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America's earliest
settlers who came in search of religious freedom in the seventeenth
century passed on a vision of America as a shining beacon
of hope to the world that still shines today. Between 1820
and 2001, more than sixty-seven million people came to the
United States from every corner of the globe, lured by the
promise of liberty and opportunity. The open-door policies
of the early years of the republic eventually gave way in
the late-nineteenth century to more restrictive measures driven
by concerns for the nation's economy and security. Fear of
foreigners and racial prejudice have also influenced policies
that excluded rather than welcomed immigrants. But the wish
to honor the ideal of America as a safe haven persists. Two-thirds
of the seventy million people who have left Europe since 1600
have come to America. Millions more have come from Asia, Africa,
and Latin America.
Today, the United States pulses with the energy of a dizzying
mix of cultures, races, religions, and languages. The people
of the United States are joined together, not by religion,
race, or genealogy, but by a shared set of beliefs about freedom.
In 1989, the fortieth President of the United States, Ronald
Reagan, reflected on the current state of the American Dream:
"After 200 years . . . [America's] still a beacon, still
a magnet for all who must have freedom, for all the pilgrims
from all the lost places who are hurtling through the darkness,
toward home."
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