September 04, 2003
Immigration Looms In CA Recall Race…
By Sam Francis
The 900-pound gorilla standing in the middle of the
California governor's race that no one dares mention is
not Arnold Schwarzenegger but the
issue of immigration. Actually, quite a few do
mention it, but so far not one of the major candidates has
done so. The only people who talk about it are the
candidates who have no chance of winning.
Mr. Schwarzenegger, whom most observers say is the
likely winner, doesn't utter much of a peep about
immigration, legal or illegal, except to take what is
now almost a dangerously right-wing extremist position
that illegal aliens shouldn't get
drivers' licenses. Since he supported
Proposition 187, widely viewed as an immigration
restriction measure, and since the head of his campaign
is former Gov. Pete Wilson, who won re-election by
wrapping himself in Prop 187, the muscleman's silence on
immigration is a bit odd. [VDARE.COM
NOTE: Arnold has spoken, sort of: click
here.]
But it's no more unusual than the silence of every
other major candidate. Last week the Washington Times
reported that "Many of those running in the
California recall election are pushing for curbs on
illegal immigration - almost everyone, it seems, except
the major candidates" and "from [Democratic
Gov. Gray] Davis, to Republican Arnold Schwarzenegger
to independent Arianna Huffington, the candidates who
have grabbed most of the attention are largely silent on
illegal immigration"—not to mention the legal
variety. [[Top
recall hopefuls quiet on illegals, By Stephen Dinan,
August 28, 2003]]
Those who do campaign on it include
Douglas Anderson, a mortgage broker,
pornographer Larry Flynt, and others who advocate
controlling illegal immigration and protecting the
border, but the main and probably most serious and
responsible immigration control advocate in the race is
school teacher Joe Guzzardi, who actually knows
something (indeed, quite a bit) about the issue. He
writes a local newspaper column about it and, when Jay
Leno
invited all 135 gubernatorial candidates onto his
show, had the good sense and taste to decline.
Mr. Guzzardi has no illusions he will win, but he
also has no intention of lowering himself and the major
issue facing his state and the country to the same level
as the porn kings and New Age goofballs who will perform
in Mr. Leno's circus.
So why don't the major candidates mention
immigration, especially since polls show that 70 to 85
percent of Americans want it reduced and controlled? One
answer, offered to the Times by political
scientist
Ricardo Ramirez, is that no one demands they deal
with it.
"The mainstream candidates aren't focusing on
immigration, and a big reason is the public isn't
focusing on that," the professor says. That's
probably true, but it really doesn't explain an awful
lot, and in an important way, he has it backwards.
The art of serious political leadership is to tell
voters what
they should know and think. In most cases, the
"public," the "people," the "electorate" don't tell the
leaders what to do because the leaders are telling the
voters. On the immigration issue, the "public isn't
focusing" because the leaders refuse to discuss it at
all.
The leaders, in other words, have not made
immigration an issue, and one reason they haven't is
that they're either afraid to do so (that would be "racist"
or "xenophobic"
or some other label stationed at the gates of public
discussion to keep out unwanted ideas), or they're
compromised on it—they owe too much to or want the
support of groups that want mass immigration to keep
coming—agribusiness,
the
teachers' unions, the
Hispanic lobby, the
Thought Police in general.
The term political scientists use for the degree to
which voters will vote for or against a candidate
because of his position on a particular issue is
"saliency."
Immigration does not have high saliency, you see,
because while voters may be opposed to it, it's not what
causes them to cast a vote for or against a candidate.
But the saliency concept is also a bit of a vicious
circle. The reason immigration lacks saliency is that
candidates don't talk about it. And another reason they
don't is that until recently mass immigration, while
undesirable, was not a serious national danger. What
should have changed that was a couple of airplane
crashes on Sept. 11, 2001.
What 9/11 showed is that by letting just
anybody and everybody into the country, we were
inviting the very sort of
massive terrorist attacks that actually happened—as
well as the
crime, drug dealing,
ethnic and
cultural conflicts and other problems associated
with immigration.
And that means that even major candidates ought to be
talking about the immigration crisis and what we should
do about it.
The fact that they don't and won't tells us a lot
more about what's wrong with the major candidates—and
the condition of American "democracy"—than it does about
the voters they say they want to lead.
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
[Sam Francis [email
him] is a nationally syndicated columnist. A selection
of his columns,
America Extinguished: Mass Immigration And The
Disintegration Of American Culture, is now available
from
Americans For Immigration Control.
Click here for Sam Francis'
website.]