'Let the prisoners pick the fruits'
Mar. 31st, 2006 01:51 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Is the current conservatives squatting in D.C. channeling Marie Antoinette? Let them eat cake?
WASHINGTON (AP) -- House conservatives criticized President Bush, accused the Senate of fouling the air, said prisoners rather than illegal farm workers should pick America's crops and denounced the use of Mexican flags by protesters Thursday in a vehement attack on legislation to liberalize U.S. immigration laws.
WASHINGTON (AP) -- House conservatives criticized President Bush, accused the Senate of fouling the air, said prisoners rather than illegal farm workers should pick America's crops and denounced the use of Mexican flags by protesters Thursday in a vehement attack on legislation to liberalize U.S. immigration laws.
no subject
Date: 2006-03-31 09:55 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-03-31 08:54 pm (UTC)But all of those folks came here long ago, and at least they were Europeans. Who knows what those brown-skinned Mexicans will want us to do; probably build pyramids to sacrifice people on. And own donkeys and wear sombreros.
It's a bit amusing to read stuff written in the early 1800s, when the Irish were the threat, on up through the 1920s, as the object of fear switched to the "swarthy folk" of the Mediterranean and eastern Europe. Now they're assimilated and safe, so we let them wave their flags in our parades. OK, the Asians got to be a threat the too; as we know you just can't trust those yellow skinned slant-eyes, just consider Fu Manchu and the like.
I'm lucky here, the city is pretty easy going. In my neighborhood there are restaurants run by Afghans, Vietnamese, Indians, Chinese, Japanese (immigrants and their kids), and even (gasp) Mexicans; an Iraqi runs a mailbox/shipping store (interesting to talk with in the last half decade). While not Vancouver, there's a fair mix of east Asians; while the Japanese have mostly dispersed there's still Chinese (from all regions), Vietnamese, Korean, a few Cambodians and Lao and Thai, and a sprinkling of Burmese. More recently we've been getting folks from northern Africa. A number of Italians come here early in the 20th century, many ran farms in and around the city; while now scattered and well Americanized they still celebrate their heritage.