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Trump, FDR, And The Plight Of Refugees Under Immigration Controls By Jacob G. Hornberger!!
(2018-11-28 at 16:18:56 )
Trump, FDR, and the Plight of Refugees under Immigration Controls by Jacob G. Hornberger
Republican President Trumps use of tear gas to prevent foreign citizens from entering the United States to claim refugee status under United States law brings to mind that Democrat President Franklin Roosevelt did the same thing in the 1930s.
President Roosevelt, of course, is widely known among both Republicans and Democrats as a great humanitarian and a lover of the poor, needy, and disadvantaged.
Unfortunately, those traits did not manifest themselves in FDRs decision to use the United States of Americas system of immigration controls to prevent German Jews from entering the United States during the Adolf Hitler regime.
Let us first place things in a historical context.
The United States was founded as a limited-government republic, which is a governmental structure that is completely opposite to a national-security state governmental structure, which United States of Americans live under today.
Under the republic type of governmental system, there was no Pentagon, no military-industrial complex, no Central Intelligence Agency, or nor National Security Agency.
That was how our American ancestors wanted it. If they had been told that the United States Constitution was going to bring into existence a national-security state, there is no doubt that they never would have approved the Constitution, which brought the federal government into existence.
They would have chosen to continue operating under the Articles of Confederation, a type of governmental structure in which the federal governments powers were so weak it did not even have the power to tax.
Under the republic form of government, the federal government had a small army, one that was sufficiently large to win wars against the Native American tribes but certainly nowhere near large enough to embroil the United States in foreign conflicts in Europe and Asia.
That was fine with the American people because they desired a foreign policy in which the United States government did not go abroad "in search of monsters to destroy."
That was the title of a speech that John Quincy Adams delivered to Congress on the Fourth of July, 1821, in which Adams summarized the founding foreign policy of the United States.
Mr. Adams pointed out that there are lots of monsters in the world - brutal tyrants and dictators, oppression, famine, wars, criminals, and revolutions. But, he said, the United States government would not go abroad with military forces to save people from these monsters.
However, the United States also had a highly unusual policy with respect to immigration, one that sent the following message to people all over the world: If you are suffering from tyranny, oppression, or starvation and you are able and willing to escape, know that there is one place in the world where you can freely come and be certain that you will not be forcibly returned to your monstrous conditions.
The United States of Americas open-immigration policy was, needless to say, one of the most radical policies in world history.
Other countries around the world took the opposite position, the position that the United States takes today, one that entails strict governmental control over who enters the country.
The United States of Americas system of open immigration lasted for more than 100 years. It is impossible to estimate the number of refugees whose lives were saved because of it. I would venture to say that many Americans today are alive because of that 100-year policy of open immigration.
That is why the French gave the United States the Statue of Liberty - to honor the United States of America for its radical policy of open immigration.
That is not to say there was not prejudice against many of the immigrants.
Italians. Germans. Irish. Poles. And more. They all suffered the insults and mistreatment from United States of Americans who felt that they were polluting American culture with their foreign languages, customs, traditions, and beliefs.
Despite the prejudice, however, the policy of open immigration remained in existence.
By the 1930s, all that had changed. By that time, the United States had adopted a policy of government-controlled immigration.
Moreover, in the 1930s the Hitler regime rose to power in Germany and immediately made it clear that Jews were no longer welcome in Germany.
What many people do not realize, however, is that Hitler did not immediately begin killing Jews. The Holocaust would not come until the middle of World War II.
In the 1930s, Hitlers message to German Jews was: Leave because we do not want you here. And he was willing to let them go instead of killing them.
There was one big problem however: Officials around the world were as prejudiced against Jews as Hitler was. No government wanted them. That included the regime of Franklin Roosevelt, who had become president of the United States in 1932.
Remember: Under the United States of Americas founding system of open immigration, Jewish refugees from Germany would have been free to enter the United States without needing governmental permission.
Now, under the United States of Americas new system of government-controlled borders, they needed that permission before they could come in.
Roosevelt refused to give the needed permission. He pointed out that under the United States of Americas new system of government-controlled immigration, which mirrored the immigration policy of all other countries in the world, the United States of America had a "quota system," one that assigned a certain number of Germans who could enter the United States on an annual basis. The German Jews would just have to follow the law, stand in line, and wait for their number to be called as part of the annual quota assigned to Germany.
That meant, of course, that Germanys Jews had to remain in Germany, where most of them would later be murdered in the Holocaust.
If no country is willing to accept refugees from tyranny and oppression, it stands the reason that the victims must simply stay where they are and die.
One of the biggest horror stories of President Roosevelts regime and the United States of Americas system of immigration controls occurred with respect to what has gone down in history as the "Voyage of the Damned".
A ship named the MS St. Louis containing 937 Jewish refugees from Germany approach Miami Harbor in 1939, shortly before the outbreak of World War II.
The Roosevelt regime said no. Like President Trumps policy toward Central American refugees, not one single Jew would be permitted to land in the United States.
To make sure that no one jumped ship and make it into the United States, President Roosevelt had the United States Coast Guard surround the ship and be prepared to capture and return to the ship any Jew who dared to break United States immigration law.
Given that all other governments around the world took the same position, the ship captain had no choice but to turn the ship back toward Germany to return the Jewish refugees into Hitlers clutches.
Remember: This is what happens when no nation has an open-immigration policy - refugees who are escaping tyranny, oppression, or starvation are returned to their country of origin to die.
At the last minute, some of the European countries agreed to take the refugees. Those who were accepted by countries on the European continent ended up dying anyway once Hitler successfully invaded France.
But at least President Roosevelt, like President Trump, had succeeded in enforcing the United States of Americas system of immigration controls.
Printed here with permission from Mr. Jacob G. Hornberger of The Future of Freedom Foundation!! Their Great Website!!