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Old 05-22-2010, 09:12 PM
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Jeanfromfillmore Jeanfromfillmore is offline
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Originally Posted by rs232c View Post
This phrase has confused me for years. I had always believed that we were a nation of citizens not of immigrants.

As for myself I am a sixth generation American and my siblings children the seventh. At what point do we become citizens and no longer immigrants?

I can't see it to mean 'America is a nation built by immigrants' because I recall the study that said 83% of our country was built by citizens and 14% non-citizens.

I have a problem understanding that 'America is a nation that was born of immigrants, therefore we have always come from immigrants, and will always be of immigrants', because the same would be true for the Indian population, which I understand still have soverign nations and are all citizens at birth now anyway.

And last it certainly doesn't make any sense to me to be a citizen in a nation of immigrants, that just doesn't seem to mean anything at all. In my understanding it is valid to be a citizen and 'used to be an immigrant' in a nation of citizens, but not both concurrently.

In my pea-sized brain the only thing that does make sense to me is that it is a policitally correct phrase that defines the status of immigrant and the status of citizenship to be one in the same and indistingusihable.

Are they?
I agree with you 100%. The phrase "nation of immigrants" belittles all the that the citizens have in this country and have invested to make it so, as though someone who has just arrived is equal to someone who created Mount Rushmore, or designed the Chrysler Building. Americans invested in what is America, and immigrants aren't truly Americans until they consider they are Americans in their hearts. There's a difference today, a big difference.

Last edited by Jeanfromfillmore; 05-23-2010 at 11:19 AM.
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