Here is a sample from George Lakoff's essay titled The Framing of Immigration:
Framing is at the center of the recent immigration debate. Simply framing it as about “immigration†has shaped its politics, defining what count as “problems†and constraining the debate to a narrow set of issues. The language is telling. The linguistic framing is remarkable: frames for illegal immigrant, illegal alien, illegals, undocumented workers, undocumented immigrants, guest workers, temporary workers, amnesty, and border security. These linguistic expressions are anything but neutral. Each framing defines the problem in its own way, and hence constrains the solutions needed to address that problem ... Our point is to show that the relevant issues go far beyond what is being discussed, and that acceptance of the current framing impoverishes the discussion.
...Perhaps the problem might be better understood as a humanitarian crisis. Can the mass migration and displacement of people from their homelands at a rate of 800,000 people a year be understood as anything else? Unknown numbers of people have died trekking through the extreme conditions of the Arizona and New Mexico desert. Towns are being depopulated and ways of life lost in rural Mexico. Fathers feel forced to leave their families in their best attempt to provide for their kids. Everyday, boatloads of people arrive on our shores after miserable journeys at sea in deplorable conditions.As a humanitarian crisis, the solution could involve The UN or the Organization of American States. But these bodies do not have roles in the immigration frame, so they have no place in an “immigration debate.†Framing this as just an “immigration problem†prevents us from penetrating deeper into the issue.The current situation can also be seen as a civil rights problem. The millions of people living here who crossed illegally are for most intents and purposes Americans. They work here. They pay taxes here. Their kids are in school here. They plan to raise their families here. For the most part, they are assimilated into the American system, but are forced to live underground and in the shadows because of their legal status. They are denied ordinary civil rights. The “immigration problem†framing overlooks their basic human dignity.
To read more, go to:
www.rockridgeinstitute.org/research/rockridge/immigration
Anyone that would like to support The Economic Refugee Project in any shape or form. This Project is currently collecting pictures that demonstrate who immigrants truly are: from the workers in restaurants to the people in media to the brave soldiers/marines/sailors/airmen in the U.S. Military. Oftentimes immigrants are portrayed in a sub-human light on the radio, TV, newspapers, and daily conversation. Furthermore, the maninstream media hardly covers the images of all those hard-working Economic Refugee individuals that work so diligently to make the United States great. So please send your pictures to: [email protected] so we can put them up on this MySpace page on a slideshow for everyone to see the faces of who Economic Refugees are and what we contribute to this country. Especially needed are pictures of those individuals of Latino origin that have either served or are currently serving in the U.S. Military. Please also send any pictures, written composition, or link to a video that shows the Economic Refugee term being used so it can be put up on this MySpace and on future websites as well.
A Day Without a Mexican, Fast Food Nation, The Motorcycle Diaries.
"Che" Guevara, Simon Bolivar, Cesar Chavez.