October 11, 2005
Illegals, Treason Lobby Profiteering off Katrina
While Hurricane Katrina was a
disaster for America, it’s turning out to be a
boon for Mexican illegals—and the
Treason Lobby.
On September 21, professional
immigration enthusiast/illegal alien employer
Linda Chavez wrote in her syndicated column:
“I
wondered in part because I saw so few Hispanic faces
among those stranded at the Superdome and Convention
Center. Yet I knew that many Hispanics lived in New
Orleans, occupying the same
service jobs they do elsewhere, often on the bottom
rungs of the economic ladder. Most are immigrants—often
illegal—from Honduras and Mexico.
“Then,
just when I thought they were nowhere to be found, I
spotted a few Hispanic men in the television footage
this week of crews cleaning up the debris that has
overwhelmed so much of the Gulf Coast. Wherever they
went to escape the storm, they're back—because there is
work to be done, and they are eager to do dirty jobs
that many others shun.
“I
wonder if these images will sink in with the
anti-immigrant crowd that imagines that Mexicans come to
the United States looking for a handout.” [Hispanics
and Katrina, Townhall.com]
“Anti-immigrant
crowd”? Who could that be?
Not
us. At
VDare.com, we don’t constitute a
crowd.
It must be the huge majority of the
American people (91
percent) who believe that mass immigration is a
“critical” or “important” threat to the
country in the next decade.
That's a crowd.
And by the way,
one in three Mexican immigrant households are on
welfare. A quarter of all illegals receive money on
behalf of their
US-born children.
Chavez went on to say,
But for
those who are illegally in the U.S., no
federal help will be forthcoming. Illegal aliens are
ineligible for the $2,000-per-family emergency cash,
food stamps, job placement, and other
federal assistance offered to Katrina's
victims—rightly so.
Actually anyone in the US illegally
is entitled to one benefit: a plane or bus ticket
home to Mexico, where it's
dry and warm. Illegals have continued to
sponge off federal and state benefits, and Ms.
Chavez has even been
heard to state that it would "unconstitutional"
to stop them.
But her prediction that Mexican
illegals would be doing a lot of the clean-up is coming
true.
Recently Ray Nagin, the
now-notorious African-American Mayor of New Orleans said
something that a
white mayor would not have said: "How do I
ensure that New Orleans is not overrun by Mexican
workers?" [Immigrants
Rush to New Orleans as Contractors Fight for Workers By
Peter Pae, LA Times, October 10, 2005]
I'm afraid that if
Mayor Nagin expects the Federal government to help
him with
this
problem, he's
out of luck.
President Bush's lifting of the
Davis-Bacon act restrictions on workers has drawn
some criticism. Arguably, if we were just talking
about
American workers, and American tax dollars, it could
be a
good thing. There's no need to tie up the rebuilding
in
red tape, or give
control of it to the unions.
But if it means the importation of
massive amounts of
illegal cheap labor, that's different.
This is especially true if it
involves refusal to enforce the law at the highest
levels of the Administration—as reported by the Wall
Street Journal:
“In
early September, the Department of Homeland Security
announced that it would temporarily relax its policies
and not prosecute contractors who don't check the legal
status of workers.
“While
not necessarily a suspension of immigration law, the
department made the move ‘to make sure that people who
are otherwise able to work, and now need employment,
wouldn't be stopped from working,’ said Jamie Zuieback,
a spokeswoman for the Department of Homeland Security.
The measure expires in mid-October.” [Roundup
of Immigrants in Shelter Reveals Rising Tensions
By Chad Terhune And Evan Pérez, The Wall Street
Journal October 3, 2005]
The WSJ story reveals that
local police in Long Beach, Mississippi were concerned
that the Red Cross shelter, meant to help victims of the
hurricane, was being used as a base camp by "workers
brought in from other areas" who should have been
housed by their employers.
Police were also "concerned
about reports of drinking, marijuana use and fights
among Hispanic men living in tents outside the
shelter building." (My italics.)
But for the
Wall Street Journal, only the threat of
law enforcement doing its job is a problem.
“The
incident [i.e. police checking for illegals] was
confirmed by the shelter's staff, including an assistant
shelter manager and volunteer Jesse A. Acosta, who said
he, too, was asked by a local police officer to show
identification. After flashing his Red Cross badge, Mr.
Acosta, a former Marine who served in Vietnam, was told
to show another form of ID and then had to wait 20
minutes while being screened for outstanding arrest
warrants. The line of men, women and children included
no whites or African-Americans, he said.
“‘I was
singled out because of my skin,’ Mr. Acosta said. ‘These
people went through Katrina and went there to be taken
care of and not to be hassled.’”
One might normally sympathize with
a Mexican-American mistaken for an illegal immigrant by
the authorities—and point out that it’s because of the
huge flood of illegals encouraged by Washington. But
this case is different.
Mr. Acosta is deliberately engaged
in harboring illegals. Sympathy is inappropriate.
The real issue: if the
Administration continues to
refuse to enforce immigration law, the results, in
terms of the effects on local American workers, and
especially the unemployed victims of the disaster, will
be a further catastrophe.
Professor
Carol M. Swain, who has a
different and frequently
somewhat clearer view of
modern American race relations than Linda Chavez,
wrote an op-ed on the threat to members of her own,
African-American, race.
“In the
next few years, we can expect greater competition for
jobs, educational opportunities, housing and food. This
increased competition will certainly increase the ethnic
and racial tensions that characterize the many parts of
the country where blacks and illegal residents
compete for the same limited resources.
‘However,
it is not clear that black Americans will have any
significant advantage over illegal residents in this
competition. Already, many major newspapers and
commentators refer to the Americans displaced by Katrina
as refugees, not citizens, a term usually reserved for
people from foreign nations who seek refuge because of
persecution or natural disasters. Additionally, recent
history demonstrates that blacks will not fare well if
whites have to choose between them and illegals of other
races.” [Predictable
Cries of Racism Miss Larger Point, Sept.
11, 2005, The
Tennessean]
This is the problem for
African-Americans. And it's not going to be very good
for white Americans, either.
Linda Chavez [email
her] ended her column this way:
“It's
hard to imagine now with the scars of Hurricane Katrina
still fresh, but my bet is that the rebuilding of the
Gulf Coast will be a
boon to Hispanics in the region. There will be
plenty of
jobs to go around, and,
as always, immigrants will be among the first lining
up to do them. It's too bad Congress hasn't done its job
as well, passing
genuine immigration reform that would let
more immigrants come legally to do those
very jobs.”
Immigrants doing jobs Americans
used to have, rebuilding communities where they used to
live, and paid for by the American taxpayer.
That's Linda Chavez's vision for
the future.
But not ours—or America’s.