USA Today
By Gregory Korte
December 15, 2015
President
Obama delivered a full-throated defense of a liberal immigration policy
Tuesday, saying,America betrays its history and its values when it
fails to welcome those
fleeing poverty, hunger, war and persecution from all over the world.
Speaking
at a naturalization ceremony for 31 new American citizens at the
National Archives, Obama compared the current wave of immigrants to the
waves of German, Scottish,
Irish and German immigrants of the past.
"You
don’t look alike. You don’t worship the same way, but here, surrounded
by the very documents whose values bind us together as one people,
you've raised your hands
and sworn a sacred oath. I'm proud to be among the first to greet you
as our fellow Americans," Obama told the newly sworn citizens.
But
Obama's speech was more than a welcoming. It was a not-so-subtle retort
to Republican presidential candidates — notably, Donald Trump — who
have promised to put a
halt to Muslim refugees and to deport the undocumented Mexican and
Central American immigrants already here.
White
House Press Secretary Josh Earnest said the president's speech does
"stand in stark contrast to the rhetoric and divisiveness that will be
on full display at the
Republican debate tonight,"
Obama
said immigration was at the core of the American identity. "In the
Muslim immigrant today, we see the Catholic immigrant of a century ago,"
Obama said. "In the Syrian
refugee of today, we should see the Jewish refugee of World War II."
Obama said those immigrants of yesterday also fled persecution and war, and "their paperwork wasn’t always in order."
He
recounted a litany of past abuses of immigrants, silently comparing
them to today's environment: The forced immigration of African slaves,
anti-Catholic discrimination
exhibited in signs reading, "No Irish need apply," and the internment
of Japanese Americans during World War II.
"We
succumbed to fear. We betrayed not only our fellow Americans, but our
deepest values. It's happened before," Obama said. "Those who betrayed
those values were themselves
the children of immigrants. How quickly we forget. One generation
passes, two generations pass and suddenly we don’t remember where we
came from."
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