The push for immigration reform got a boost Monday night when Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg gave opening remarks for a film about Mountain View’s Jose Antonio Vargas, an undocumented immigrant and Pulitzer prize winner who graduated from Mountain View High School.

Shown at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco to a sold-out crowd of over 700 people, “Documented” is part advocacy journalism and part documentary. It gives an unusual look inside the experience of being an undocumented immigrant through the personal story of Vargas, who was brought to the United States from the Philippines to live with his grandparents on Farley Avenue at age 12, his sense of abandonment by his mother that followed, and then striving as a journalist to “write my way into America,” eventually winning the Pulitzer prize as a reporter at the Washington Post.

Vargas came out publicly as an undocumented immigrant in a lengthy story in the New York Times, revealing that he had used fake documents to obtain jobs at the nation’s top newspapers. “I’m done running,” he explained.

He’s since formed the nonprofit organization Define American to humanize the immigration debate by telling his story to “anyone who will listen.”

Though Vargas had billed the event as a “cultural” one aiming to bring people together, hanging over the event were doubts about whether Zuckerberg and his immigration reform advocacy group, fwd.us – which sponsored the event — were true allies to those who Vargas had been championing in his work. While no concrete policies were advocated, Zuckerberg made assurances that he was interested in more than just H1-B visas for high-tech immigrant engineers in Silicon Valley.

“People often talk about two parts of the issue, high-skilled H1-Bs, the issues that tech companies have, and full comprehensive immigration reform as if they are two completely separate issues,” Zuckerberg said. “Anyone who knows a DREAMer knows that they’re not.”

Young immigrants “are going to be tomorrow’s entrepreneurs and the people creating jobs in this country,” Zuckerberg said. “Someone did a study recently that showed that half of the top tech companies were founded by immigrants.”

Before the film began, Vargas asked the audience, “How do we define American? As far as I’m concerned I am an American, I am just waiting for my country to recognize it.”

In a panel discussion after the film, Vargas said that he and others were not “coming out” as undocumented but “letting you in” on the experience of being undocumented. Some of the film’s more striking scenes are when he confronts his opponents by revealing his personal story, which leads to some surprising exchanges. In one he gets fist bump from a man who seemed belligerent at first but then slowly becomes more reasonable as Vargas reveals himself and explains that he’s been paying his taxes like everyone else. He befuddles people by explaining that he’s a Pulitzer prize-winning journalist but “there is no line” for him to get into if he wants to become a citizen, an apparently common misunderstanding.

The film’s most powerful moments were about Vargas’ relationship with his mom, who he stopped talking to in 1997, apparently upset that she had not followed him to the U.S. A film crew in the Philippines and another in the U.S. capture their reunion over Skype, both of them in tears. “I didn’t even know how I was supposed to feel about my mom,” Vargas explains.

A number of Mountain View residents attended the screening, including over 20 from the Mountain View Day Worker Center. The center’s director said Vargas’ story reflected the pain many immigrants face when they leave their families behind and can no longer relate to them. “Their first families get destroyed, it’s very true,” Maria Marroquin said of her day workers who cross the border without their wives and children.

Guadalupe Garcia, a DREAMer who works at a downtown Mountain View eatery and came to the U.S. with her mother as a child, said she found the film compelling because it made her reflect on the real possibility of being separated from her own mother. “I can’t imagine not having my mom,” she said.

Facebook CEO inspired to act

Zuckerberg said his interest in immigration started when his wife encouraged him to teach students about entrepreneurship in Menlo Park’s low-income neighborhood east of Highway 101. He asked the students what they were worried about and one replied, “I’m not sure I’ll be able to go to college because I’m undocumented.”

Zuckerberg said the student’s response “really touched me.”

“I asked the students how many were born outside of the U.S. and about half of them put their hands up. It was impossible to tell the difference between them, there was no difference between the students who were born in the U.S. and were born outside, but they had this issue and they weren’t going to be given an equal opportunity.”

“I went home and talked to some of my friends that run tech companies and we decided to do our best at helping out,” Zuckerberg said. “So we created this organization to push to get comprehensive immigration reform done.” He added that he was “really heartened to see just how easy it was to get so many of the leaders of a lot of the great companies out here to sign on to support, not just the issues that affect their company, but full comprehensive immigration reform.”

Zuckerberg called Vargas a “friend” who he initially got to know after Vargas used Facebook to report on the Virgina Tech shootings to win a Pulitzer Prize, and later when Vargas profiled Zuckerberg for the New Yorker.

