September 25, 2006
A Fellow-Democrat Has An Intellectual Sunrise!
By
Donald A. Collins
One of my old California
friends,
a fellow Democrat, who for some time was
pooh-poohing the need for immigration reform has sent me
a series of emails confirming a complete change of
heart.
How encouraging!
In his last one, he said,
in part,
"The growing number of
illegals in
my neighborhood and area coupled with the lack of
enforcement has caused me to join up on this issue. My
position is 'no citizenship (without verifiable proof of
being in the process of getting it) no work'. I think
the employers should be taken to task financially or
otherwise if they won't play ball. As far as deportation
issue goes: NO
health &
human services,
food stamps, etc unless similar evidence of
citizenship is verified. That we go a long ways to
solving how to deal with the illegals who have been here
for years without rewarding them for it with an
"amnesty program" like "W" and
Ted Kennedy are promoting."
Bingo! There is nothing
so exciting as the sight of an intellectual sunrise.
My friend’s brother,
however, came back to him these hackneyed reasons to do
nothing.
"That’s all great, but none
of these workers would have a job if they weren’t
offered one by employers, big and small, who hire them,
illegally, don’t get the proper documentation, don’t put
them on the payroll so that
FICA , federal and state taxes are withheld, don’t
provide them with
health insurance, don’t care where they came from or
where they are housed.
“The government makes
virtually no effort to enforce laws against illegal
hiring of illegal immigrants, to police the borders
adequately, or to address the problem of how to provide
migrant workers to employers in a legal fashion. Many
illegal workers do go on payrolls with
phony SSN’s and do have FICA taxes withheld, then
return home and never collect any benefits for the FICA
withheld.
“There is a lot of stupid,
illegal activity involved in bringing
cheap labor to work in this Country, but it seems
unfair to heap all of the blame on one group of people,
the immigrants, and turn a blind eye to the big
grape growers of Napa Valley, or the Peach farmers
in Santaquin, Utah, whose
profitability depends on illegally employing migrant
workers.
“I have a good friend, Hiram
Alba, whose family, with 9 children, immigrated from
Mexico in the 1940s, probably illegally at the time, and
worked in southern Idaho picking potatoes. Everyone one
of those 9 children have college degrees, one is a Utah
High School Principal, one is a U.S. Federal Judge,
Sam Alba, one is a Civil Engineer, my friend Hiram,
all have achieved and contribute significantly to their
community. So you never know, do you?"
You certainly never
know—but these responses show that dialogue now rampant
in states like California, undergoing a transition that
many, like my friend’s brother, still don’t (or won’t)
get!
My retort to my friend’s
brother would be as follows:
Your brother is certainly
right about the
failure of both parties to enforce our
laws—particularly those against employers hiring
illegals.
Bad treatment of illegal aliens is also not right.
But of course many, including me, believe in that
enforcing the law with employers would dry up the job
market, making the task of
deportation much
less onerous, as the incentive for illegal migration
would be vastly reduced and many illegals already here
would leave.
As for the plight/alleged
unprofitability of growers, I think these rich farmers
can afford automation.
Robert Mondavi not too long ago sold his little
winery in Napa for
something north of $1 billion!
Thus we must
first secure the borders,
using whatever methods can work—but we will not
solve the problem until errant companies are made to
pay a severe price for hiring illegals.
Like Sarbanes Oxley–make the
CEO risk jail time!
Now, I would go on to say
to my friend, just so your brother understands the costs
of failure: By 2050 we will have a population of 500
million (it’s now over 300 million) and education,
public transport, clean environment and the general
quality of life will be on the skids. By 2100 we will
have 1 billion. If our laws aren’t fixed, these
population projections are a certainty.
Success stories about
immigrants get constant media attention. But what gets
little or no attention is the fact that
generations go by before most of these illegals move
up the
economic ladder.
Meantime, the failure to
educate
our own poor minorities means the constant widening
of a
divide between rich and poor and the diminution of
the Middle Class.
Then of course there is
the matter of culture, perhaps the most important of
all. If my friend's brother likes the idea of a culture
that has held back reasonable development all
over South America, then he should remain against
immigration reform.
Meantime, the
Chinese will blast our socks off with cheap labor,
free stealing of
intellectual property, and a low
pegged currency, while we run up the deficit to a
place where it can’t be ever paid and our economy goes
into the tank as every manufacturing operation of
scale—like the automotive industry--goes off shore.
An
immigration moratorium would allow us time to fix
the problem—which, by the way, is
not fixed just with regulating illegal migrant
entries. Almost 1 million come here yearly on legal
visas and half of them
overstay them, never to be found again. That is how
we got 20 million here illegally and if Congress passes
and the President signs (which he says he will) the
proposed Senate legislation (S
2611) we will have twice as many more in the next 20
years.
That’s the dilemma for
Democrats who believe in reform of voting Democratic;
the Democrats are
worse by far on this issue than Republicans.
But most Americans have
long understood that they are getting screwed by their
government’s failure to protect them. Hence we get
citizens such as the tongue-in-cheek guy who wrote
Senator Sarbanes wanting to apply for illegal alien
status.
The only way to get the
attention of these feckless elites who govern us is to
throw some of the rascals out.
This is hard because of
gerrymandered entrenchment of House members and the
power of well-heeled incumbents in the Senate. But it
can be done. It may take one or more election cycles,
but it can still be done—if voters from both parties
wake up.
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.