Assimilation

Many of us speak of the assimilation of new immigrants into our society, but what is assimilation? It is simple. Assimilation is the absorption and integration of people, ideas, or culture into a wider society or culture. When thousands of people enter a country from a foreign land, it takes considerable time for them to understand our culture. We have gone through this process several times in the history of the USA. Each time, it was difficult for us, but more so for the newcomer. It is they who have to learn a new language and new customs. We on the other hand have to tolerate the migrants old ways as they slowly evolve into the American way. During my lifetime I have witnessed several waves of immigrants entering our society. First was the wave that bought my parents here in the nineteen twenties and long before I was born in the nineteen thirties. I grew up in a neighborhood populated by Americans, Hungarians, Italians, Ukranians, and Polish. I’m certain I left some of them out, but time has a way with dealing with memories.

My father’s assimilation began when at age seventeen he joined the Illinois Central Railroad as a laborer. His sponsor was his sister’s husband, who had arrived a few years earlier than he did. Uncle John Yusko most likely helped him learn the language on the job. Also, many of his supervisors were the sons of immigrants who knew the language and could communicate in Hungarian when English failed. Gradually, my Dad began speaking in English, but never at home. He and Mom spoke in the familiar language of their birthplace. As children, my older brother taught me and our younger sister to talk English while he learned from the Nuns at school. Many of the local businesses were run by immigrants and they too learned from and taught their customers. The best assessment I can make is that assimilation takes time and patience. My dad had a fairly good command of the language even into his nineties, but reverted to Hungarian when he didn’t have the English word. It was hilarious when Mom and Dad while speaking Hungarian slid an English word into the sentence. In my mother’s case she reverted more to Hungarian as she aged.

The second wave of immigrants I encountered was after the 1956 Hungarian Revolution against the Russians. My mother paired me with the nephew of our Pastor’s housekeeper. He was about the same age as me and a genuine Molotov cocktail-throwing rebel who fled for his life. We were inseparable; he challenged me to speak Hungarian, and I urged him to speak English. We were inseparable for about a year, and then I left town to go to college. The next time I saw him, he was on leave from the army. He had joined up to assimilate faster. He sure did. He returned on leave speaking excellent English with a hefty Alabama accent. He went to school on the GI Bill and became an engineer. He assimilated.

The next round of migrants I became aware of came from Viet Nam. My cousins in California helped them through their difficulties for at least ten years. The hardest part of assimilation is getting employment. These poor people struggle with life and do their best to make a living. After that, I lost track of any other migrant infusions, but I have witnessed an awful lot of Central Americans cutting lawns in the neighborhood. I even convinced myself to hire one to do my lawn chores. It is the best decision I ever made to assist with assimilation.

This morning, I researched how the Israelis infused so many people into their country. They devised a process called the Kibbutz. As new immigrants arrived, they were assigned to a Kibbutz, which is nothing more than a farm with a formal name. The newcomers worked the land to raise vegetables and livestock for their consumption and the markets. Any profit made was distributed equally between members of the Kibbutz. That sounds a bit Marxist to me. Many of these enterprises have evolved from agriculture to manufacturing, depending on the individuals’ capabilities. I think this concept appeals to me and is one that we could propose here. Why not divide these people into manageable groups, assign them to some land and basic tools, and let them have at it? The problem with my idea is the government. We have so many swamp creatures inventing regulations and work rules that a Kibbutz in the Israeli sense would be unlawful.

Back when my parents arrived, there were no unions, children were allowed to work, OSHA wasn’t yet an idea, and workers could take chances on the job. It was a working economy. However, employers tended to overdo things. Working conditions became difficult, and the people felt like slaves. When our most revered president, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, became president and worked to ease people’s suffering by inventing new laws and regulations, he called it the New Deal, but inadvertently created the Swamp. The various Bureaus have been left unfettered to make rules that are as strong as laws, except they aren’t laws written by Congress and voted in. They are regulations that are imposed upon us whether we like them or not. Because these Bureaus are not controlled by ‘We the People’ they have gone on their merry way and have continued to dream up countless ways to make our lives better than we can. Since the nineteen forties they have grown and spent trillions of dollars on too many things that don’t really make our lives better, but they do make our lives more expensive.

