Can Immigration and Immigrants be Made Great Again?

A recent photo of a park and probably a practice raid on an area where people hang out kind of makes you wonder why people would want to come to America. Why come when the US President and a host of bigoted supporters make life miserable for people who look different, speak with an accent, etc. and are willing to work at jobs Americans/US Citizens have no desire to do.

The raid was called more of a political stunt and spectacle which was designed to intimidate the city’s immigrant communities. So now they scared them off and they won’t be hanging around there for a while.

And what is with the finger near the trigger?

Horses, armored vehicles, carrying rifles, and people in tactical gear . . . “oh my.”

“Making Immigration Great Again,”

In any case, however, it seems to me that the lie is beginning to unravel as it becomes clear that ICE is having a really hard time finding violent immigrants to arrest.

According to the Miami Herald, around a third of the people being held in “Alligator Alcatraz” (a cute name) have any kind of criminal conviction.. Itis a a concentration camp, pure and simple,

Americans may be turning on Trump’s immigration policies. In part, they are starting to realize they have been lied to. But an even more important factor may be that more native-born Americans are beginning to see what our immigrants are really like, rather than thinking of them as scary figures lurking in the shadows.

It’s a familiar point that views of immigration tend to be most negative in places with very few immigrants and most positive in places where there are already many foreign-born residents. You can get fancy about why that’s true, but I would simply say that if you live in a place like New York, where you’re constantly interacting with immigrants, they start to seem like … people.

Will the public backlash against Trump’s immigration policies force ICE to stand down? Probably not, although the courts may at least slow the mass arrests. Business may also have a say, as labor shortages disrupt agriculture, construction and more.

In any case, however, harsh anti-immigrant policies are looking like a political loser, not a winner.