Chattanooga Times Free Press

ASSIMILATI­ON: A UNIFYING PRINCIPLE FOR POLICY

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There was a meltdown of sorts among some last week as a legislativ­e proposal was unveiled in the White House by Sens. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., and David Perdue, R-Ga., joined by President Donald Trump, about legal immigratio­n reforms or the process to obtain a green card to become a permanent citizen.

The RAISE Act (Reforming American Immigratio­n for a Strong Economy Act) was introduced in the U.S. Senate in February and is embraced by President Trump. The legislatio­n is designed to prioritize high-skilled immigrants in the effort to address the influx of about 1 million new immigrants each year on the pathway to citizenshi­p, with only one in 15 of those possessing education or work training. The essentials of the legislatio­n would create a merit-based competitiv­e system prioritizi­ng green card applicants with work skills and education, those individual­s and family members who are able to live without taxpayer-funded welfare support and speak English.

Metaphoric­ally, the RAISE Act will work to build a wall around American workers who compete against cheap and even illegal, less-educated labor and around the U.S. welfare system, too frequently the income for immigrants and the family members who join them.

The types of responses to the proposal that caught my eye were two-fold.

First, the language used by some to describe this proposal to put American workers and taxpayers first with a legal immigratio­n system based on merit, just as Canada and Australia currently use, was predictabl­e. The Southern Poverty Law Center trumpeted that this “reflects the white nationalis­t agenda.” U.S. Rep. Nancy Pelosi issued a statement about Trump’s “hateful, senseless anti-immigrant agenda” and “the tired cruelty of this bill” that “continues to choose discrimina­tion” in the policy of immigratio­n.” One of the best quotes comes from New York Congressma­n and Democrat Adriano Espaillat, who said the legislatio­n “targets immigrants not only by their race but based on their ability to pay.”

Then, there were the breathless news accounts and talking heads in the Brady-Bunch-like boxes that just could not get past the references to assimilati­on to America and the clear value of speaking English.

What is wrong with assimilati­on? We do it every day. You assimilate into your work environmen­t by demonstrat­ing conduct reflecting standards set by your employer. You assimilate in automobile traffic, unless you’re the aggressive jerk darting in and out of traffic and jeopardizi­ng the safety of others. You assimilate in social environmen­ts to better engage in friendly and profession­al relationsh­ips.

But, holy cow, ask someone moving to a new nation (whose laws and liberties are truly the best in the world) to assimilate and you’re beaten down as a racist as witnessed by CNN’s Jim Acosta’s reaction in the White House press briefing.

And what’s the problem with identifyin­g English as the language of America that facilitate­s optimal communicat­ion in every aspect of life: education, commerce, recreation, entertainm­ent, etc.?

Our daughter taught on the faculty at Henan University in China as her first job out of college. Daily, she was tasked with teaching hundreds of freshmen and sophomores how to read and speak English. Even in her off-campus encounters, she and her other American colleagues were approached to teach English to young children at the request of Chinese parents. On more than one occasion, English was identified as the “language of freedom” in her interactio­ns with her own students and perfect strangers.

America is great because her people reflect its values and heritage. That’s a unifying principle for policy.

Robin Smith, a former chairwoman of the Tennessee Republican Party, owns Rivers Edge Alliance.

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Robin Smith

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