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How guest worker visas could transform the US immigration system

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    By October 2018,
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    Juan Carlos Rivera could no longer afford
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    to live in his home in Copan, Honduras.
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    As the "Dallas Morning News" reported,
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    a gang was taking 10 percent
    of his earnings from his barber shop.
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    His wife was assaulted
    going to her pre-K teaching job.
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    And they were concerned
    about the safety of their young daughter.
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    What could they do?
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    Run away?
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    Seek asylum in another country?
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    They didn't want to do that.
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    They just wanted to live
    in their country safely.
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    But their options were limited.
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    So that month,
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    Juan Carlos moved his family
    to a safer location
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    while he joined a group of migrants
    on the long and perilous journey
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    from Central America
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    to a job a family member said
    was open for him in the United States.
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    By now we're all familiar
    with what awaited them
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    at the US-Mexico border.
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    The harsher and harsher penalties
    doled out to those crossing there.
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    The criminal prosecutions
    for crossing illegally.
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    The inhumane detention.
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    And most terribly,
    the separation of families.
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    I'm here to tell you
    that not only is this treatment wrong,
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    it's unnecessary.
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    This belief that the only way
    to maintain order
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    is with inhumane means
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    is inaccurate.
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    And in fact, the opposite is true.
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    Only a humane system
    will create order at the border.
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    When safe, orderly, legal travel
    to the United States is available,
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    very few people choose
    travel that is unsafe,
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    disorderly or illegal.
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    Now, I appreciate the idea
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    that legal immigration
    could just resolve the border crisis
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    might sound a bit fanciful.
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    But here is the good news:
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    We have done this before.
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    I've been working on immigration for years
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    at the Cato Institute,
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    and other think tanks in Washington DC,
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    and as the senior policy adviser
    for a republican member of Congress,
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    negotiating bipartisan immigration reform.
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    And I've seen firsthand
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    how America has implemented
    a system of humane order at the border
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    for Mexico.
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    It's called a guest worker program.
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    And here's the even better news.
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    We can replicate this success
    for Central America.
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    Of course, some people
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    will still need to seek
    asylum at the border.
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    But to understand how successful
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    this could be for immigrants
    like Juan Carlos,
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    understand that until recently,
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    nearly every immigrant arrested
    by Border Patrol was Mexican.
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    In 1986,
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    each Border Patrol agent
    arrested 510 Mexicans.
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    Well over one per day.
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    By 2019, this number was just eight.
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    That's one every 43 days.
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    It is a 98 percent reduction.
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    So where have all the Mexicans gone?
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    The most significant change
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    is that the US began issuing
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    hundreds of thousands
    of guest worker visas to Mexicans,
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    so that they can come legally.
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    José Vásquez Cabrera was among
    the first Mexican guest workers
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    to take advantage of this visa expansion.
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    He told "The New York Times"
    that before his visa
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    he'd made terrifying
    illegal border crossings,
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    braving near deadly heat
    and the treachery of the landscape.
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    One time, a snake killed
    a member of his group.
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    Thousands of other Mexicans
    also didn't make it,
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    dying of dehydration in the deserts
    or drowning in the Rio Grande.
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    Millions more were
    chased down and arrested.
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    Guest worker visas have nearly ended
    this inhumane chaos.
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    As Vásquez Cabrera put it,
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    "I no longer have to risk my life
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    to support my family.
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    And when I'm here,
    I don't have to live in hiding."
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    Guest worker visas actually reduced
    the number of illegal crossings
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    more than the number of visas issued.
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    Jose Bacilio, another
    Mexican guest worker, explained why
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    to the "Washington Post" in April.
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    He said, even though
    he hadn't received a visa this year,
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    he wouldn't risk all of his future chances
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    by crossing illegally.
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    This likely helps explain why
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    from 1996 to 2019
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    for every guest worker
    admitted legally from Mexico,
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    there was a decline in two arrests
    of Mexicans crossing illegally.
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    Now, it's true,
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    Mexican guest workers
    do some really tough jobs.
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    Picking fruit, cleaning crabs,
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    landscaping in a 100-degree heat.
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    And some critics maintain
    that guest worker visas
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    are not actually humane,
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    and that the workers
    are just abused slaves.
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    But Vásquez Cabrera thought
    a guest worker visa was liberating.
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    Not enslavement.
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    And he, like nearly
    all other guest workers,
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    chose the legal path
    over the illegal one, repeatedly.
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    The expansion of guest worker
    visas to Mexicans
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    has been among the most
    significant humane changes
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    in US immigration policy ever.
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    And that humane change
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    imposed order on chaos.
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    So where does this leave
    Central Americans,
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    like Juan Carlos?
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    Well, Central Americans received
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    just three percent of the guest worker
    visas issued in 2019,
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    even as their share of border arrests
    has risen to 74 percent.
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    The US issued just one guest worker visa
    to a Central American
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    for every 78 who crossed
    the border illegally in 2019.
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    So if they can't get their papers at home,
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    many take their chances,
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    coming up through Mexico
    to claim asylum at the border
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    or cross illegally,
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    even if, like Juan Carlos,
    they prefer to come to work.
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    The US can do better.
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    It needs to create new guest worker visas
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    specifically for Central Americans.
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    This would create an incentive
    for US businesses
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    to seek out and hire Central Americans,
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    paying for their flights
    to the United States,
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    and diverting them from the illegal,
    dangerous trek north.
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    Central Americans could build
    flourishing lives at home,
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    without the need to seek
    asylum at the border
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    or cross illegally,
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    freeing up an overwhelmed system.
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    Some people might say
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    that letting the workers go back and forth
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    will never work in Central America
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    where violence is so high.
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    But again, it worked in Mexico,
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    even as Mexico's murder rate
    more than tripled over the last decade,
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    to a level higher
    than much of Central America.
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    And it would work for Juan Carlos,
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    who said, despite the threats
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    he only wants to live
    in the United States temporarily,
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    to make enough money
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    to sustain his family in their new home.
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    He even suggested
    that a guest worker program
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    would be one of the best things
    to help Hondurans like him.
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    Santia, a 29-year-old
    single mother of three from Honduras,
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    seems to agree.
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    She told the "Wall Street Journal"
    that she came for a job
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    to support her kids and her mom.
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    Surveys of Central Americans
    traveling through Mexico,
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    by the College of the Northern
    Border in Mexico,
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    confirm that Juan and Santia are the norm.
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    Most, not all, but most do come for jobs,
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    even if, like the Riveras,
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    they may also face
    some real threats at home.
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    How much would a low-wage job help
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    a Honduran, like Juan or Santia?
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    Hondurans like them make as much
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    in one month in the United States
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    as they do in an entire year
    working in Honduras.
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    A few years' work in the United States
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    can propel a Central American
    into its upper middle class
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    where safety is easier to come by.
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    What Central Americans lack
    is not the desire to work.
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    Not the desire to contribute
    to the US economy,
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    to contribute to the lives of Americans.
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    What Central Americans lack
    is a legal alternative to asylum.
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    To be able to do so legally.
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    Of course, a new guest worker program
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    will not resolve 100 percent
    of this complex phenomenon.
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    Many asylum seekers
    will still need to seek safety
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    at the US border.
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    But with the flows reduced,
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    we can more easily work out ways
    to deal with them humanely.
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    But ultimately,
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    no single policy has proven to do more
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    to create an immigration system
    that is both humane
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    and orderly
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    than to let the workers come legally.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
How guest worker visas could transform the US immigration system
Speaker:
David Bier
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
10:56

English subtitles

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