Open books, open borders
While vigilance is required in our post-9/11 society, we must be
careful to not swing the pendulum of security in the direction of
absurd extremes. A modicum of common sense should inform our
reactions to individuals who enter and live in our country. Of
course, bureaucracies often intrude and apply ludicrous standards.
While any ties to terrorism must elicit a swift and appropriate
response, concocting artificial determinants to curtail residency do
not speak well of America. Surrender to a siege mentality, blindly
treating all foreigners as potential terrorists, and the building of
a fortress America are ineffective and unrealistic responses to the
dangers we face.
The American Immigration Law Foundation counsels: “Policies and
practices that fail to properly distinguish between terrorists and
legitimate foreign travelers are ineffective security tools that
waste limited resources, damage the U.S. economy, alienate those
groups whose cooperation the U.S. government needs to prevent
terrorism and foster a false sense of security by promoting the
illusion that we are reducing the threat of terrorism.”
America’s ability to thwart further terrorist assaults must depend
on correcting failures of intelligence. If the government casts too
wide a security net over the entire foreign-born population, rather
than actually identifying terrorists, we will not have enhanced our
security. In the process, we will forfeit various principles and
liberties that are hallmarks of our country.
Yes, we must suppress threats of domestic terrorism and must adapt
to a heightened state of alert. But overreaction may produce more
harm than good. We should be measured and responsible and not yield
to the temptation of jumping to unwarranted conclusions. All we may
achieve through radical responses is the perception of greater
security, without the reality of any substantive protection. The
consequences of the response may well exceed the power of the threat;
the treatment may be more injurious than the threat. One observer
wrote: “Even the most dramatic mobilization of capacities cannot
produce the total security most people desire. If the goal is the
complete elimination of a terrorist threat on American soil, even the
most draconian measures will fail.”
The times insist on urgent measures, and yet we ought not be
panicked into overblown defenses. The creation of a garrison state is
disproportional to the peril. As Alexander Hamilton wrote in
Federalist No. 8: “The violent destruction of life and property
incident to war, the continual effort and alarm attendant on a state
of continual danger, will compel nations the most attached to liberty
to resort for repose and security to institutions which have a
tendency to destroy their civil and political rights. To be more
safe, they at length become willing to run the risk of becoming less
free.”
RABBI MARK S. MILLER
Temple Bat Yam
Newport Beach
I fail to understand why current visa and immigration laws should
apply differently to religious scholars than they do to everyone
else. I fail to understand how our U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
Services, a bureau of the Department of Homeland Security, formerly
known as INS, is qualified to evaluate who is and who is not a
religious scholar and/or what is and what is not a religious
institution.
I do understand that religious scholars/leaders do not receive the
respect, or have the status, they (we) once apparently enjoyed. Once
upon a time, I am told, persons easily identifiable as leaders in or
of faith communities were initially viewed positively as contributors
to American society as a whole. Such is no longer the case. When
wearing clerical (priestly, clergy) clothes in public, I have been
sneered and spit at, cursed and given obscene gestures. (To be fair,
I have also been smiled and waved at and spoken to kindly by people I
don’t know, just because they identified me as a priest/pastor by my
outfit.) Perhaps our current immigration processes reflect changed
predispositions.
I learned long ago not to travel in clerical garb as it inevitably
attracts both extra scrutiny and conversations. When traveling, I do
not identify myself as a “priest” because it draws negative responses
and requires excessive explanations especially when I am traveling
with my spouse and son, such as: “Yes, I am a ‘priest,’ an
Episcopalian/Anglican. We can marry and have children as well as be
ordained.” There are consequences of being a religious leader and/or
scholar. Some are easily understandable, some are not.
THE VERY REV. CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
St. Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Church
Corona del Mar
Universities and seminaries need to attract faculty from around
the world so that students may learn from well-qualified teachers,
benefit from international perspectives and be exposed to various
points of view. The real issue is whether our immigration laws are
good ones and whether they are applied fairly -- or if they are being
used as a political football. As politics and religion intermingle,
foreign theology professors may become unwelcome if they present
challenging perspectives.
After Pearl Harbor, many Americans of Japanese descent were forced
out of their homes and into internment camps in the name of “national
security.” This appalling chapter in our history has yet to be fully
acknowledged or remedied. “National security” was used by President
Richard Nixon to cover up Watergate. For some, the “war against
terrorism,” “the nation at war” and “homeland security” are
fear-inducing slogans that justify compromising or even abandoning
our freedoms.
We need increased public awareness of Islam and especially a
better understanding of its diversity. Muslim scholars should be
welcomed, as well as Pentecostal or any other religious teacher a
school chooses to hire to assist with preparing students to
understand the world in which we live. Unless the individual is
engaging in criminal activities, all points of view, ideologies,
religious and political beliefs, including radical or extreme ones,
should be regarded as free speech in the United States and should not
be used as the basis for denying visas or deporting faculty.
REV. DR. DEBORAH BARRETT
Zen Center of Orange County
Costa Mesa
There is a difference between sidestepping the law and the law
being irrationally practiced. No, a religious scholar should not be
able to sidestep immigration laws.
That being said, these two situations are different questions. The
government has legitimate terrorist concerns related to Tariq
Ramadan. However, in the case of Karkkainen, some caseworker has
decided he or she has a better understanding of correct doctrine than
Fuller Seminary. The government should never be in the business of
clarifying theology.
Fuller Seminary has a great vision of Christian unity, and dozens
of different yet Christian theological perspectives are taught and
debated, at the same time holding firm to basics of the faith. Thus,
a Pentecostal scholar from Finland is a welcome addition to the
faculty that also includes Evangelical Orthodox, Southern Baptists,
Korean Presbyterians and many others.
Whoever took on this case for the government has no understanding
of Christian theology and unity, nor should they. However, they
shouldn’t be making judgments with the assumption that they do.
SENIOR ASSOCIATE PASTOR
RIC OLSEN
Harbor Trinity
Costa Mesa
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