Zuckerberg noted that when President Barack Obama decided to create a path to citizenship to allow immigrants brought to the U.S. as children, Vargas was too old to qualify. “He missed the cutoff by four months,” Zuckerberg noted. “He’s been fighting to make sure no one has had the issues he’s had and to really bring justice.” He added that he found Vargas’ story “so compelling.”

While introducing the film, Vargas vouched a bit for Zuckerberg and his efforts.

“I remember when Joe and Mark and I were first talking about Forward — it didn’t even have a name yet — and they wanted to make sure this wasn’t only about engineers, it wasn’t only going to be about H1-Bs, it wasn’t only going to be about Silicon Valley,” Vargas said.

After the film, Vargas said he was willing to go anywhere and talk to anyone about immigration.

“We as Americans need to be able to sit down and talk with those who may be against us,” he said. “We are not getting anywhere if we just stay in our corners and point to each other.”

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22 Comments

  1. His attempt to link his well-funded lobbying effort to increase the # of H1B visas with a more populist cause is so cynically transparent, it’s hardly worth commenting upon.

  2. Way to go, that is why I love Facebook! He is so young, but so smart and can see far beyond than just undocumented people.

  3. What can you say, he’s a billionaire, he must know everything about immigration and understand everyone’s opinions and needs on the subject and be weighing them in a mature, intelligent way, right?

  4. Globalization. Americans like him profited from it, while tens of millions of ordinary Americans lost out.
    Now even he is seeing the downside. Other countries can compete with the U.S.
    The only answer to that is to drain out of those countries all their brains and bring them to the United States.

  5. Public policy made by uneducated college drop outs! Well, if we are going to listen to people like this young man–what’s the point of spending trillions of dollars on public education–when it’s clearly of no value to him, or other silicon valley types?

    Knowing how to get rich, riding on the backs of other people, is all that Zuckerberg brings to the table. It’s doubtful that he could get a job in his own company, based on his academic record.

    Wisdom does not flow from wealth, as this fellow proves daily.

  6. Disgusting.

    This guy stole an idea
    Rigged an IPO and made himself a billionaire
    Supported the nastiest wing of the GOP
    Sells the personal data of facebookfools to advertisers for a profit
    And wants nothing but to further enrich himself by replacing Americans with cheap labor.

    Disgusting

    And this will probably be censored by a pawn of the policed state at the Palo Alto online.

    A new darkage is apon us. And its heart of darkness is Silicon Valley.

  7. I’m the only person left who does not Facebook (Big Brother). We need to use what we have in this recession — homegrown talent. We need to control population growth. We need to not let more people in and fix our problems first. Not a Zuck fan. He’d gladly pay a foreigner half over a Cal Poly grad with an engineering degree. Sell-out.

  8. DEPORT ALL ILLEGAL ALIENS NOW. The “Gang of 8 Fools” has crafted a bill with the racists Hispanic Organizations like La Raza, to bring in 33 Million aliens and give them green cars and amnesty over the next 10 years. This will cost the US taxpayer over 6 Trillion dollars over the next 10 years in health costs, food stamps, welfare, aid to dependent children, enforcement costs and legal and jail costs for the teenage gang members, incredible education costs as we have to hire teachers to teach in Spanish, free medical costs, etc. Look at the Buena Vista Trailer Park to see what our neighborhoods will turn into.
    What stupidity, complete stupidity. There are more than 20 million Americans unemployed or underemployed and we need to take care of them first, not last. Just another ploy to get more Democrat votes.
    What lunacy

  9. Enforce existing immigration law NOW. No “immigration reform” – aka amnesty.
    This country is the most generous in the world. And that’s something to be proud of. We have NO need to be lectured by shrill persons with no basis to stand on.
    Charity and helping real refugees IS important, and we do so as a government and as individuals.
    Letting a bunch of free-loaders and those who have NO respect for U.S. law – for the U.S. at all, really – to have the “right” of citizenship and bennies is outrageous.
    This is a nation of laws. Follow the law and I’ll respect you.
    The U.S. does have a right to enforce it’s borders just like any other country. Do not give in to the greed of billionaires OR those seeking a free ride of health, education, and other bennies on the backs of the U.S. working stiff.

  10. Mark Zuckerberg’s compassion for DREAMers and others denied US residency and a path to citizenship (i.e., Mr. Vargas) has truly surprised me. Let’s put it this way… I never would have expected such a stand from Zuckerberg. I consider his company a bastion of discrimination against older workers and I question Facebook’s (and by extension, his) failure to address issues pages devoted to child pornography and animal cruelty. Something just doesn’t mesh here.

  11. Doesn’t surprise me– He’s championing something that directly benefits his company.

    Not saying he wouldn’t necessarily speak up for something that doesn’t directly tie in to his P&L-I’m sure he’s a nice person, don’t know him personally–but this one is transparent. Convenient political platform.

