November 11, 2007
Message To Vets On Veterans Day: Get Off Meeting Hall Bar Stools—Enlist In Immigration Wars!
By Dave Gorak

Dave Gorak is the one on the (ahem!) far right
wearing a garrison cap.
I am not a combat veteran. My military service included a year with the
1st Reconnaissance Squadron, 9th Cavalry, an
armored unit stationed along Korea's
Demilitarized Zone, nearly 10 years after a
ceasefire ended fighting there.
What we did wasn't particularly notable: Monitoring the activities of
North Korean troops on their side of the
Military Demarcation Line, listening to radio
chatter, learning to
identify the other side's aircraft and vehicles by
their silhouettes, recognizing uniform insignia,
participating in field exercises, and, of course,
looking forward to Pay Day so we could drink beer until
we were stupid and silly.
My question is this: If I, whose Army experience was
relatively tame, am upset by people entering this
country illegally,
wiping their feet on our immigration laws and
sovereignty, waving foreign flags in our streets
while demanding that we afford them respect and dignity,
where are the voices of those
veterans who experienced things
I thankfully was spared?
In light of our
stupid and
irresponsible immigration policy, where is these
veterans’ anger over having watched some of their
friends die for what they were told are American values
and principles—which our government now apparently has
kissed off?
When I
became involved with the immigration issue nearly
eight years ago, I naively thought that one of the ways
to turn things around was to get the various veterans
groups
fired up and turn them loose against their members
of Congress. Who better to do it than those who risked
all because their government said it was necessary? A
government that through its immigration policy now is
saying
it was all for nothing, that they were just so much
cannon fodder, as the
old saying goes.
To say I was out of touch with the real world is an understatement. One
of my first attempts to motivate veterans was a
presentation to a
VietNow chapter in
Villa Park, IL. A dozen or so of these
Vietnam vets sat for an hour or so listening and
nodding their heads in agreement. But that was the last
I heard from any of them.
Later, I approached other organizations that I surely thought would jump
at the opportunity to raise the awareness level. Several
Rolling Thunder chapters in Illinois, where I lived
at the time, didn't return any of my calls or answer my
e-mails. Ditto for the
Patriot Guard Riders, a national organization of
motorcyclists that, among other things,
provides a buffer between mourning families at
military funerals and
wacko religious groups and others who exploit these
events to push their anti-war messages.
And ditto the
VFW post down the street from our home.
How many veterans really buy the hollow tributes from politicians who
wave the flag when it's convenient and go to great
lengths to assure those who served just how much they
care?
Are these veterans really taken in each Veterans Day when a somber-faced
President Bush,
Mexico's point man in the United States, places a
wreath at the
Tomb of the Unknowns?
Maybe some veterans feel that, as they’ve already served their country,
it is time for others to step up.
I'm sorry—but I think that's selfish, at a time when this country is
being
invaded each year by thousands of unskilled and
uneducated people from Mexico, an
arrogant and corrupt nation unwilling to provide for
its own people.
We in the
patriotic immigration reform movement know only too
well that many of our "fellow citizens" will
never join us for various shameful reasons—cowardice,
laziness, greed etc. We need all the voices we can
muster—especially those veterans who know better than
most that
"freedom isn't free."
Retired Army Col. Al Rodriguez, founder of
Veterans for Secure Borders and
You Don't Speak for Me, put it this way this last
summer during an
Illinois Minuteman Project meeting in Aurora, IL:
"Veterans fought
for this country once, and they must get ready to fight
again. It's time for them to get off their bar stools in
their meeting halls and deal with this problem."
Rodriguez is right. Those who wore the uniform in battle have to do much
more than participate in fund-raising efforts like
steak, chicken and pork "feeds," local parades,
helping to instill patriotic values in local school
children by teaching them the proper way to fold the
flag, judging their essays about "what it means to be
a good American," and donating cash to worthy high
school students headed to college.
Thus far I've painted a pretty discouraging picture of those who I
believe naturally should be at the forefront of our
movement.
But I've recently seen some hopeful signs that perhaps things are about
to change—thanks to the
American Legion, the America's largest veterans
services organization. (I am a member). To date, it is
the
only organization of its kind to take a stand
against illegal immigration.
Last spring, during its annual Legislative Conference, the Legion
devoted an entire afternoon to the immigration issue. It
included a presentation by
NumbersUSA President Roy Beck. On May 10, the Legion
issued a
resolution and strategy paper condemning illegal
immigration and rejecting any form of amnesty and
delivered both to every member of the Congress.
But resolutions are meaningless unless there is action to back them up.
The Legion has 2.7 million members. But only 3,000 of them have signed
up to receive the group's
e-mail legislative alerts asking them to contact
their members about legislation that affects them
directly.
(Steve Robertson, the Legion's legislative director, says it's unknown
just how many members ultimately get the alerts, because
some of those who initially receive them use their own
address books to pass along the information.)
The Legion further increased awareness of the illegal immigration crisis
in its October issue of the Legion magazine with
its cover story
"Southern Discomfort," by James Jay
Carafano.
Here are Carafano's recommendations for dealing with the crisis:
-
Enforce the laws.
Numerous laws already exist that, if enforced in a
targeted manner, would discourage illegal
immigration and the
employment of illegal labor and send a signal
that such activities will no longer be
overlooked. Recent actions by the administration
prove that
reasonable enforcement measures—well short of
massive deportations—can significantly reduce
the number of
illegal border crossings.
-
Regain
control of the southern border. Many of
the border-security provisions of the Senate
proposal are being implemented as requirements of
previous legislation, including the
Secure Fences Act of 2006 and the
Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of
2004. This should continue. Responsible
border security and
workplace enforcement makes America safer.
-
Emphasize
legal immigration.
The process by which
individuals enter the country legally must be
fair, orderly and efficient—welcoming those who
abide by immigration laws and denying
entry and advantages to those who
violate the law. The
integrity of this process is important to
protecting and encouraging a meaningful
naturalization and citizenship process.
-
Create
flexible legal opportunities to work in the United
States.
A
balanced and well-constructed
temporary worker program that allows for a
market-driven source of labor provided by a rotating
temporary workforce would diminish
incentives for illegal immigration by providing
an additional option for legal entry. This would
foster national security and serve a growing
economy.
Carafano says that these elements—along
with a
rejection of amnesty—offer a path to strengthen
national security; and to replacing an illegal alien
labor force with temporary workers and new legal
immigrants.
Carafano's piece was certainly welcome. But to me, it was somewhat of a
disappointment because
-
He thinks we need another
temporary worker program, and
-
He didn't urge his fellow veterans to learn more about this issue and to
begin holding accountable our politicians who
created the problem in the first place.
Since the creation of our Constitution, more than 600,000 Americans have
died in the service of their country. Each year we honor
all of them. We tell ourselves and all who listen that
their sacrifices were not in vain.
But unless far more of our veterans stand up and begin looking at the
"Big Picture", then all the monuments to
their sacrifices and achievements
here and
overseas will be worth about as much as, "a
one-legged man at an ass-kicking party."
Dave
Gorak [email
him] is the executive
director of the
Midwest Coalition to Reduce Immigration
in LaValle, WI. Read his VDARE.COM archive
here.