WSJ's Latest Propaganda
Offensive vs. Prop. 200 [James
Fulford] -
11/01/04
The Wall
Street Journal Op Ed page has fired another
shot in its
Open Borders propaganda offensive, (which by
Republican standards should now be
illegal) against
Proposition 200 in Arizona. The article starts out
by calling illegals merely
"undocumented" and goes on to say that "What
is noteworthy is that support for the initiative has
been plummeting."
Maybe, but
that's likely because of the massive propaganda
campaign, by what the editorial refers to as "Labor
unions, the Chamber of Commerce and other opponents,"
which is to say the beneficiaries, rather than the
victims of illegal immigration.
“The
shaky premise of
Proposition 200 proponents is that illegal aliens
come here not to work but to vote and collect welfare.”
[Immigration
Anxiety, A misguided ballot initiative in
Arizona, October 31, 2004]
Well,
working is just as illegal, and a major part of the
attraction of the United States for poor illegals is the
massive "safety net," paid for mostly by US
citizens. (Illegal immigrants are generally part of what
the Journal calls the
"non-taxpaying class.")
“But
the proposition does deputize state and local government
employees to become immigration cops, as if they don't
already
have enough to do.”
Ah, but if they
stop giving Arizona
taxpayers money to citizens of
Mexico, there will be a net savings of time, and
more important, money. The reason for the existence of
social workers is to decide who does and does not get a
welfare check.
If there was an
unlimited supply of money, they could just leave it on
the ground in a box in front of City Hall, and let
people come and pick it up.
The reason for
the existence of election officials is to make sure that
no-one votes who
isn't allowed to.
The City of
Milwaukee has asked for
938,000 presidential ballots, in spite of having
only 382,000 registered voters—some of whom are illegal
aliens. This is the "box of money in front of the
city hall" model, and it's not surprising that the
citizens of Arizona are trying to prevent it by
requiring ID for voters.
It's equally
unsurprising that "Labor
unions, the
Chamber of Commerce and
other opponents," (which last presumably means
the
Hispanic lobby) are spending big money opposing it.
As for the
Journal, we gave up on them
years ago.
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