Sidewalks by Tom Deignan


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Sidewalks by Tom Deignan

The Irish cop behind Arizona's anti-immigrant law

Posted on Wednesday, May 05, 2010 at 09:05 AM

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Arizona lawmaker John Kavanagh -- who was actually born in Queens -- was recently challenged by a protester.

Kavanagh, a former Port Authority police officer, was a major force behind the controversial law which allows Arizona police officers to question people who might be in the U.S. illegally.

Quite a few folks believe this is a law which, at best, makes racial or ethnic profiling legal and, at worst, is anti-immigrant.

So, a protester asked Kavanagh, where did your people come from?

Ireland and Germany,” Kavanagh was quoted as saying. “But legally.”

Perhaps a deeper, follow-up question was in order -- should Irish Americans who have been in the U.S. several generations (such as John Kavanagh) sympathize with current immigrants?

This leads us to a dirty little secret among a sizeable number of Irish Americans. For decades, many have embraced their own immigrant ties while sneering at more recent immigrants.

Is this a majority of Irish Americans? Probably not. And they should not make us forget the passionate Irish Americans who work tirelessly to make sure a new generation of immigrants enjoys the same access to opportunity that earlier immigrants had.

However, for many Irish Americans, it’s not hard to find an uncle or cousin or aunt who has particularly passionate opposition to America’s current immigration situation.

If you’re lucky enough, you might here an anti-immigrant rant at, say, a St. Patrick’s Day party. Which will get your head spinning faster than Jameson.

One line of reasoning you often hear is similar to the argument made by Kavanagh. The past waves of Irish came here legally, whereas so many of today’s immigrants -- including those targeted by the controversial

Arizona law -- are here illegally.

Well, it’s not hard to oppose illegal immigration. Of course, you might argue that if the immigration system were comprehensively overhauled, we might not have so many illegal immigrants in this country right now.

But back to the Irish, there is this problem -- the deeper into the past you go, it’s harder and harder to say who, exactly was legal and who was not.

Even if your grandparents proudly displayed their Ellis Island papers on their living room wall next to their portrait of JFK, who’s to say there wasn’t an uncle or cousin or aunt somewhere who might have entered through the back door? Or, for that matter, who simply jumped the (Canadian) border?

America, after all, didn’t have any sort of national immigration policy until the 1870s. Incidentally, one of the first national directives was to limit the number of Chinese laborers coming to the West.

Why? Well, for one thing, the Chinese were taking a lot of jobs that Irish immigrants had been performing.

A cynic might say that Kavanagh and those anti-Chinese Irish laborers share a motto, “I got mine, you get yours. Somewhere else!”

But the immigration debate is already rife with cynicism. Irish Americans such as Kavanagh make arguments about not only the legality of current immigrants, but the crime which they supposedly spur.

Again, no group was seen as more congenitally criminal than the Irish. But that’s the past.

Today, we have laws that deal with criminals no matter where they come from. And, just as an Irish criminal was likely to be arrested by a police officer named Flanagan or O’Shaughnessy, an immigrant suspect in Arizona today should not be surprised if he is booked by a cop named Garcia or Gonzalez.

So what’s the deal? Are the Irish and Mexicans inclined to criminality or law enforcement?

To answer an earlier question -- I think today’s Irish Americans should see today’s immigrants as the latest arrivals in a long line of folks simply seeking better lives. The Irish should, indeed, have sympathy for today’s immigrants.

No, of course not the criminals or the terrorists. But then again, what would the Irish know about criminals or terrorists?



(Contact tomdeignan@earthlink.net or facebook.com/tomdeignan)


67 comments

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Name a racist or hypocritical thing I've said, ritmomente. Name a single, solitary thing.
The Trojan Horse being used by the Irish illegals to gain citizenship is a transparent ploy. They think giving 12 million illegals US citizenship is a fair trade off for their citizenship(50K of them). Sell us right down the road to get what they want....We don't need anymore new citizens like that. Get in line and come in legally.
I'm not the minority nor the hard left. I see the human rights and financial benefit of documenting the undocumented. Myself, with the Irish Lobby for Immigration Reform feel as though there are better, more economical ways than having to deport 12,000,000 people. I just take offense to racist remarks and hypocracy by someone who calls himself Irish.
Well MAYBE I'm offering another viewpoint besides the tiny-minority, hard-left dribble that some of these drips passing for Irish people write. I'm clearly irritating you (good!), and if you don't like dissent, perhaps you should move to Cuba or Venezuela. And no illegal 'stole' my job. Part of my work involves janitorial stuff...you know, the kind of thing people like you think only illegals will do because Americans won't. And I was doing it even BEFORE the Obama economy screwed us over.
Irishandproud, you have waaaaaay too much time on your hands. What happened? Did an illegal immigrant steal your job? Lol. Why do you frequent this site if you continually insult the writers and disagree with the articles??
You can't simply just push them out.
After you've pushed the 12,000,000 towards either a guest worker program or on the path to citizenship. Fix the broken law.
Seal all of our borders. Enforce all of our immigration laws. Use e-verify for all employees, so that the only ones working in the US are its legal citizens. Emergency healthcare to all that need it, but non US citizens to be sent home.
The "free education" and "free healthcare" is because of broken laws. The boder is broken because no administration has yet to fix them. Fix the laws. Enact comprehensive immigration reform.
No Monsoonman, you are a racist. There are a few problems with your statement about pulling the race card. 1) I am of Irish descent and was born in this country. 2) I have repeated ILIR's proposition for comprehensive immigration reform. 3) You have produced no viable solution except for wholesale deportation of what you call vermin. 4) Your language suggests that because they are swimming over or running across the desert, they are subhuman. Your statements are purely racist.
I hate to break the news to you ritmonte, but you have lost all of your racist arguments. You are like Monty Pythons Black Knight who defended the bridge to his last limb, but bouncing around on his stumps, didn't know he had been trounced.
Irishandproud you are not pro-life at all. Pro-life means from conception to natural death. You can't just sit in your high tower and laugh while Mexicans die in the desert. If you fix the broken law, it will be easier to fix the broken fence. The cleaners called...your and Monsoonman's white hoods are ready.
You've heard of the UN oil for food program? How about oil for illegals? Mexico pays us a barrel of oil per day for every illegal Mexican in our country, sounds fair to me....and it still doesn't buy them citizenship, just helps defray expenses while they are here.Same thing with Iraq, they should be paying us for getting rid of their dicktater saddam hussein, the bill is due, start sending us oil.
The illegals are breaking our laws! What about the word Illegal that you don't under stand??? The illegals receive free medical care, a free education, welfare, all at the expense of the American tax payer If we complain we are called racist America can no longer afford to give Mexico a free ride!
And again, NO, ritmomente...it is NOT 'hate speech' (or 'tragically misguided') to say an illegal should be deported. And btw...being pro-life (which I am) does NOT mean allowing illegals to overrun the country, because we don't want them dying in the desert (which THEY CHOSE to cross). I would be all for giving them food, water and air conditioning...on the bus and/or plane back to Mexico (or Guatemala, or wherever).
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