But the symbolic meaning is great.
Biden’s proposed bill, if passed, would remove the word ‘foreigner’ from U.S. immigration laws, replacing it with the term ‘non-citizen.’
“How we describe people really sticks. It affects how we treat them,” he says. “The way we talk about immigrants shapes the policy. It gives a framework of the issues that are really at stake here. It gives recognition that we are talking about people and families here.”
What do the laws say now
Officials have in the past pointed out the prevalence of the term in U.S. laws to defend their word choices.
The term “foreigner” was often used by President Trump in speeches because he warned about what he saw as the dangers of uncontrolled illegal immigration.
“We were the perennial boogeyman in the Trump administration,” Vargas said. “Every time Trump was in trouble, he started talking about the ‘illegals’ and across the border.”
But not everyone in the Trump administration was a supporter of the language.
“I think the words matter a lot,” McAleenan was quoted as saying by the Post. “If you alienate half of your audience through your terminology, it will hinder your ability to ever win an argument.”
This is not the first attempt to change such wording
California hit ‘stranger’ in 2015 from the state’s labor laws.
Prank callers targeted the term early in the Trump administration
One of the first times the use of the term ‘alien’ attracted widespread attention during the Trump administration was in 2017 after officials published a hotline for victims of ‘crimes committed by removable aliens’.
Prank callers quickly flooded the line with reports about space creatures, and shared examples on social media of their comments about Mars and UFOs.
But Vargas says the term and others who have demonized immigrants is no laughing matter.
“Language has power. And I think we saw it in the Trump administration, how it used dehumanizing terms and how it dismantled language and dismantled people in turn,” Vargas said. “If you call them ‘aliens’, you’re going to put them in jail, of course, you’re going to lock them up, of course you would not mind separating small children from them.” parents.”
Vargas says the new government’s effort to use more respectful language gives him hope that some Americans’ views of undocumented immigrants may shift as well. If he changes just one word, he could have a profound impact on millions of people.