Los Angeles Times

A CHANCE TO TEACH TRUMP?

Skip the wall, Mr. President, and meet California­ns

- STEVE LOPEZ

If it’s not too late to juggle his itinerary, I’d like to offer an invitation to President Trump on his first visit to California since he took office.

Why not stop by my Monday night class at Cal State L.A.?

The campus has several hundred students living in the U.S. illegally, by the best estimate. Many of them have temporary protection under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program Trump has both defended and vilified, depending on his mood or whom he last spoke to.

It might help educate Trump if he were to actually meet a DACA student or two, rather than taking easy shots from a distance. Maybe I could arrange for him to meet with students of mine who’ve written powerful stories about their immigratio­n experience­s. One of the best was turned in a couple of years ago by a young man who wanted to be a pilot.

He wrote that when his family lived in Mexico, his father flew small commercial planes and was ordered — under threat of violence to him and his family — to smuggle drugs across the border. In terror, his father stayed in the U.S. after one flight, sent for his family and never got to fly again because of his lack of legal status. So the son wanted to fly, for his dad.

Last week, as we know, the Trump administra­tion sued California over its laws protecting immigrants. Gov. Jerry Brown called it a political stunt and “SAD!!!,” mocking Trump’s Twitter style.

So why is Trump coming to California at all?

Officially, he’s supposed to visit San Diego County and inspect the prototypes for his border wall. Then he has a big reelection fundraiser in Beverly Hills, where dinner starts at $35,000.

As for the wall, I think Trump should reach out to Albert Garcia for some advice. Garcia is a retired Border Patrol welder who spent decades repairing holes in the wall near Calexico. In my latest visit with him last year, Garcia — a conservati­ve Democrat who voted for Trump — laid out a sensible immigratio­n reform plan but said he’d rather not see his tax dollars spent on a wall.

“I don’t think anything they make is going to hold them back,” he said. “They’re going to come across and it doesn’t make any difference. If you can see blue sky, they’ll go up and over the top, or they’ll crawl underneath.”

And as we know, most of the people who now immigrate to the U.S. illegally don’t sneak in, they overstay visas. So spending billions of dollars to replace one wall with another might draw cheers in some quarters, but it doesn’t make much sense, especially if Mexico isn’t paying for it as promised.

I’d like Trump to know that in between his San Diego and Beverly Hills events, I’m available for a round of golf. I haven’t hit a ball in years, so I might not offer much competitio­n. But I can offer the perspectiv­e of someone who was born in California with grandparen­ts from Spain and Italy, and has been told on many occasions to go back to Mexico. I can also explain to Trump why he got trounced in California by Hillary Clinton.

When it comes to immigratio­n, California­ns just aren’t as constipate­d as Trump. That’s a generaliza­tion, for sure, because our red regions are painted a deep, deep red. But let’s look at the numbers.

Last year, based on polling by the Public Policy Institute of California, 7 of 10 California­ns were opposed to building a wall the length of the border. Also, 85% of California­ns said immigrants living in the U.S. illegally should be allowed to stay legally, and two-thirds favored having their local public school districts declared sanctuary safe zones.

Why do a majority of people feel this way?

Partly because more than one-quarter of California residents are foreignbor­n, about 40% of the population is Latino and 15% is Asian. We’re not just accustomed to cultural diversity, we’re defined by it, we’re unafraid of it and we get to eat a lot of really good food.

This doesn’t mean we don’t respect rule of law, or we don’t want to kick out rapists and drug dealers, or we don’t understand there are costs involved in supporting a large undocument­ed population. And it doesn’t mean we’re in favor of throwing open the borders.

It just means we know that most people here illegally are economic refugees or fled violence. And clearly, many of them are here because the U.S. appetite for drugs fueled corruption in Mexico and Latin America and empowered narco bosses. Those bosses terrorize with weapons manufactur­ed by American companies that are protected by the gun lobby’s good buddies in Congress and the White House.

Knowing these things as we do provides context and a deeper sense of humanity, and makes it easier for us to identify gasbag politician­s who specialize in red-meat rhetoric but are incapable of reason or reflection. So sue us. Last week at Cal State L.A., I had a nice chat about Trump and immigratio­n with two DACA students.

“The reason my parents came from Mexico was that they feared all the organized gangs and feared for their safety,” said R., who was 1 year old when he was brought across the border.

R. said that in Mexico, violence was not a possibilit­y but a reality. An uncle was decapitate­d.

Today, R. is studying microbiolo­gy with a goal of becoming a doctor. His father, an attorney in Mexico, is a baker here. His mother, who sold aircraft parts, is a housekeepe­r.

R.’s friend H. said he came across when he was 1 1⁄2 because, as his parents tell it, they lived in a home with dirt floors and outdoor plumbing, and there was little hope on the horizon. H. is studying history and wants to be a teacher.

Neither R. nor H. has been back to Mexico since they came north as babies, so if DACA is rescinded, they would be sent to a country they don’t know.

H. said he doesn’t feel sorry for himself but for his parents, who don’t have the temporary legal protection he has under DACA.

R. said that when he found out as a teen that he lacked legal status, he didn’t feel any resentment toward his parents. Instead, he felt guilty, because they gave up their careers for his sake.

Not knowing what might happen is maddening, but given the flip-flops and political exploitati­on of immigrants, some students tell me their focus is on school, family and jobs.

In a state with a lot of Trump haters, R. and H. told me they don’t fear the president so much as they worry about the anti-immigrant sentiment that existed before him and will linger after he’s gone. But they’ll remain committed to their goals.

These young men are California­ns in my book.

In a state at war with the president, they make it easy to choose sides.

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? SUPPORTERS of President Trump stage a counter-rally during an L.A. protest in November. Trump this week will make his first visit as president to California, a state that largely opposes his immigratio­n policies.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times SUPPORTERS of President Trump stage a counter-rally during an L.A. protest in November. Trump this week will make his first visit as president to California, a state that largely opposes his immigratio­n policies.
 ?? Mario Tama Getty Images ?? TRUMP is set to inspect border wall prototypes in San Diego County, seen above from Tijuana, before attending a Beverly Hills fundraiser.
Mario Tama Getty Images TRUMP is set to inspect border wall prototypes in San Diego County, seen above from Tijuana, before attending a Beverly Hills fundraiser.
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 ?? Jim Watson AFP/Getty Images ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP this week will make his first visit to California while in office. Dinner at his reelection fundraiser in Beverly Hills starts at $35,000.
Jim Watson AFP/Getty Images PRESIDENT TRUMP this week will make his first visit to California while in office. Dinner at his reelection fundraiser in Beverly Hills starts at $35,000.

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