- cross-posted to:
- politics@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- politics@lemmy.world
The first impression America gave me was gentle carelessness. We were driving down from Canada to visit family friends in Texas sometime in the mid- to late 1980s, and a young border patrol agent at a booth, crouched over a newspaper, leaning back in his chair, carelessly waved my family’s station wagon across without looking up. You didn’t even need a passport to enter the United States until I was 33.
You need clear eyes at the border today. Europe and Canada have issued travel advisories after a series of arbitrary detentions, deportations to foreign jails without due process and hundreds of valid visas pulled or voided amid a sense of general impunity. While I have crossed the border a hundred times at least, sometimes once a month when I lived there, I cannot say when I will see America again, and I am quite sure I will never return to the country I once visited.
The America I knew, the America I loved, has closed.
And so I find myself like a man who has been admiring bubbles floating in the air, trying to recall their shape and swerve and shine after they’ve popped.
Once, in 1999, I was coming back into the states with my new Canadian girlfriend (yes, really), and once we endured a gantlet of irrelevant questions from the fine folks at the Blaine, Wash., crossing, she turned to me as B.C. 99 turned into I-5 and said, “Do they really think I’m sneaking into your country to take advantage of your fabulous social programmes?”
“I had too much to dream last night, too much to dream…” —Electric Prunes, 1967