July 03, 2006
“There Shall Be Closed Borders”
On July 3,1984 the Wall Street Journal published
a notorious editorial called
In Praise of Huddled Masses in which it
advocated "a five-word constitutional amendment:
There shall be open borders."
This was a call for the abolition of all
immigration controls. What this would mean in practice
has been explained by
Steve Sailer in his article
The Five Billion. Really, that one number (the
number of people in the world whose per capita income is
below Mexico's) is all you need to see to realize how
bad this policy would be.
Last year at this time, I did a
round-up of the WSJ's recycling this
editorial, which it did year after year until for some
reason it stopped in 1990.
When the late
Robert Bartley revived it in 2000, he referred to
the original editorial as having been written
"Back in the immigration debate of 1984" by
which he meant during the WSJ's campaign to
sabotage the Simpson-Mazzoli Act.
Since Simpson-Mazzoli turned out to be the
IRCA Amnesty of 1986, this was a fairly successful
campaign. In 2001, Bartley wrote
“The naysayers who
want to limit or abolish immigration look backward to a
history they do not even understand. Each new immigrant
group has been derided as backward,
unclean,
crime-ridden and so on; each has gone on to adopt
the American dream of a free and independent people, and
to win advancement economically, politically, socially.
The ability to assimilate is the heart of the American
genius, precisely the trait that sets the United States
off from other nations. Immigration makes the U.S. what
it is.’ [Open
Nafta Borders? Why Not? by Robert L. Bartley,
July 2, 2001]
This assimilation he wrote about cost a lot of time and
trouble to accomplish when it did happen. (And it
doesn't happen anymore, since it's more or less
forbidden by law.) Not only time and trouble, but
bloodshed. The crime-ridden Irish of the
nineteenth century reformed after years of schooling
and
evangelization but a lot of people died in the
intervening
riots and
robberies.
And if what Bartley meant was that it will "all be
the same in
a hundred years" then he might have been right,
but we all have to deal with what's happening now.
And what's happening now is a wave of legal and illegal
immigration from Mexico.
Interestingly, the Wall Street Journal did not
repeat its open-borders call this weekend, probably a
reflection of the
parlous state of the Open Borders Lobby’s
latest offensive. It refrained from suggesting that
America change to let Mexicans in. It merely suggested
instead that Mexico needs to be changed so that Mexicans
will want to stay home. It compares Mexico's political
divisions to America's "Red-Blue" split,
totally ignoring the fact that South American
politics are increasingly based on a white-Indian split:
“For Americans, the
stakes in this election could hardly be greater.
Tom Tancredo and friends may believe that the only
thought the U.S. need give its southern neighbor is the
height of the wall it plans to raise between them.
But if Mexicans are able to build on the
liberalizing trends of the past 20 years, their
appetite for El Norte is bound, over time, to diminish.
And if they revert to the populist habits of yore, no
American wall will be high enough to keep the flood of
desperate workers out.”
[Mexican
Watershed, July 2, 2006]
In fact, closing the border is one of those things
that's never really been tried. America has the best
Army in the world, and it could
close the border with little difficulty. That's what
armies are actually for. And Mexico isn't going to
change overnight, or in twenty years, to the point that
Mexicans won't be able to make more money in America.
As Allan Wall
wrote recently "[B]eing "pro-American" is
not part of the job description of the president of
Mexico. It’s really not. I’d settle for having a
pro-American U.S. president!"
Personally, I'd like to see the Wall Street Journal
change sides.
I'd particularly like to see it stop agitating in favor
of illegal immigration, which is what it’s doing
when it attacks the idea of a wall, or when it decries
all attempts at immigration enforcement.
Did you ever wonder why Wall Street was called that? It
turns out that the Dutch colonists in New Amsterdam
built a wall. This was intended to keep out
"Indians,
pirates, and other dangers." (I bet the Wall
Street Journal would support it if it would keep out
Elliott Spitzer.)
So in the spirit of Independence Day, which is about
fighting off foreign invaders rather than welcoming
them, I'd like to propose something that does not
require a Constitutional Amendment—since
protecting United States from invasion is
already in there. [Article
IV, Section 4]
I
propose that "There Shall Be Closed Borders—Whether
The Wall Street Journal Likes It Or Not."
Previous Fourth of
July Columns
July 03, 2005
Independence Day And The WSJ Edit Page
July 02, 2005
View From Lodi, CA: It’s the Bombe—An Independence Day
Ice Cream Extravaganza!!
July 03, 2004
Jack Kemp vs. George Washington On Independence Day
July 03, 2004
A Patriotic Hispanic Reflects On Independence Day
July 02, 2004
View From Lodi, CA: Pass Up The Politicians This
Independence Day
July 04, 2003
On Independence Day: Fly The Flag – But Defend The
Nation
July 04, 2002
Immigration Day?
July 04, 2001Patriotic
Bore
July 03, 2001
Wall Street Journal: Independence Day Means Immigration!