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David Muccigrosso's avatar

It definitely fits the pattern of every other wave of immigration: People come over and get shat on, and after enough of them accumulate and integrate, they veer rightward and co-sign on a restrictionist backlash. A generation or so later, as their descendants gain upward mobility, they liberalize and join the elite, reopening immigration for the next wave to start the cycle all over again.

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Eric Terzuolo's avatar

I wasn't familiar with Huntington's non-academic biographic, but now note his connection to the Democratic Party. Advisor to Hubert Humphrey during the 1968 election, chairman of the party's Foreign Policy Advisory Committee in the mid-70s, and working for Carter at the NSC. His thesis about the "non-integrability" of Hispanic immigrants to the US presumably did not directly and explicitly influence Democratic thinking, but was consistent with the total misunderstanding of immigrants that has increasingly characterized the party. "Assimilation" became a dirty word in progressive ranks, with the notion of preserving the specificity (but also by implication the insularity and non-integration) of immigrant groups gaining traction. In fact, immigrants overwhelmingly do not wish to remain hyphenated Americans, and Democratic rhetoric based on an identity group by identity group model of America has clearly lost a lot of immigrant support. I say this as a lifelong Democrat, but also as the child of immigrants who experienced first hand the challenges, but also the enormous benefits, of integration into broad American society.

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