America at 250: immigration and the making of an innovative nation
The chairman of the Ellis Island Honors Society says we would do well to build an immigration system worthy of this legacy of immigration and innovation.
Opening excerpt (first ~120 words) tap to expand
Since America’s founding, legal immigration has been debated, enforced, contested, and redefined. It runs through our national story and will continue to do so as we pursue our nation’s second 250 years. As we consider today’s immigration policies, it would be wise to appreciate that this issue has historically stirred both aspiration and anxiety. It reflects our perpetual debate, grounded in the economic realities of a given era and the state of our nation’s political discourse during that time.Recommended Video As early as our colonial times, arriving religious sects were often spurned, even by those who worshipped the same God but in a different church. Immigrants from the Old World were often ostracized by countrymen whose families had arrived generations earlier.
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Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at Fortune.