

Communities like mine, in small-town Michigan, are told to blame immigrants when unchecked capitalism hurts us. We don’t buy it.

By Sarah Schulz
Midland, Michigan, where my husband and I are raising our two young children, is a small town surrounded by rural communities. Many of us living here have seen, generation-by-generation, that weโre falling behind.
Our anxiety is real, but we wholeheartedly reject attempts by those in power to blame immigrant families who have their own struggles, or to suggest that a made up โnational emergencyโ is any kind of solution. We know better.
One of my friends and her husband both work full time and each have separate health insurance through their jobs โ but their three children arenโt insured. Their income is too high for the kids to qualify for the MIChild insurance the state offers children of working families. But their income isnโt high enough to allow them buy coverage independently.
Their third child was born just a few months ago. She doesnโt have paid maternity leave, so even though she shouldโve recovered at least six weeks after a necessary C-section, she went back to work after three weeks.
โWe shouldnโt have to just get by each month,โ she said to me. โWe should be able to get ahead like our parents did. But we canโt, and now we are just kinda living here โ where one unplanned $20 expense means you canโt buy groceries, and youโve lost hope of ever paying your bills.โ
Her family is falling through the cracks. Like so many Michigan small town and rural families, theyโre working hard, doing all the right things, and just barely getting by. Forty percent of our households in Michigan struggle to afford the basic necessities, like housing, food, and health care.
In situations of growing desperation, itโs natural to want to blame someone or some group of people, especially when our loudest leaders are constantly presenting us with an enemy to focus on. Weโve been inundated with messages in the last three years inciting us to blame immigrants for all our troubles, whether itโs lack of jobs or the cost of health care.
Baloney. We all know that our system of unchecked capitalism is to blame.
Too many profitable companies donโt insure their employees or their families. Mega-corporations like Amazon pull in billions โ and pay no federal income taxes โ while their workers go on food stamps. Others, like General Motors, take tax huge tax breaks only to ship thousands of jobs overseas.
My small-town Michigan neighbors understand that other people, struggling just as we are, arenโt the ones to blame for these harms.
As parents, we share the impossible agony of the mom at the southern border forced to return to her country of origin without her 5-year-old child. As neighbors, we recognize our immigrant friends attending church, school meetings, and soccer practices beside us.
These one-on-one interactions prove over and over that we all desire the same security, stability, and community. We all have the same love for our families, and hopes for a better future.
The mantra of โimmigrants are taking our jobsโ comes from people with virtually no first-hand knowledge of any immigrant taking the job of any citizen we know. The jobs held by immigrants are often either the low-skilled jobs that U.S. citizens often donโt take, or high-education jobs in our science labs, hospitals, and engineering firms that similarly benefit us all.
Up here, weโre the first to see through the fallacy of walls as we look across our lakes and rivers to Canada. Thereโs no talk on this border of a permanent concrete wall to stand as a forever monument to xenophobia and the ego of our current leaders.
We know at heart thereโs only one reason โ sheer racism โ that weโre asked to believe the need for a wall on one border is an emergency, while thereโs no talk of one on the other border at all.
Powerful people stoke this racism and fear to keep the poor at each otherโs throats. That kind of thinking isnโt our way and shouldnโt be welcome in our communities, our state, or our nation.
Originally published by OtherWords, 02.20.2019, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative 3.0 license.


