April 21, 2006
View From Lodi, CA: The Immigration Disaster—Blame The
White House, The Media…And Us
By Joe Guzzardi
When I think about the
immigration protests of the past weeks and
anticipate the big one on
May 1st, I’m reminded of the advice we
get from our
family dentists: "Don’t wait too long to take
care of this. If you do, it will only get
more painful and more expensive."
That’s where the U.S. is with
illegal immigration today. Twenty years after the
Immigration Reform and Control Act amnesty, scant
attention has been paid to
enforcing immigration law. And since the first days
of
President George W. Bush’s administration in 2001,
not even a
token effort has been made to curb illegal
immigration.
Since
Bush took office, about 5 million illegal immigrants
have come into the U.S.
The result: illegal immigrants,
emboldened by the total lack of resistance to their
arrival and encouraged by Bush’s misleading comments
that migrants come only to do
jobs Americans won’t, are marching, demanding and
fully expecting to win
amnesty.
Yet history tells us that amnesty
will only lead to more illegal immigration.
In 1986 about 3 million illegal
aliens resided in the U.S.; today, today’s total,
according to Wall Street investment bank
Bear Stearns, is about 20 million.
Assuming that immediately after the
1986 amnesty the illegal alien count was effectively
zero, then 20 million have arrived during the subsequent
two decades.
Not only did the past amnesty not
even come close to reaching its advertised goal of
ending illegal immigration, the other half of the Bush
concept—guest
workers—has been a failure of equal magnitude.
In the 1986
Special Agricultural Workers (S.A.W.) program, fraud
dominated, only a handful of guests went home and people
supposedly here to work in the field soon left to find
better jobs, once held by Americans, in
construction and other trades.
One of the many problems the
country faces in its deliberations about illegal
immigration is that it is incorrectly perceived to be a
victimless crime.
But the
victim list—on both sides of the border—is long.
Last week, the Washington Times
reported that an Alabama-based employment agency
sent 70 U.S. citizens at contractor’s requests to
various Gulf States for
post-Katrina clean up.
Shortly after the men began their
work they were dismissed because, according to agency
manager Linda Swopes, the employers told her "the
Mexicans had arrived" and were "willing to
work for less." [Arrival
of Aliens Ousts U.S. Workers, by Jerry Seper,
Washington Times, April 10, 2006]
And also last week, the BBC
documented the case of Florida
tomato-pickers from Mexico and Central America who
are paid $3.50 an hour, nearly $2.00 an hour less than
the federal minimum wage. [Florida
Tomato Picker, BBC News, Photo Journal, April
2005]
The blame for today’s dismal state
of affairs lies with three parties.