January 11, 2008
Democrat Rebuts Open Border Propaganda By WAPO's Aizenman
By
Donald A. Collins
Since we already had at least one
"treatment" of the issue from this Washington
Post reporter, N.C. Aizenman, which I described
in an earlier VDARE.com article [Democrat
Asks: Why Did WaPo's Aizenman Spin CIS Report?
11/29/07], I have been watching to see when the
other shoe (or shoes) from this open border mule for
hire would be dropped.
It’s dropped! In a January 10, 2008
article entitled "Two Views Of Illegal", Aizenman
[email
her] is at it again. ." [Two
Views of 'Illegal' | Many Undocumented Immigrants
Say They Resent Being Treated Like Criminals, But Some
of Their Opponents Say There's No Gray Area When Laws
Are Broken By N.C. Aizenman, Washington Post,
January 10, 2008]
Trying to set a false agenda by noting
only two sides to this complex issue, Aizenman starts,
"To many illegal immigrants, sneaking into the United
States is at worst a minor violation—a breach of the
rules so small, and so necessary, as to be beyond even
mild reproach.
Oh, I thought our Rule of Law meant
something.
In the next paragraph, as if to balance
the approach forecasted in the article's headline,
Aizenman continues:
"To many Americans, the
act of entering the United States without permission
taints every aspect of an illegal immigrant's existence
in the country. It points to a disregard for the law,
suggests that the government has abdicated
responsibility for borders and fuels outrage.
“The chasm between the
views has created an emotional response to one of the
newest hot-button words in the political lexicon:
illegal."
You mean downgrade "illegal" to a
minor role?
I would suggest that legal is legal and
illegal is illegal, but of course that is not why this
article has been foisted on American citizens. Who buys
ads, who demands fealty from the media to open border
illegal entries? You know who and we know who wants more
cheap labor, ethnic voters, supporters for its church
and Latino association members, many of whom can be
recruited from the ranks of illegal aliens. As Claude
Rains ordered in
Casablanca: "Round up the usual suspects!"
Aizenman swiftly departs from reporting
to snorting the coke of her employer with the standard
arguments of the illegal alien promoters:
"Those opposed to
illegal immigration insist on using the term instead of
the more anodyne ‘undocumented immigrant’ as a litmus
test of a person's commitment to restoring control of
the borders and order in the interior.
“Among immigrants
[my emphasis],
the word has become a slur."
Does this apply to our legal immigrants
and/or American citizens of Hispanic descent? Pretty
broad brush there, Aizenman.
Aizenman continues: "’To call us
illegal is to call us criminals,’ said Salvadoran-born
Maria Isabel Rivas, 28, who trekked across the Arizona
desert seven years ago to join her husband in Herndon.
‘But how can this be a crime? Our only crime is to come
here and work like burros.’”
(Sob, Sob, Sob again–and, yes, of
course illegal immigrants are criminals).
But the reporter wants us to really get
into the dilemma of those here who have broken the law:
"Rivas, a hotel maid who
obtained a temporary work permit granted to Salvadorans
after an earthquake, said she considers herself
law-abiding. When she set out for the United States, she
said, ‘Honestly, I didn't even think about the idea that
I was breaking the laws of this country.’”
Rivas said she was preoccupied with the
troubles that prompted her to leave El Salvador: the
young daughter and son whom she could afford to feed
only rice and beans; the one-room adobe hut they seemed
destined to share with other relatives if Rivas
remained. If there had been a realistic way to enter the
United States legally, she would have tried. But without
professional skills or relatives in the country who
could sponsor her, she said, "I had no choice."
So—break the law! And have our elites
cheering as you do so. If American businesses would pay
Americans enough to do the work, they wouldn't have to
import these poor souls as slaves.
In short, folks, if you want to come
here and you have no choice, you come illegally and that
is now regarded by the Washington Post as OK!
Certainly the role model for this
attitude has been the conduct of our Federal government.
Aizenman's paymasters gave this story
front-page coverage in the Metro Section, replete with
two large photos, one right above the story, with two
smiling men, dominating the first page of this section,
bearing the caption:
"Jose Angel Fuentes,
left, dines with Francisco Ramirez at Ramirez' home in
Herndon. Ramirez emigrated here illegally from El
Salvador but won asylum."
Message: come here illegally and by hook
or crook, with the help of the sell-out
American immigration bar, you too can stay and have
a home and take jobs from American citizens.
The story, spread widely over seven
partial columns, continues on page B10, right under the
oft-read Weather section, with the caption, "For Some
Immigrants, Legal Isn't An Option".
Are you angry yet? If not, you should
be.
The second photo on B 10, captioned
"Francisco Ramirez said he fled El Salvador's inhumane
laws, but he respects rules in general." shows a
smiling asylee knowing he has won the illegal immigrant
lottery.
But, as we know from seeing the numerous
trouble spots around the globe, fleeing from inhumane
laws as an excuse to enter this country illegally would
likely involve millions and millions of illegal aliens
every year.
As in her 11/29/07 article, Aizenman
throws in a few comments at the end of the piece from
the persons who believe that illegal is illegal. But in
citing the recent ABC news poll, which showed that 54%
of us are against illegal immigration, the piece quickly
points out that most of us favor legal immigration,
which is a crude ploy to set the stage for more and more
people we don't need.
The writer at least throws one sop:
Mark Krikorian of the respected
Center for Immigration Studies is quoted as saying,
"The thing that's easiest to address is the
illegality, so that's to some extent what you're
seeing." But again, this quote lets the writer cast
illegality as a minor tort, hardly worth our attention.
As any student of this immigration issue
knows, the legal problem is just as out of control as
the illegal, with special efforts coming from the same
people who want open borders to raise the number of
legal aliens, now approaching a million a year, to even
higher levels. Ask Bill Gates what he wants in the way
of special work visas.
We really have lost control of our
borders. And while the Presidential candidates of both
major parties are talking tough about securing our
borders, we know from the horrible past record that:
-
Securing the border is not enough,
-
Leaving undone the job of stopping the huge influx
of legal aliens as well as illegal intruders will
continue the assault on our culture, our economy,
our environment, and our democracy, and
-
Illegals here now must be the subject of removal by
attrition or deportation.
Don't let the continuing biases of
reporting such as by Aizenman and that ilk in most of
the major US media, fool you.
As the 2008 campaign unfolds, be sure to
tell your favorite, in my case Democrat, how you feel
about real patriotic immigration reform.
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.