America didn’t invent greatness—it imported it, branded it, and now tries to ban it. Every time we shut the door on immigrants, we slam it on our own genius.
America’s greatness has always been an imported product
with a made-in-elsewhere label. We parade as the world’s workshop of ideas, yet
most of our finest tools were crafted by foreign hands. Albert Einstein didn’t
sprout from Jersey soil. Sergey Brin, who helped build Google’s empire, was
born in Moscow. Elon Musk came from South Africa with more grit than green
cards. Even the founders of Moderna — the scientific wizards who saved the
world from COVID-19 — were foreign-born dreamers who turned opportunity into
oxygen for a dying world. If America were a body, its immigrant mind would be
the beating heart. And when we start choking that heart with red tape and
resentment, we’re not saving the patient — we’re suffocating it.
Half of America’s billion-dollar startups were launched
by immigrants. That isn’t coincidence — it’s chemistry. Talent meets
opportunity, and innovation explodes. Restrict the opportunity, and you smother
the spark. It’s the equivalent of taxing progress itself. The numbers tell the
story more bluntly than any politician ever will. Roughly 46 percent of Fortune
500 companies were founded by immigrants or their children. That’s nearly half
of the economic engine we boast about as “American-made.” Immigrants make up
about 14 percent of the U.S. population, yet they are behind more than 20
percent of all new businesses and over half of all billion-dollar startups. The
irony? Many of the politicians waving the “America First” banner are spending
their weekends scrolling on phones built by immigrant engineers and tweeting on
platforms created by immigrant founders.
The immigrant contribution to American science and
technology reads like a hall of fame. Twenty-three percent of all patents
registered between 1990 and 2016 came from immigrant inventors — a contribution
wildly higher than their share of the total workforce. When you look at the
brightest corners of Silicon Valley, the pattern becomes blinding: Google,
Tesla, YouTube, PayPal, Intel, and Moderna — all born from the minds of people
who came here chasing an idea, not a handout. History itself repeats this truth.
From the 19th-century railroads that Chinese and Irish immigrants built, to the
20th-century labs powered by Jewish scientists fleeing fascism, to the
21st-century biotech firms led by immigrants — the backbone of America is
foreign-born and battle-tested. We didn’t just borrow brilliance; we built a
mansion with it and called it home.
But here’s the controversy: the same country that has
been fed, funded, and fueled by immigrant brains is now starving them with
bureaucracy. We are, quite literally, taxing our own future. Every time we
tighten visa rules, delay green cards, or push xenophobic policies, we are not
protecting jobs — we are protecting mediocrity. Nations like Canada and Germany
are already poaching the talent we reject, offering fast-track programs for
startup founders. America, meanwhile, acts like a jealous lover — locking the
door on the very partner that made it successful.
The danger isn’t theoretical. It’s economic suicide in
slow motion. When the U.S. makes immigration harder, entrepreneurs look
elsewhere. In the past five years, Canada’s Start-Up Visa Program and the
United Kingdom’s Innovator Founder Visa have attracted hundreds of high-growth
startups that might have otherwise taken root in California or New York. The
result? America loses innovation, jobs, and global edge. We’re not just closing
our borders — we’re closing our minds. When you dam the river of talent, the
nation downstream dries up.
Opponents of immigration love to chant that foreigners
“take American jobs.” But the truth is, they make them. Companies founded by
immigrants employ millions of Americans. The founders of Google, Apple, and
Tesla alone employ a combined global workforce that dwarfs the population of
some countries. For every job an immigrant takes, data shows they create more
through entrepreneurship and innovation. It’s not a zero-sum game; it’s a
multiplication problem that protectionists can’t solve.
And let’s be honest — without imported minds, America’s
innovation machine would sputter. Native talent is vital, but it thrives best
when challenged and complemented by diverse perspectives. The immigrant
inventor, the refugee coder, the foreign-born scientist — they see what others
overlook because they’ve lived what others haven’t. That’s the secret sauce
behind every disruptive idea: an outsider’s eye in an insider’s world. The best
mirrors are often foreign glass.
Still, many Americans cling to the myth that greatness
can be preserved by exclusion. They dream of a “pure” American innovation, as
if creativity were a crop that grows only on domestic soil. But purity has
never built anything — it only polishes tombstones. The more we fear outsiders,
the more we shrink inside. The very slogan “Make America Great Again” ignores
who made it great in the first place — a chorus of accents, colors, and
cultures that turned borrowed land into the world’s most powerful economy.
Imagine America without its borrowed brilliance. No
Google to search the truth. No Moderna vaccine to save lives. No SpaceX to
stretch our imagination beyond Earth. Strip away the immigrant contribution,
and you don’t get a safer, stronger nation — you get a smaller one, dimmer and
less daring. America’s superpower has never been isolation; it has always been
attraction. The magnetic pull of opportunity, not the illusion of purity, made
this country what it is.
That’s why closing doors now is more than a policy error
— it’s a betrayal of identity. America was never a fortress; it was a forge.
And every immigrant who walked through its gates added heat, hammer, and hope.
When we start sealing that forge, we lose the very fire that made us shine. The
nation that builds walls to keep out talent eventually walls itself in.
I won’t romanticize immigration. It’s messy, political,
and imperfect. But perfection has never been America’s story — progress has. We
can debate border control without betraying brainpower. We can uphold laws
without downplaying logic. The choice before us isn’t between nationalism and
globalism; it’s between growth and stagnation. If talent is global, opportunity
must be too.
So, here’s my plea — stop treating brilliance like
contraband. Stop confusing security with small-mindedness. America’s wealth
isn’t in its borders, it’s in its openness. The soil may be American, but the
seeds are foreign. Every time we forget that, we dig up our own garden.
In the end, greatness isn’t stolen — it’s shared. And if
we keep borrowing brilliance from the world, we should at least have the
decency to stop pretending it’s all our own. Because the mirror of history
doesn’t lie — America’s face has always been foreign.