Winstonm, on 2016-January-12, 14:15, said:
Obviously, the original inhabitants of the land now held by the U.S. were separated by tribes - Choctaws, Cherokee, Apache, etc. The modern U.S. has less tribalism I think due to the concept of immigrants wishing to leave past tribal allegiances for perceived increased opportunities in the U.S. Many Italian immigrants, for example, would not allow their children to learn to speak Italian.
That attitude of immigrants seems to have changed. Perhaps that is due to increased tribalism within the U.S. Chicken or the egg type of debate.
I suppose somewhere sometime someone has written a book titled
The history of immigration in the United States, or some such title. It probably should be assigned reading in every high school.
My father, I am sure, was representative of many. He would not talk about it. "My childhood was hell". End of conversation. I have tried tracking it now that we have so much data accessible. Basically I have struck out. I am not up for paying a researcher big bucks since, Faulkner to the contrary, the past is past. But surely there are some fascinating stories.
I think that the fundamental change in immigration is the purpose. Whatever it may say on the Statue of Liberty, immigration policy in my father's time (he arrived in 1910) was based on a need for immigrants. Often the focus now is much more on the plight of those seeking entrance. At least at the low skills end of the spectrum. It has always been a mix of purpose, but I think that top billing has changed. This is a major change of viewpoint.