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September 21, 2007
Where
Is The Father Of Elvira Arellano's "Citizen Child"?
By Joe
Guzzardi
One question keeps rolling over in my mind: Where is the
father of Saul Arellano?
Maybe I have too much time on my hands. Or perhaps immigration
is
too much with me.
Whichever is the case, I am obsessed with the mystery that
surrounds “Señor X”.
We know only that
Elvira Arellano refuses to identify him. But by keeping mum,
Arellano prompts a host of theories…none of them flattering.
Among the reasons why “Señor X” hasn’t surfaced might be:
- The age-old problem in these nasty unwed
parental matters—he may be married. Since Elvira has no
affection for him, her already
questionable image would further suffer if she revealed
that her former lover is a married man.
- Or perhaps Arellano, during her illegal stay in
Oregon where Saul was born, had a
string of paramours and she therefore cannot with any
certainty identify his father.
- Maybe Arellano paid “Señor X” to have sex with her
for the express purpose of conceiving an
anchor baby—improbable but not impossible given what we
know about the value of a
U.S. citizen child and about her (lack of) character.
- Or possibly “Señor X” has been bought off by the deep
pockets open borders fanatics in exchange for keeping
quiet—again far-fetched but not out of the question.
Since Elvira is not the only person in the loop who knows who
Saul’s father is, the total silence from all parties is
deafening.
Among those who might identify “Señor X” are the people
who introduced him to Arellano or those who worked with them.
Also included might be eyewitnesses like her neighbors and
friends or tavern keepers who served them.
Of course, “Señor X” himself could come forward and own
up to his
responsibilities as a father.
But since he hasn’t done that over the course of Saul’s
eight-year life, “Señor X” is unlikely to have a change
of heart now.
More speculation:
-
“Señor X” might be persuaded by money. Assuming that
Arellano parties with men in her same socio-economic strata
and further assuming that he has no emotional ties to her
whatsoever, “Señor X” could be influenced to sell his
story to the gossip rags. Their tawdry tale might command a
fee in the low five-figures. A
semi-graphic account of their trysts might garner an
even larger sum, e.g., “My Smoking Hot Days and
Sex-Filled Nights with Elvira Arellano”
Turning serious, this is all
ugly business. And one of the most disgraceful things is
hearing the delusional Arellano refer to herself as a “mother.”
Technically, she’s correct—but only in the strictly biological
sense.
As a
twenty-year veteran teacher in the Lodi Unified School
District, I see daily examples of the startling behavioral
differences between loving and nurturing mothers and clueless
women who have borne children.
California has about 10 million kids under 18 who must—someway,
somehow—be reared into productive citizens. To give you an idea
of the magnitude of that challenge, California has more children
than the total population of all but seven states—Michigan,
Ohio,
Pennsylvania,
Illinois,
Florida,
New York and
Texas.
According to a new report from the advocacy organization
Children Now, 51 percent of California’s child population is
from “immigrant families.” [Children
in Immigrant Families: A California Data Brief August
2007] Of that number, 85 percent of them are, like Saul,
American citizens. That’s a sobering and infuriating statistic
about the impact of the misconstrued anchor baby interpretation
of the
14th Amendment.
Problems abound. The report found that:
- Nearly 60 percent of 3- and
4-year-olds in immigrant households do not attend preschool,
compared to about half of children in non-immigrant
households.
- Children in immigrant families
are three times as likely not to have
health insurance than their non-immigrant peers.
- 39 percent of immigrant households are
low-income (earning less than 200 percent of the federal
poverty level), compared to 25 percent of non-immigrant
households.
Corey Newhouse, [email]
Children Now's senior policy associate and the report's author,
said:
"Learning English and access to health care are absolutely
critical to immigrant children's lifetime success. We should
ensure that children have an opportunity to learn English
beginning in
preschool and provide
health insurance to all children now. These preventative
measures will save taxpayers a great deal of money over the long
term."
Children Now’s president, Ted Lempert, added:
"It becomes exponentially more difficult and expensive to make
up
lost preventative health and formative education ground
later in a child's life. Addressing these issues early in a
child's life is the key to success."
(General contact information for Children Now is
here.)
The pay now or pay later argument regarding special programs for
alien children is one I’ve heard for two decades. As far as
I can tell, we’re doing both with little to show for it.
Throughout California, pre- and after-school programs as well as
English language and special intervention classes are
commonly offered. But the results in too many cases are poor.
The
high school dropout rate for
first and second generation Hispanics is the
highest in the nation. And only
13 percent of U.S.-born Hispanics have college degrees.
But the real question is: why should we have to
pay for anything?
The hundreds of thousands of anchor babies like “Little
Saulito” are born each year. (Edwin S. Rubenstein estimates
338,000; I put the total as high as
500,000.) They are citizens by accident. They shouldn’t be
in the U.S. and taxpayers should not be underwriting their
education or any other of their societal needs.
Unless Arellano lands the “peace
and justice” ambassadorship she covets, she and Saul
will be Mexico’s headache.
And that’s how it should be.
Let Mexico deal with its children and, for that matter, their
dysfunctional mothers.
Take it from someone on the front line: we have our hands full
with our own kids.
Joe Guzzardi [e-mail
him] is the Editor of VDARE.COM Letters to the Editor.
In addition, he is an English teacher at the Lodi Adult School and has
been writing
a weekly newspaper column since 1988. This column is exclusive
to
VDARE.COM. |