  12. Zuckerberg is an entirely ruthless business person and his latching on to the more populist causes surrounding “Amnesty” or the Dream act is extraordinarily cynical. It’s also a considerable distraction from the tech corporation’s lobbying in Pay-To-Play Washington regarding H1-B visa workers in particular. It shows the weakness of our journalism that they seem to buy it all uncritically.

    Brain-draining the world is indeed a privilege we should strive to continue to earn and we usually get excellent colleagues and good neighbors out of it.

    That has little to do with the sheer numbers of H1-B’s in the last Senate bill – the devil is always in the details in Washington. Note that the corporations didn’t lobby much for the Green Card with a Master’s Degree program – they want H1-B’s because they keep the indenture feature. Corporations get both the work visas and must apply for any later associated Green Card. US MS Grads with the Green Card are not indentured and can get jobs and leave them like anyone else.

    H1-B’s in even the numbers we have now are too numerous to call “brain-draining the world”. In reality most of the EB-3 H1-B category, by far the largest group, are average tech workers. The Senate bill plus all the other programs including the GC for MS grads, L-1’s, and others must add up to nearly a quarter million a year. Naturally, the tech labor market is a labor market like any other. Such a supply of indentured workers kills the job market and definitely the careers of US citizens and already GC holders. Such numbers are way over the number of new jobs available in the field in the US annually. Visa worker’s salaries are usually just below the theoretical local market – look at the hours worked instead.

    For years now the best US students have been avoiding tech since even if they get a job, they will not get a career – even really good ones. Does anyone out there really think that Americans have suddenly become utter dummies? Many US tech students get MS’s in Marketing or Business in the hopes of being marketable long enough to have families and so on. Pure tech grads should remember something else also – Stanford, say, is a fine educational institution, but if you were there more than 6-7 years ago Stanford is in no way your friend. It is only interested in replacing you with new product.

    Money runs Washington and tech looks more and more a set aside, especially around here. That’s it. Multinational corporations are not American and are buying their global or even foreign interests in Washington.

    But it makes sense to effectively minor in Computer Science to have a real edge in almost anything else going forwards. And Cloud Services will offer great computing services to Main Street to level the playing field with larger corporations. Be there. Forget the corporations, they forgot you and own Washington.

  13. As usual a lot of hand wringing and platitudes and no specific resolutions. Do something say some writers. What specificaly are their answers to specific problems such as the Vargas issue. As usual no answer from the masses or their representatives.

    We have immigration laws which our government chooses not to enforce. Some of the rules and statutes may be unfair in modern society but do not expect the cowards in our congress to address the specific issues. Instead they will cry for an OMNIBUS bill which allows them to do nothing. This way they do not have to vote and thus alienate somebody.

    Regarding Vargas being sent here at age 12. Should he have been detected? If detected should we have let him stay or sent him back? Now that he has been here for 10 yrs or so should he be allowed to stay. Should he be able to become a citizen. Answer these questions yourselves then ask Anna and Diane and Barbara why they are too cowardly to vote on these issues.

    We do not need cowards who dodge the issues by calling for OMNIBUS legislation. Attack each issue individually and we can solve a lot of problems. But we have Anna and Barbara and Dianne who you can bet successfully that they will never propose any legislation to deal with specific problems.

  14. Of course, Zuckerberg is taking this “stand” as a political ploy, trying to kill two birds with one stone: (1) self-portrayal as a compassionate person with a liberal leaning (ha! ha!) and (2) direct business opportunity to hire foreign workers at lower wages than U.S. workers in an indentured capacity, thereby depriving U.S. workers (citizens and green card holders) of jobs. Same old, same old… I was merely being facetious. I wonder what his stance will be when he turns 35… if his apogee even lasts that long!

  15. Why all the cynicism.
    Where can I see this Movie?????
    I personally believe that the Dreamers should be given an opportunity to live full contributing lives as U.S. citizens. As should Vargas and other like him.

    There is so much misinformation in the above quotes: “For years now the best US students have been avoiding tech since even if they get a job, they will not get a career – even really good ones. Does anyone out there really think that Americans have suddenly become utter dummies?”
    No, our brightest math and science students are going into Finance and “consulting” as they see they will make more money there than in most tech jobs, or teaching.
    When my son (Palo Alto High grad) graduated from Harvard, that is what almost all of the brilliant math minds were doing.
    And the friends of my kids who chose to go into Tech have great jobs.
    If you are qualified, you will get a job even Home Grown.
    What we need to do is finance our educational system, pay our teachers well, so children everywhere get the chance to have the education our kids at Paly and Gunn get.

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