"People see their lies and we will rise
Because you might stop a single man
But you can't stop the tide."
Water seeks its own level.
Gravity persists, and humans can build a bridge using arches because we don't defy gravity. We work with it. Sometimes we resist the inevitable. At some point the Mississippi will find its new, shorter and steeper path to the Gulf and New Orleans and Baton Rouge will be left high and dry.
There is a bigger picture way to perceive this. This is just a moment in the great tide of migration into what is now the United States, a process going on for 13,000 years, accelerated in the last 400 years, and it is as powerful and inevitable as the Mississippi and gravity. The only way to stop it is to make life in the United States more miserable than life everywhere else--a bad option.
Are we building levies or are we building an arch?
As this blog reported yesterday, we have opportunity here. Employers need workers, now, and are eager to pay them. This is an irresistible force.
Rick Millward is a close observer of the American political landscape. He is also a music producer, singer, and songwriter, living in Medford, Oregon. He performs regularly at local wineries. He produces singer-songwriter showcases, with an upcoming one at RoxyAnn Winery in Medford at 3:00 p.m. on Sunday, October 27.
Guest Post by Rick Millward
"You're either runnin to somethin'
Or running from somethin'"
Song: Running like me, by Rick Millward
"We should stop calling it immigration and tell it like it is. This is migration: the movement of people to a new area or country in order to find work or better living conditions.
Humans are no different from any other species on the planet in this regard.
Immigration acknowledges this by creating a legal framework to accommodate migrants.
America was settled by Europeans who migrated for the same reasons; economic, religious, political, and that continues to this day. As long as there is some hope of a better life this society will attract those who have the courage and fortitude to make the journey.
We should welcome them. We need them. Instead Regressives would rather turn the country into a place no one would want to come. No migration problems in Russia, China and North Korea.
We should also acknowledge that Latin America, due in a large extent to climate change, is increasingly becoming uninhabitable which is one of the drivers of migration. It's not going to get any better until the industrialized World starts taking steps to decrease CO2 emissions. The United States could lead this effort to combat an existential threat that is far greater than migration."