The current government’s approach to assimilation involves two policies: The first is to fly or bus people by the hundreds to various parts of the country and let them loose. The second is to do nothing and allow the immigrant himself to find a way to live. The first is to spread the population without regard to the immigrants or the cities where they are dumped. Cities nationwide have seen this invasion and are remiss about handling housing, clothing, meals, and, more importantly, jobs. The result is that we see communities of tent cities popping up in urban areas all around the country.

When the country encouraged a large population of immigrants to come in the early twentieth century, it needed labor to do work. The current administration has no clue what these people will do when they arrive. Should I hire a gardener, a housemaid, and a cook and provide them a place to live while they work for me? I could be okay with hiring help, but I cannot afford that, a life with my family and Uncle Sam, too.

I’m afraid in the long run, I will end up paying these people to assimilate. Uncle Sam will finally wake up and realize he has created a human catastrophe. He will then begin implementing new social programs to assist immigrants. Two things will happen: 1. He will raise our taxes, and 2. He will print money to pay for the programs, thus increasing inflation and making life equally miserable for all of us. This flood of new immigrants smacks of the redistribution of wealth plan inaugurated by our Progressive, Liberal, Socialist, and Communist former President Obama. When does this guy go away?

A New Year

It is the fourth day of the new year, and I realized I still need to post something. I didn’t make any resolutions because I would only break them. Instead, I am getting up earlier and heading for my workshop sooner. My latest intarsia work is coming along, but I haven’t been inspired to name it yet.

I am in a phase of work where patience is an absolute necessity, and I lose it after a couple of hours. Today was a perfect example. I began to lose interest, and my back ached from standing. I removed my apron and headed for a nice, comfortable chair. I want to visit my daughter this afternoon and make a pot of beef stroganoff before tipping the vodka and changing chairs. The daughter’s hip is healing well. The screws holding her hip bone together have been removed, and she is walking with assistance. She is still a long way from coming home.

The news about current large sanctuary cities all crying to Uncle that they don’t have resources to pay for housing new migrants is disturbing to me. Whatever happened to live up to the sentiment expressed by the poem on the Statue of Liberty: “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free. . .” ? It seems to me that we love to recite these words whenever we speak about accepting immigrants into the United States. Very often, it is by guys like me whose parents were immigrants who passed through Ellis Island. When it comes to helping immigrants, we often forget we are wearing big-boy pants and zipp up the purse in our pockets. I admit that I support immigration that follows the immigration laws of the USA, but I don’t support migrants coming into the country illegally. The rules were enacted for valid reasons: migrants need time to assimilate into the population, migrants need time to find jobs to support themselves, and migrants need housing, food, and safety. We, the people, prefer that migrants allowed in are healthy and not bring diseases with them. We lawfully admit one million new people every year. The current President has violated his oath of office to defend and honor the Constitution by adopting the open borders policy. He has deliberately exposed himself to impeachment. Over six million migrants have crossed the border into America since he has been in office. In his term, the law has allowed three million people in, but he has allowed an additional six point two million more. No wonder the mayors of Sanctuary cities are protesting. The government is quietly shipping these migrants around the country and dropping them off to fend for themselves. The receiving cities often are not even aware of what is happening. The governors and mayors of California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas, all border states with points of entry, are overwhelmed by the influx of strangers invading their cities. For example, El Paso, Texas, with a population of 680,000 people, receives as many as sixty thousand new people each month, or ten percent. Imagine if your town had ten percent more new people every month. In my town of Frankfort, it would mean adding 2000 new migrants monthly. When I moved here thirty years ago, the population was at 4000, and now it is up to 20,000. There has been a constant growth of new neighborhoods, shopping centers, schools, and services added all along the way. The only way we could house two thousand extra people every month is to take them into our homes. We do not have a surplus of housing. Tent cities would be another way to accept them. We, too, would be crying Uncle for money to provide their needed services

When I began writing this article, I intended to criticize the sanctuary cities that are crying that they don’t want any more migrants. Now, I have convinced myself that they have a point. If they get new people in proportion to their population, they will be overwhelmed, and if the faucet stays on, they will all go bankrupt. Assimilation in these numbers will be a dream rather than a reality. Migrants will cluster together to form neighborhoods that the rest of the population will fear entering. Most likely, new cities will be formed to deal with the situation, and we will no doubt encounter situations similar to that of Israel and Palestine scattered all around the country.

