ensure that hatred is not the new
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    normal again in the United States of
  • 00:15:37
    America we will also need those fresh
  • 00:15:40
    eyes again as individuals in all our
  • 00:15:44
    communities to accept immigrants truly
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    embrace them and welcome them no matter
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    which country they come from to this
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    land of immigrants the United States of
  • 00:15:58
    America thank you
  • 00:16:00
    [Applause]
Tags
  • immigrants
  • immigration
  • history
  • contributions
  • perception
  • diversity
  • culture
  • negativity
  • resilience
  • society