May 15, 2008
A Democrat Says Readers Liked His Idea Of A “Magic Carpet” Voluntary ID Card
By
Donald A. Collins
This Democrat so enjoys writing on the
immigration issue, not only because the issue has
such vital and sweeping importance for America's
future, but also from a personal standpoint, because
the responses I get truly inspire and help direct my
own evolving views on this complex, contentious
issue.
My May 7 piece (A
Democrat Says: Why Not A Polio-Type Campaign To Immunize
Americans Against Illegal Alien Fraud With National ID
Cards) brought the usual barrage of letters.
A few were from lunatics, one of whom said: "It is
worth noting that Collins' and similar others' position
on immigration is driven not by any love of kin, of way
of life, of culture, but solely by a love of the
state—the state that is destroying our economy, our
civilization, our morals, our science, our ethics"
You mean, Sir, that the utter failure at the Federal
level is in fact accomplishing what you claim? Hardly.
Our Federal government's inaction, not its actions, are
at the heart of our dilemma. In fact, it can be argued
that the dismantling of government services by
outsourcing them to private sector corporations has so
weakened our government that it fails constantly to meet
its responsibilities, such as
protecting us as the US Constitution requires.
But I digress.
Most of my mail is most enlightening. One American
woman who lived with her husband in Mexico for 12 years
wrote me the following letter:
"The deep divisions that
have grown up in the last few years really point to the
importance of a non-partisan approach. A friend of ours
in Washington has just finished a book on the subject. I
think the immigration problem is being ignored because
it seems to be insoluble—and there's no way to take a
stand without stamping on someone's toes. We lived in
Mexico for twelve years. I worked for some months as an
'illegal alien'
teaching English in a downtown Mexico City high
school. They were 'looking into' getting me my papers,
but it never happened. Avecita Lopez Mateos (the
president's daughter) was working in the office of
that school and when inspectors came by she would take
over my class for me. When the time came for me to be
paid, they gave me a pittance and said 'too bad' when I
protested.
“So it's not a one way
street. When we go back to visit, we find
villages without men—much like Ecuador. Vicente Fox
worked so hard to get Washington to cooperate in making
migration easy, basically
ruining family structure and culture in his own
country. I will continue to read your articles. Maybe
you have a solution. I would love to have some help
seeing through the tangle. I'm a member of the League of
Women Voters. They have devoted years to studying the
dilemma."
Another reader said:
"I think
Congresswoman Barbara Jordan's 1995 immigration study
recommended among
several actions to reduce illegal immigration, a
card to identify a citizen when they applied for a job
or public benefits. The card was not called an ID card
and was emphasized that it would only be needed twice in
a person's life, when applying for a job or receiving
benefits. This simple measure would have solved most of
our current problems but was
shot down as a Nazi type national ID card by the
usual pro immigration gang.
“Perhaps another attempt
at a card would be a good idea but I would drop any
attempt to call it a national ID card. I would focus on
a card that was used for citizens to get benefits and
let the
E-Verify system be used for jobs. Just my opinion."
These are good, constructive thoughts, offered by
intelligent, concerned citizens. But of course our
Washington leadership is not leading. They continue
mooing and cooing and pursuing the lowest common
denominators, votes from any where they can be cadged
regardless of the price all us citizens are paying,
demonstrated to be enormous by study after study,
year after year, decade after decade.
I seriously wonder if it it's possible for any good
thinking to reach the small-bore people whom we elect.
George Bernard Shaw famously said: "Democracy is
a device that ensures we shall be governed no better
than we deserve." Are we indeed getting to be such
small-bore people that we have lost our ability to fix
what is broken? Many letters I get make that assumption.
Another correspondent commented,
"I like your national ID
article. I have often wondered how many hundreds of
billions of dollars this country would save by having a
national ID card instead of this grueling piecemeal
enforcement approach. Any idea if such a study exists?
It seems every week there is a new piece of legislation
dealing with document verification, security and
database sharing between departments, each well meaning,
each offering an incremental benefit, but all falling
short of the broad efficiency a national ID card might
offer."
Perhaps there is where the thinking needs to be done.
In my view, a secure identification card can't be called
something else. It is after all the ultimate measure of
who we are.
One of my fellow FAIR board members reminded me some
time ago that there is a firm that has the technology
for an ID card with 64 different metrics, making a fake
card impossible.
We could, of course, give anyone who volunteers to
accept such an option such a marvelous almost magic
transport to the ultimate citizenship card.
Why have we been apologizing for declaring our wish
to be identified as American citizens? Do you have
anything to apologize for? Probably, but then so do we
all!
But, as I noted in my earlier piece, we all went to
be immunized for polio. Just think, our government could
fund the outfitting of airport terminals and other
critical places where ID is important with devices which
would allow rapid transits for anyone who had such a
card.
I bet the demand for such a Magic Carpet Card,
offered with no charge, would be enormous. This would be
the ultimate Visa or Master Card card! ATMs could
install readers. Our government could help pay banks to
install readers for the transition.
Let's not let our country’s security falter on money.
After all, isn't this what Bush has been claiming he has
been giving us with this insane, and fantastically
expensive, war in Iraq?
Such a card could be issued only after a personal
appearance, with carefully-checked source documents
proving without any question that the person receiving
this new freedom card is who she or he claims to be.
Since nearly 300 million of us could prove our
antecedents, pretty soon the country would reach the
"tipping point" and no one would want to be without
one!
So, Dear Readers, many of you have asked me for an
idea. This is it. A Magic Carpet Card delivered to
American citizens on personal appearance. That’s the
vast majority of us.
This is not an idea that can be brushed aside by the
people who are afraid of identifying themselves. Are you
a legal American citizen or a legal alien here with
proper documentation? Isn't that the bottom line
question?
Yes, there are at least 20 million people in the US
of A here illegally. And that issue needs solved. But
without a first-class program to identify those of us
who have real citizenship, illegal immigration is not
going to be solved because of the same old delays and
obfuscation that has dogged immigration policy for
decades.
Here is an irrefutable starting point. Will Obama or
McCain listen to this clear, non political,
easy-to-initiate idea?
Without this starting point, we can continue to
scream at each other and not ever save America.
Let their staffs chew on this one, but hopefully the
candidates themselves will see that we need to take that
first key step—making sure that the vast majority of us
citizens can be given the Magic Carpet Card soon.
Then the question of what to do about those here
illegally will be much easier to solve.
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.