This problem will take decades to solve, but it may take centuries if we don’t close the borders and deal with the inclusion of six million more people in so short time.

Assimilation???

This video is somewhat alarming, but not unusual for new immigrants coming into the country. I live in Chicago and over the past seventy years I have seen neighborhoods similar to this one in Dearborn with some exceptions. The signage was in Polish, Italian, German, and most recently Mexican. People who come into our country need to live near other people of their own nationality. Think about it, if you were suddenly dropped into an area of Iraq and had to learn the language, read the strange alphabet, assimilate into their culture how would you like it. Most likely, you would want to live in there American village with all the other Americans. Do you think the Iraqi’s would welcome you with open arms? Most likely, they would be hollering and screaming at you to get the hell out. Also not an easy thing to take. Assimilation takes time, learning a new language takes time, learning your way around the block takes time, finding food you can eat all takes an effort. None of it is easy.

What seems to be different with the Muslim immigrant is an Imam preaching not to assimilate. All of the kids I went to school with were pushed by their parents to learn the language, and to learn in school. My brother learned to speak English in grammar school. My sister and I learned from him, my parents learned from us, and from English classes for immigrants. There wasn’t a single nationality that harbored a hatred for America. Every Mexican I know is a friend. I love them as a people. They love America, they learn the language, they work hard, and they want to be your friend.

I would love to be alive a hundred years from now to see just how this new world works out.

Adapt or Leave

There is a dire need world wide for leaders to use the same policy as used by the Mayor of Dorval, Quebec, Canada. He is not Islamaphopic as Liberals will classify him, he is being practical and patriotic. He is also 100% correct in that a Muslim must learn and practice the ways of their chosen country and not expect the chosen country adapt to Islam.

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I wonder how many years (hundreds for sure) that Jewish people have lived in Quebec. I don’t believe that they have ever demanded that pork be removed from the school’s menu where their children attend. Excellent reply by the Mayor of Quebec to the “demands” of the Muslim population in his community.

Put some pork on your fork. Too bad the USA doesn’t have the common sense to publish this nationwide. Should also be posted on signs all along U.S. borders.

Let’s hear it for a Quebec mayor. Or as the commercial promoting pork says “put some pork on your fork”

MAYOR REFUSES TO REMOVE PORK FROM SCHOOL CANTEEN MENU.

EXPLAINS WHY Muslim parents demanded the abolition of pork in all the school canteens of a Montreal suburb.
The mayor of the Montreal suburb of Dorval, has refused, and the town clerk sent a note to all parents to explain why.

“Muslims must understand that they have to adapt to Canada and Quebec, its customs, its traditions, its way of life, because that’s where they chose to immigrate.

“They must understand that they have to integrate and learn to live in Quebec.

“They must understand that it is for them to change their lifestyle, not the Canadians who so generously welcomed them.

“They must understand that Canadians are neither racist nor xenophobic, they accepted many immigrants before Muslims (whereas the reverse is not true, in that Muslim states do not accept non-Muslim immigrants).

“That no more than other nations, Canadians are not willing to give up their identity, their culture.

“And if Canada is a land of welcome, it’s not the Mayor of Dorval who welcomes foreigners, but the Canadian-Quebecois people as a whole.

“Finally, they must understand that in Canada ( Quebec ) with its Judeo-Christian roots, Christmas trees, churches and religious festivals, religion must remain in the private domain.

The municipality of Dorval was right to refuse any concessions to Islam and Sharia.

“For Muslims who disagree with secularism and do not feel comfortable in Canada , there are 57 beautiful Muslim countries in the world, most of them under-populated and ready to receive them with open halal arms in accordance with Shariah.

“If you left your country for Canada, and not for other Muslim countries, it is because you have considered that life is better in Canada than elsewhere.

“Ask yourself the question, just once, “Why is it better here in Canada than where you come from?” “A canteen with pork is part of the answer.”