November 10, 2006
Stupid Neo-Con Reaction to Republican Election Loss: Blame Immigration Reformers
By
Donald A. Collins
Just like the neo-con cabal's advice to do a
pre emptive strike on Iraq, one neo-con must have
been writing his column under the recent full moon that
coincided with Election day. In the quickest (and what
he must have seen as a strategically clever)
counterattack on immigration reform yet,
Fred Barnes, the Editor of The Weekly Standard,
a
neo-con paper, claims that Republicans lost in this
mid term election in part because of their failure to
enact open border legislation.
Sorry, Fred, it was the long list of Bush failures,
the very neo con policies which brought us into the Iraq
War, which you admit was a factor, as well as pushing
ultra right social views on stem cell research and a
woman’s right to choose. And, oh, yes, Fred, remember
Mark Foley, and the breakdowns all over the
Republican landscape in public morality, so highly
prized by Bush’s
evangelical base? Furthermore, Americans saw Bush as
ignoring civil rights and installing a one party rule.
They didn’t like his
handling of
Katrina and the more sophisticated among voters
realized the insidious
North American Union plan was the ultimate
multinational corporate giveaway.
So now this massive loss of power Mr. Barnes mostly
blames on "immigration restrictionists" in his
November 8, 2006 article entitled,
“Post Mortem:Why Republicans got shellacked in the
midterms”. His evidence is weak to begin with,
but his logic is impeccable, if you care more about
getting big money from cheap labor employers to keep the
flood coming. This demand has been fulfilled by
politicians on both sides of the aisle for far too long.
He claims “Already the wails of the immigration
restrictionists are rising, insisting Republicans lost
because they weren't tough on keeping illegal
border-crossers out. Not true. The test was in Arizona,
where two of the noisiest border hawks, Representatives
J.D. Hayworth and
Randy Graf, lost House seats. Graf lost in a seat
along the Mexican border, where illegal immigrants
flock.”
C’mon, Fred, you know very well these Republicans
were victims of
Bush’s war policy, and their stances on other
issues, not their stance on border security. Arizona
Senator, John Kyl, who is strong on immigration reform
won his 3rd term with ease. And all the Initiatives on
the Arizona ballot favoring border control
passed! Not exactly voter rejection, Fred.
Brian Bilbray, a strong pro border
security/immigration reform Republican, won handily in
the San Diego area. California Governor, Arnold
Schwarzenegger, a
border control advocate, won in a landslide.
It is true that because of strong Democratic
resistance, immigration reform didn’t get done in this
Republican controlled Congress. Barnes goes on to say,
“What Americans want is a
full-blown solution to the immigration crisis. And that
will come only when Republicans come together on a "
comprehensive"
measure that not only secures the border but also
provides a way for illegals in the United States to work
their way to citizenship and establishes a temporary
worker program. If Republicans don't grab this issue,
Democrats will.”
How clever. There were a few brave mostly Republican
voices in the avalanche of cave-ins by pols on both
sides, but who is waiting to sign an open border bill
like the Senate passed (S2611)? President Bush, that’s
who! Barnes takes his party leader’s weakness on
immigration and blames it on those brave enough to stand
up for real reform, not just another amnesty that has
added over 40 million to our numbers since
the ill fated 1965 legislation.
The 80 plus percent of us who want our laws followed
and improved by being sure we know who comes here and if
legal are being set up for the fastest legislative
shuffle ever done on this issue. According to Barnes, if
we only quickly authorize the 11 to 20 million illegals
here now, it will be better for his party in 2008.
American citizens of Hispanic heritage are clearly not
anxious for that to happen, as the “You Don’t Speak
For Me” group has
articulately pointed out.
One observer who noted about Barnes’s Post Mortem
tirade: “My question is this: why is it that these
dolts always seem to point fingers at the any
immigration reformer who loses and says "See, his
immigration stance hurt him!" Perhaps Republican
positions on stem-cell research, Iraq, abortion, etc.
hurt them in reality, but we never hear those arguments
from the wide-open-borders people like
Dick Morris, and
Tamar Jacoby, do we?”
Thank goodness we still have Lou Dobbs and his
weekdays 6 PM CNN Nightly News program to keep setting
the record straight.
But watch out. This new Democratic Congress may very
well try to use this chance to open our borders. It will
then be up to the Republicans, at least the sane ones,
to stop it. Sadly Bush will not help them, despite
research from the conservative Heritage Foundation
which shows that allowing such liberal comprehensive
immigration reform would open the US to a flood of
illegal and legal aliens, which could in 20 years time
number to another 50 or 60 million.
Now with a population of 300 million, by 2050
projected to be 500 million, most Americans know we are
too full already and this onslaught of untutored,
un-acculturated new comers would spell the end of the
Middle Class and the permanent construction of an
underclass of slaves who could serve the likes of the
super rich elites and their acolytes like Mr.
Barnes.
We need a bi partisan understanding that nothing is
gained for American citizens by comprehensive
immigration reform except a diminution of public
services for us and a crushing of our beloved country
under the load of new, soon to be demanding more,
uneducated hoards.
Anyone who is for “comprehensive immigration
reform” (read “open borders") should be voted
out of office and if the Democrats choose this route,
their tenure will be 2 years long.
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.