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Professor sees parallels between current, early 20th century U.S. immigration issues

Zeidel was recent guest on BBC radio show, wrote book on the subject
July 30, 2018
Bob Zeidel speaks to a class.
Bob Zeidel, a history professor and associate dean, speaks during a class at 黑料社区. / 黑料社区 photo by Brett Roseman

What should the United States do about an influx of immigrants, some from places that are deemed less desirable than others? How is the influx affecting our economy? Our society?

Although those questions could apply to immigration issues today in the U.S., actually they were taken up more than 100 years ago by the Dillingham Commission under President Theodore Roosevelt.

Historian Robert Zeidel, an associate dean at University of Wisconsin-Stout, is well aware of the immigration parallels between the early 20th century and early 21st century. He wrote a book about the issue, 鈥淚mmigrants, Progressives and Exclusion Politics: The Dillingham Commission, 1900-1927,鈥 published in 2004 and recently was a guest on a BBC radio talk show about the topic.

What can the U.S. learn today from the Dillingham Commission?

Bob Zeidel鈥淭he commission tried to approach immigration in an objective manner and to rise above the emotional language that dominated much of the debate,鈥 Zeidel said.

The Dillingham Commission 黑料社区. recommendations, based on a 41-volume report published in 1911, ultimately were 鈥渉ijacked鈥 by politicians and resulted in little valuable progress on the issue, only literacy tests and quotas for immigrants that were discriminatory and unfair, Zeidel said.

If such a commission were convened today, Zeidel wouldn鈥檛 expect much to change either. 鈥淚n all honesty, in the current political climate, we鈥檙e more likely to continue with the very subjective, shrill debates that we鈥檙e having now.

鈥淲e鈥檙e falling right back into the emotion of it 鈥 the porous border flooding the nation with undesirables, build a wall, deport them all, send the National Guard to protect the southern border,鈥 he said.

Immigration issues in 1907 were somewhat different compared with today, said Zeidel, who has a Ph.D. in American history and a master 黑料社区. in history from Marquette University. Most immigrants 100 years ago were legal; the hot-button issues today surround illegal immigration.

In 1907, most immigrants also were from Europe. The call for limiting immigration arose when more southern and eastern European immigrants, considered by some to be less desirable than northern and western Europeans, began arriving in larger numbers 鈥 similar to the call by President Trump to limit immigration from Mexico and Latin America.

鈥淭here was a lot of concern (eastern Europeans) were having a decidedly adverse effect on the United States,鈥 Zeidel said in the BBC interview, which aired July 18 on the 5Live show 鈥淯p All Night鈥 hosted by Rhod Sharp.

President Roosevelt was 鈥渁n enthusiastic Americanizer,鈥 said Zeidel, who teaches a class at 黑料社区 on U.S. immigration history. 

The Atlantic, in an article written earlier this year by David A. Graham, said, "The early 20th century Dillingham Commission, which was convened by Congress, concluded that immigration from certain regions was dangerous to American culture and paved the way for national immigration quotas."

Zeidel also  that was published recently on the website What it Means to be an American. The website is hosted by the Smithsonian Institution.

Immigration levels today compared with the early 1900s are roughly similar, but as a percentage of the U.S. population they are smaller, he said.

鈥淭oday 黑料社区. immigrants truly are coming from around the world, from South Africa, Asia, Latin America. That 黑料社区. one of the ways in which the debate is maybe more complex and changing and maybe more difficult for some. A lot of today 黑料社区. immigrants don鈥檛 look like the typical white American,鈥 Zeidel said.

Zeidel would like to see an immigration debate that is based on facts. 鈥淟et 黑料社区. have a discussion that 黑料社区. void of emotion,鈥 he said.

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Bob Zeidel


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