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April 28, 2008
As my high school English teacher used to point out, the best messages are conveyed when form matches content. So it is with Green Card Day. The mailing of green postcards to ones Senator or Representative on May 5th is a delightfully simple symbolic act concerning the importance of immigration to the United States. The symbolism works on several levels. The choice of green cards shows that it is illegal immigration that is the concern (as in, green cards are what make immigration OK). This is complemented by the intellectual irony (Cinco de Mayo is Mexicos Day of Independence). It conveys as well the need for a multi-faceted approach to enforcement (high-tech organizing via the Web meets low-tech, difficult-to-ignore piles of physical postcards). The actual content of the messages is entirely up to those that send them. Thus, Green Card Day can easily become a bi-partisan effort on the part of the public. So long as the message is clean and polite, anything is possible. Believe the U.S. should double its immigration quotas? Say so. Want there to be a big wall on our side of the Rio Grande? Write it down.
Regardless of the individual messages, the aggregate message to the nations elected officials will be clear: immigration is a major issue in this election year, and enforcement of U.S. laws concerning immigration is a necessary first step in resolving the problems with immigration policy. The presidential candidates all pay at least lip service to this notion; with clear public pressure, some sort of action will become imperative. Just as it finally happened with welfare reform, so too can it happen with immigration reform. With Green Card Day, and the enforcement-first policy it supports, the common ground for action has arrived. |
| Last Updated on Tuesday, 28 October 2008 15:52 |