August 07, 2004
Could There Be Twenty Million Illegals In The
U.S.?
By D.A. King
[Recently
by D.A. King:
Can Banks Profiteer From Illegal Immigration with Impunity?]
“Your
check is in the mail...”
“I’m
from the government and I am here to help...”
“I’ll
call you soon.”
Most of us accept the above lies as a relatively
harmless part of life in our United States. We are so
accustomed to hearing them that we
regard them as not worth the trouble to correct.
But what about this one:
“There are 8-12 million illegal
aliens in the United States.”
If we accept these figures at
face value, we do so at our national peril.
I believe that figure
underestimated by half. And I think it obvious that many
of the patriots involved with immigration reform realize
the commonly stated illegal aliens statistics are low.
Why we are stuck to 8-12 million as our figure for
illegal aliens is hard for me to understand. Perhaps
this column will generate the necessary debate to bring
the real figures to the front.
The official estimate of the
illegal alien population has been regularly increased,
last time in December 2003, by
Homeland Security chief Tom Ridge, in a
softening up action before the White House dropped
its amnesty bomb. The “8 -12 million” range replaced an
already outdated 2000 census figure of 6-7 million [one
that was later
corrected to 8 million.]
Almost immediately after the 2000
figures were released, at least one major immigration
reform organization, issued its own calculation showing
the absurdity of the census report. [2000 Census Shows that Illegal Alien Population Much
Larger than Estimated by INS, FAIR press
release, Feb 6,2001]
In the post-Census era, some
observers offered
thirteen million illegals as a realistic figure.
But that number did not catch on.
I am
not alone in the suspicion that various federal
agencies are misleading trusting American citizens.
We have allowed a government that
permits the
assault on our sovereignty to measure and report the
level of damage that it, itself, is
causing.
If we continue that to be passive,
we will pay the price for not resisting.
As long as we participate in the
illusion, we do so at the risk of minimizing our effort
to educate the American public. And we help to cover up
our most important ally—the truth.
Take this example from my own
personal experience. During the 2000 Census, the view from my home office window
looked directly out at the home of Mexican illegal
aliens. I can attest to the fact that they did not open
their door for the
police, dogcatcher, water meter reader, or code
enforcement officer—much less the 2000 Census taker.
Those who lived in that house wanted to hide—not
share—the fact that
18 of them lived in a three-bedroom
Marietta, Georgia home.
I suspect that if illegal aliens
“live in
the shadows”—as we have been repeatedly told—
that they sure aren’t coming into the sunlight when the
Census Bureau drives up.
In April of 2003, Reconquista
Georgia state senator in Georgia, Sam Zamarripa [D-36th] told the Georgia
senate that there were “20 million people residing in
our country without complete documentation”—his
euphemism for illegal aliens. Here, finally, Zamarripa
spoke the truth.
In a February, 2004 letter to an
Arizona constituent,
United States Senator John McCain admitted that
Border Patrol apprehension statistics demonstrated that
nearly 4 million illegal entered our nation in 2002. It
is widely accepted that a similar number crossed our
borders illegally the year previous, 2001.
McCain’s figures show that more
than 10,000
“future citizens” per day entered the country
nearly two years ago.
Not included in that computation:
before that enforcement agency was forbidden to report
it, the United States Border Patrol released information
showing that the number of illegal crossers increased
20-25% immediately after Bush’s amnesty proposal of
January 7, 2004.
Last month, the Department of
Homeland Security revealed that as many as 2.3 million
residents have overstayed their visas. But that estimate
too is low according to a recent Government
Accountability Office [G.A.O.]
report tells us that the number is considerably
higher, and that millions of Mexicans (and Canadians)
were not counted. GAO report on Overstay Tracking,
text
PDF]
Finally, Patrol Agent Luis
Gonzalez, a staffer for Gloria Chavez, information
officer with the
United States Border Patrol in Washington D.C.
recently returned my phone inquiry concerning
apprehension figures for the first half of 2004[
January- June]. The figures are as follows: