Daily Kos

Immigration Hysteria on a Sunday Morning

Mon Jun 11, 2007 at 10:37:57 AM PDT

My wife and I are currently in the process of buying some additional life insurance.  Not a big deal or at least it shouldn't be.  Part of the process now-a-days to buy life insurance is take a medical exam, and the insurance companies actually make this part easy by sending a nurse-practitioner to the prospective client's home for administering the forms and lab work.

Yesterday, we had our home visit.  As part of the nurse's visit, she subjected me to some of the ugliest anti-immigration crap I've been personally subjected to.  

We had setup for a 9:00 AM Sunday morning appointment - inconvenient for us, but when the nurse-practitioner called to make the appointment, she explained she did Sunday appointments but not Saturday's or late weekday evenings.  She showed up essentially on time, but from there the visit went down-hill.  

The three of us sat at our dining room table.  The nurse interviewed my wife first. As normal I assisted with language issues and answered questions where my wife's language failed. After administering the questionnaire she drew my wife's blood sample.  At this point the woman had already explained she worked for dozens of insurance companies doing this type work, and was a licensed nurse-practitioner.  In the process of drawing blood, she did "something" with the needle and blood ran down my wife's arm, actually dripped on the tablecloth.  The nurse sort of apologized, with the explanation of "that usually didn't happen."

I had never seen or experienced this type incident with drawing a blood sample.  I was disturbed but passed it off as an accident.  Later, my wife told me the draw hurt, and showed me the mark on her arm. It was a tear, not a tiny mark as normal.

My wife left the table and the nurse started on my forms and exam.  As we progressed through the interview, the nurse asked where my wife was from.  She mentioned her sister-in-law was an immigrant from North Korea, who had taught their children the Korean language.  Then he started talking about her husband, a retired army ranger on 75% disability, and their children.  She went on to mention that her children could all speak several languages fluently, but not Spanish.  They all refused to learn Spanish, opting to learn Korean, Russian, French, and possibly a few others - I started losing the conversation.  When she proudly mentioned her children refusing to learn Spanish, she looked at me with this "significant, knowing" look.

Then the nurse started talking about illegal immigration.  She related how her 19 year old son had recently testified before Congress on the Immigration Bill.  She proudly described how her son had compared, in front of Congress, the need for Illegal Immigrants to work and care for their families as being comparable to prostitution.  The nurse repeated this several times, each time ending with the statement that the Immigration Bill had been defeated, as though her son's testimony was the cause of the bill's defeat.  The nurse also proudly described how a senator from Alabama approved of her son's comparison, how this senator had never himself though of comparing illegal immigrants with prostitutes.  

By now, I was feeling upset.  The part of me that believed in being a proper host to visitors kept me quiet.  

The nurse went on to make more comments that offended me.  She stated:

  • Illegal Hispanic immigrants were responsible for 60% of all crime in the US
  • Immigrants were spreading disease.  This nurse-practitioner claimed that tuberculosis, Spiral meningitis, and hepatitis were becoming rampant in our public schools due to immigrants.
  • She talked more about hepatitis, stating that people drank dirty water in their native country then brought the disease here to spread.
  • Immigrants caused schools to be overcrowded, providing inadequate educations Immigrants were using up all the welfare money, would cause social security to not be available to our children, and refused to pay their taxes.  

I was now angry but still trying to be a proper host.  I was also stunned by the statements this medical person was making and not sure how to react.  When she paused to momentarily breathe, I reminded her that it was employers who were not paying withholding taxes.  She ignored me.  I asked if the tuberculosis (TB) she was referring to was the penicillin-resistant variety.  She stated it was.  I asked this for a reason; Penicillin-resistant TB started showing up in the US in inner-city homeless people several years ago and has been spreading.  For a nurse to claim this type of TB was directly related to immigrants showed serious professional ignorance.  I wanted to make this point, but she immediately wound up again.

The nurse started talking about legal issues and the Department of Homeland Security.  I actually felt a need at this point to defend my wife's Immigration Status.  I had the though that this woman might actually file a DHS report on us.   I stated my wife and I had married in China and then had waited 20 months for my wife's visa to come through.   The nurse made the acknowledgement statement "So she IS here legally."  I repeated my statement "We waited 20 months for her visa, and a total of 39 months for her green card."  The nurse's comment "I know it's hard, but you have to follow the law."

Then the nurse talked about her sons going to Virginia Tech for a Homeland Security Degree and started winding down.  When she finished, she resumed the exam.  The nurse took my blood sample very smooth and almost pain-free, in direct contrast to how she took my wife's blood sample.  When she finished my exam she collected her papers then let herself out of our house without even giving me a chance to open the door for her.

The entire exam lasted about 30 minutes, but left me with a bitter, angry feeling that took many hours for me to even verbalize.  I felt violated by this nurse who entered the home my wife and I share to conduct a medical exam and then proceeded to politic on immigration and make hurtful, deceptive statements.  

It took several hours for me to be sure in my own mind that the nurse's comments were deliberately aimed at my wife and me, simply because the behavior was so far outside the norms I expect from a medical person.  The incident with my wife’s blood sample was the most disturbing.  After thinking all things though, I am convinced this nurse deliberately "twisted the needle" on my wife, to hurt her, simply because my wife is an immigrant.

This morning, after collecting my thoughts, I called the agent handling our insurance package and made my complaint.  The response was immediate and gratifying.  Our agent, whom I believe is also an immigrant, apologized profusely.  She promised to follow-up with the agency that sent the nurse over, and if the incident checked out would immediately sever all business ties with them.  Our agent firmly stated the nurse's were there to administer a medical checkup, not discuss politics or personal opinions.

From my personal experiences these past several months, I am beginning to feel frightened of the level of animosity here in Northern Virginia against people who are immigrants. I am feeling that anti-immigration sentiment is approaching the level of general hysteria.  When any issue is ramped up to hysteria levels people get hurt and even killed, lives are ruined, property destroyed.  This is an issue that deeply affects my wife and me, and I don't know how or when things might "boil over."

Tags: immigration, virginia, bigotry (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 18 comments

    •  I'm so sorry you and your wife had to endure the (3+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      tgray, debedb, BachFan

      questioning and the badly administered blood test.

      I hope you have a reputable agent who is offering you well-rated insurance coverage. Check Moody's for the rating on the insurance company to assure your family of the financial solidity of the insurer, because that really bad experience may be reflected in the quality of your coverage.

      This may not be directly connected to the insurer, as many use nurse-practitioners on a contract basis to do blood draws, but it bears looking into.

      If all do not join now to save the good old ship of the Union this voyage nobody will have a chance to pilot her on another voyage. Abraham Lincoln

      by 4Freedom on Mon Jun 11, 2007 at 10:44:48 AM PDT

      [ Parent ]

    •  Way out of line (0+ / 0-)

      I'm glad the insurance company took action though.

  •  OTH, for the nurse... it's hard to draw blood (13+ / 0-)

    with a white sheet over your head.

    They really ought to make those eyeholes bigger for that kind of work.

    Geezus, I hope you got her fired.

  •  Thank you for calling and complaining. (6+ / 0-)

    She had no right to be so unprofessional and intentionally hurt your wife.  Makes me sick and furious.  I am working on a degree in Social Work, and am very proud to be taking spanish all summer long.  It seems perfectly natural to want to learn the language so many of our neighbors, and immigrants, speak.  For about a year I have worried about this mass hysteria, and what will come of it.  Please give your wife a kiss and hug for me.  I am so happy she is here and has you to look out for her. Maybe I will try to learn some Chinese eventually, although it looks very difficult.  Blessings to you both.

    "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." ~ Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

    by godislove on Mon Jun 11, 2007 at 10:55:18 AM PDT

    •  Thank You For This... (6+ / 0-)

      ...it was a struggle for me to decide to complain, but now that I've made the choice, I'm going to follow through.  If my verbal complaint gets nowhere, I'm going to follow up with a written.

      For the way the nurse administered the blood test on top of her BS comments, I do belive she should be fired.

      •  I hope you did write a letter, (0+ / 0-)

        and something is done.  This diary really got to me.  People like that have to be stopped, they should not go into the medical profession if they cannot treat everyone with kindness and compassion and keep their opinions, political, religious, whatever, to themselves.  Imagine how she would treat a hispanic family.  Horrible.  I hope you both had a much better day, even though it was Monday ...

        "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." ~ Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

        by godislove on Mon Jun 11, 2007 at 07:08:55 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

  •  You and your wife have my sympathy (5+ / 0-)

    However, I have to tell you that if your wife was latina, it would probably be worse.  Fortunately we have avoided dealing with racist medical personnel, but there are plenty of other anti-immigrant assholes out there that are willing to mouth off about Mexicans without realizing my wife is from Mexico.

  •  good for you! (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    redtravelmaster

    your wife is lucky to have you. As I read this diary, with a lump in my throat, I couldn't help but wonder about those immigrants who have no one to protect them from this hatred.

  •  Host? (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    greenchiledem

    This was a business transaction. You were not a gracious host, you're a paying customer. The transaction would have been over right there with me.

  •  Speak up Next Time (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Halcyon

    I've lived in the heart of a Republican stronghold my entire life and have found that sort of bigot thrives on people who are too polite.

    May I suggest you stop being so worried about offending those who spout that nonsense and start speaking up?

    Challenge people when they try to peddle that junk. That's the only way things are going to change in this country. Silence is the face of intolerance helps to perpetuate the problem and makes the silent dissenter an enabler of the wrong.

  •  sounds like normal conversation here in Dallas (0+ / 0-)

    Texas..

    sometimes it seems like i am surrounded by racist bigots.

    Don't fight it son. Confess quickly! If you hold out too long you could jeopardize your credit rating. --Brazil (1985)

    by hypersphere01 on Mon Jun 11, 2007 at 11:57:20 AM PDT

    •  Why didn't you just kick her out??? (1+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      theran

      Someone in my house would get kicked out dramatically at the first sign they were going pull that crap. (I may have excused the stabbing as an honest mistake... but not after the racist crap started).

      I am from Massachusetts and sometimes our directness is interpreted as rudeness.

      But this is one of those time when politeness is a vice.

      I hope you are writing the appropriate letters to anyone who has can reconcile the situation.

      If it were me... I would be cancel this policy unless they did something dramatic to resolve this. I think that even most people on the other side of the immigration issue know enough to understand that this is way beyond civilized behavior.

      I would be out for blood on this one.

      •  That was part of what I had to Deal with... (0+ / 0-)

        ...yesterday afternoon.  I'm a native New Yorker, my dad a native of Rhode Island, and I'm quite used to being blunt and direct with people.  But I also was brought up to treat anybody who entered my home as my guest, and show a certain level of courtesy.

        I think I would have walked out or otherwise dealt very different with the person had I been in an office environment.   Receiving this level of crap in my own home was a first for me, a shock and I was simply not prepared for it.  Part of why I feel so violated is that my hospitality was abused in this way.  

        I can say that after thinking things through, a future occurance of this nature will receive a very different response from me.  

        I am going to follow up on this and already have a letter prepared (part of writing this diary was to draft my letter).  If my phone call this morning does not get results, my followup will be a letter to the insurance company with copy to state Insurance Commission.  

  •  I'm an immigrant too & the US is lucky to have us (3+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    theran, Halcyon, greenchiledem

    Thank you for standing up to this bigot who insulted your wife and demeaned her worth.

    I am an immigrant from Germany. I came to the US in 1973, got my college degree here, raised my three children here, and have been working here now for over 30 years. I stand in solidarity with the most recent wave of immigrants. America would not be who she is without the regenerating influx of immigrant populations.  

    Anti-immigration sentiments have a long history in this country made up of immigrants. American nativists railed against every wave of immigrants since the first settlers set foot on this continent and displaced the indigenous population. In the 18th and 19th century it was refugees from France, Catholics from Ireland and Germany that were in their crosshairs. In the early 20th century immigrants from Italy, Poland, China and Japan were targeted; the latter part of the century saw immigrants from Vietnam, Mexico, Cuba, and Central America as a threat.

    And every wave of newcomers is greeted with the same racist arguments by the established immigrants: the new immigrants are lazy, they are criminals, they are disease-ridden, they are dirty, they are unable or unwilling to learn English, they are unable or unwilling to accept American values, they take away jobs from those already here, they are a burden on their host communities, they are less intelligent, they are undermining our democracy, they are conspiring to take over the country, etc. It's the same old song every time, with the very same sour notes and venomous discords.  

    The majority of today's immigrants are economic refugees, the 'collateral damage' of free trade deals that serve multi-nationals at the expense of people. These immigrants are the people who grow and harvest our food, build our homes and highways, care for our young children and elderly parents. They are the ones who empty our bedpans when we are hospitalized, make our beds when we are traveling, pick up our trash, clean our houses, and maintain our yards. Most of the time, they are invisible to us as they go about their work with their heads down.

    Seeing millions become visible in the past two years as they took to the streets all across the country, heads and signs held high, in opposition to proposed anti-immigrant legislation that denigrates their human rights and slanders their contributions, has filled me with hope for this country.  

    Waves of immigrants have always energized America's economic, cultural, and political progress. The passion, dreams, and communal values that the descendents of earlier waves of immigrants have all too often abandoned for an "I’ve got mine, to hell with you" attitude, have taken on new life, and America is the better for it!

    Instead of fearing our new brothers and sisters, let's welcome this opportunity to deepen our commitment to the ideals which founded this country and celebrate our wonderful diversity!

         

    I have won the War on Terror, and so can you. Simply refuse to be afraid.

    by heiderose1 on Mon Jun 11, 2007 at 12:17:31 PM PDT

    •  Yes, America is Lucky for All immigrants... (0+ / 0-)

      ...I'm very proud that all four of my grandparents were immigrants.  My maternal grandparents were from Germany (grandmother, who came through Ellis Island) and Holland (grandfather, who was a bona-fide illegal immigrant by jumping his merchant ship in New York Harbor and staying on.)  My paternal grandparents were from Quebec.

      I can't help but worry that this latest round of anti-immigration hysteria is worse that previous, with the DHS stepping in and claiming their new and improved police powers.  

      And congradulations to you on your sucesses in your adopted country.

Permalink | 18 comments