Yawn!
The magazine features political
science professors and leading politicos, such as
Bill Jones, Former Secretary of State, on current
crises–water shortages, educational problems, etc.
But only once is there a mention
"immigration"—namely the
"anti immigrant proposition", with no
discussion further.
Jones notes, "We are on the
verge of a crisis in this state unless we get some
leadership", presumably his, but so what? In
California, leadership is clearly not present on
either side of the aisle.
Californian opinion leaders remain
"chicken" about standing up and telling it like it
is. We simply have too many illegal and legal migrants
coming into California. The problem isn’t getting fixed
and may not get fixed until California and other
Southwestern states vote to secede from the US. Our
federal government doesn’t want to stand up either.
Nobody wants to display the courage that former
Governor Pete Wilson did in standing up for
immigration reform, only to have Prop 187 mugged by a
federal judge.
There are a couple of exceptions.
Congressman Ed Royce (R-40th) and
Ray Haynes, a member of the California Assembly, are
supporting a November 2006 ballot initiative which would
activate the
California Border Police, authorized under a US
Congressional law written by then Congressman Chris Cox
in
1996.
The immigration invasion goes on
unabated and untreated in Congress, except for the
introduction of Trojan Horse amnesty bills. A model
example of this sham legislation: the
"Secure America and Orderly Immigration Act (S.1033).
Introduced by John McCain and Ted Kennedy, opponents
properly have
dubbed it the
McKennedy Illegal Alien bill. It initially anoints
400,000 "non immigrants" with work visas and then
gets even worse.
The Democratic Candidate for
Governor in
Virginia still says immigration reform requires
Federal action. But his opponent, taking a
stronger position will
likely get huge support if current polls are
correct.
The amnesty legislation
solutions being suggested by the
Bush White House would authorize more illegal aliens
who are already here to get 3 year visas which are
renewable for 3 more years.
Is that helping the 10 million
already here or would you ask
President Fox to send more, Mr. President?
Just what we need–a plan to knock
more of our poorest American citizens out of jobs.
Bush’s
FEMA has been awarding vast no bid contracts to
"experienced" contractors (e.g. read: big company
Bush buddies) who can use these cheap labor slaves to
make even more profits, while
canceling Davis Bacon, a law that demands fair wages
on government contracts.
If America’s elite insist on
importing cheap
uneducated labor to perform
menial tasks at under market wages, they are setting
the stage for future disaster, just as we are now by
borrowing wildly to pay for today’s expenses, instead of
confessing that
Katrina and Iraq are our responsibilities to pay for
by raising taxes.
Apparently, the power elite cares
not a whit about its
offspring or that of those below them in the
economic scale.
The immigration invasion plainly
foretells impending disaster. Our
clogged highways, overstretched natural assets such
as
water, and the growing toxicity of our total
environment, lunges forward into a situation which not
even the children of our elite will be able to dodge.
Republican arrogance has clearly
been at the root of present troubles:
Misplays about Katrina, and Iraq, the
charges against Delay and Frist, ideologizing the
FDA with Plan B, no jawboning cronies over gas
prices, outsourcing jobs to Asia, and the growing
feeling among all of us that the Bush Administration
simply doesn’t know what it is doing.
But the Democrats haven’t got any
answers for making things better, above all on fixing
our dire immigration invasion. Both parties are totally
bought by the cheap labor crowd. (Help, somebody! Is it
time for new
political party?)
The Commonwealth Club has in the
past had
dialogue within its doors on the
issue of immigration—even including VDARE.COM’s
Peter Brimelow. The Club has not failed entirely in
its important educational mission.
So why didn’t immigration reform
merit a mention in the Commonwealth Cub’s magazine?
[Ask
Commonwealth Club CEO
Dr. Gloria Duffy].
Donald A. Collins [email
him], is a freelance writer living in Washington DC and
a board member of FAIR, the Federation for American
Immigration Reform. His views are his own.