Avi Chomsky: There’s no such thing as an illegal person. A person can commit an illegal act, but we don’t call people who have stolen money or beaten up their wives “illegals.” It’s a term invented to criminalize those who have done nothing more than cross a geographical line.
The correct description: undocumented or unauthorized. And status can be in flux for each individual. Half the undocumented population has entered the United States legally, but then, in the most typical case, overstayed a visa. Others entered the country without inspection. Conversely, someone undocumented can gain status, for example, by being granted asylum.
The US population today consists largely of the descendants of people who came from somewhere else. Who had the freedom to come?
The US was conceived — and born and grew — as a white settler state and always controlled and curtailed the movement of people of color. Native peoples already here were forcibly moved and removed to make room for Europeans. And Africans were moved across the world against their will.
Citizenship rules reflect this design. The first Naturalization Act of 1790 specified that only “free White persons …of good character” could become citizens through naturalization. In fact, the US government actively recruited immigrants from Europe, offering them jobs as incentives.
In 1870, after the Civil War, lawmakers amended the Naturalization Act to include people of African descent newly emancipated from slavery, and the 14th Amendment gave citizenship to all those born in the US.
With that amendment, people of African descent had citizenship and its rights, at least by the letter of the law. What about other non-white immigrants already in the US?
Remember that Africans were not “immigrants” since they were transported to the US to be sold as commodities. The Nationality Act, after the 1870 amendment, still excluded Mexicans and Chinese, the other two largest non-white groups in the United States.