January 21, 2004
Dick Morris’ Silly Support For Bush
Betrayal.
By
Robert Locke
[Recently by Robert Locke:
Immigration And The Holocaust: Debunking The Myth]
Former Clinton strategist Dick
Morris's recent
defense of the Bush
amnesty plan is worth analyzing line by line, for it
epitomizes a good deal of the idiocy on immigration as
perfectly as only a confession by the guilty party ever
can.
Let's begin with this astonishing
Morris assertion:
"America has 4 percent of
the world's population but 25 percent of its wealth. It
is incumbent on us to open our doors to those who seek
upward mobility
In other words, America's
superior living standard, created by over 300 years
of hard work, scientific genius, and
good economic policy on the part of Americans,
doesn't really belong to us. We may have built it, but
it really belongs to
the whole world.
Mr. Morris is to be congratulated
on one of the most succinct expressions of the
international socialist creed ever devised. As
Communists used to say,
"what's mine is mine, and what's yours is negotiable."
Morris also writes:
"It is not
American workers who
[immigrants] are
putting out of jobs, it is
American robots. The alternative to their low wage
work is not American labor but machines."
Well, I've been aware of this fact
for ages but I never imagined the immigration
enthusiasts would admit it: cheap labor retards
technological innovation and industrial progress.
It encourages companies to not
invest in the
labor-saving machinery that is the only ultimate
source of high productivity and high wages, but to rely
upon hordes of ill-paid laborers instead.
Immigration is emphatically not
a source of economic progress, but of economic decline
back towards the low-productivity, low-investment,
low-wage world that comprises most of human history.
Do you think it’s an
accident that
no-immigration Japan, second-richest nation in the
world, leads the world in robotics?
Morris’ implicit hostility to
industrial progress makes absolutely no sense from any
perspective but one: what if you actually want
there to be a
proletariat? What if your ultimate political
ideology requires one?
As put in William Hawkins's
excellent 1994 book on the open-borders conspiracy,
Importing Revolution,
"The
solution? Increase immigration, especially that of
undocumented, illegal workers. The
Communist Party, USA, in its publication,
Political Affairs: Theoretical Journal of the
Communist Party USA, understands well the
cause-effect relationship of this: "undocumented workers
in any work... have the effect of depressing wages and
lowering the quality of working conditions." In other
words, CPUSA and its fellow travelers suggest that, in
order to "save" workers, the working class must first be
destroyed through declining wages and living standards!"
(I document the fact that mass
immigration has been promoted by a Marxist conspiracy
here).
The rest of Morris’ article simply
trundles out all the tired sophisms about immigration
that VDARE.COM has already debunked many times. I won't
do so here, but follow the links.
Tired Sophism #1: The Myth of
Hispanic Cultural Conservatism
Morris writes,
"As Catholic voters, who
take their religion seriously, Hispanics are a natural
Republican constituency. Recent data that closely links
the frequency of church attendance to party-voting
habits supports the theory that this very religious
voting group is likely to adhere to the Republican Party
once its platform stops repelling them at every turn."
Not only does
Hispanic behavior show they’re just not
cultural conservatives, has Morris checked out what
the Catholic Church actually
promotes politically these days? On
all issues not connected to sex, the Catholic Church
is simply a liberal organization, period.
Tired Sophism #2: Upward
Mobility Will Cure All
"As Hispanics follow the
traditional paths of
upward mobility that immigrant groups have trod
before them, they are likely to lean more and more
toward the Republicans—just as
Irish and Italians do these days, abandoning the
Democratic orientation of their ancestors."
Well, for a start, there's going to
be a long wait even IF he's right. Irish Americans were
a
Democratic voting bloc from the time they arrived in
this country in
large numbers in the 1840's until Nixon in 1968.
That gives the current wave of Mexicans about 100 more
years by my reckoning.
And, of course, that's ignoring
that economic status determines political affiliation
less than it used to. Due to the
end of the Cold War, the replacement of capitalism
by corporatism, the
bohemianization of the bourgeoisie and other
factors, Republicans got only 56% of the rich vote in
1996, compared to their 75% in 1980.
Tired Sophism #3: Immigrants
Oppose Immigration Reduction
"For decades, Republicans
systematically alienated Hispanics by insisting on
English-only initiatives, opposing benefits for
illegal immigrants and demanding an
end even to
free public schools for the children of those who
came here illegally."
The problem is, they didn't. Polls
consistently show substantial support for all these
measures among immigrants, who suffer the same negative
consequences of high immigration that Americans do. The
leadership of immigrant groups naturally opposes
these things, which curtail their power. But their
constituents don't.
Furthermore, those immigrants who
do support these things are the kind of people who are
more likely to vote Republican. Seeking the favor
of the others is a waste of time. They can always get an
even more indulgent deal from the Democrats, especially
if Republicans give the idea legitimacy by endorsing it
themselves.
Tired Sophism #4: Resistance
is Futile
"As America became 1
percent more Hispanic each year, the Republicans could
not concede this growing group to the Democrats by 2-1
ratios without risking total annihilation down the
road."
For a start, his math is way off.
We have a population of 300 million, so a 1% per year
rate would imply 3,000,000 new Hispanics a year. Since
total immigration is about 1,500,000, this is not
possible.
Furthermore, he's presuming this
trend will be sustained. But, as we all know,
immigration could be cut off by legislation tomorrow
Tired Sophism #5: The
Republican Party Will Be Rewarded
"But by embracing the cause
of Hispanic immigrants and extending to them elemental
civil rights and
minimum-wage protections, Bush has struck a blow on
their behalf that will resonate in their voting habits
for generations to come. His legislative proposals are
akin to the sponsorship of a sweeping civil-rights bill
in 1963-65 by Presidents Kennedy and Johnson and will
have a similar effect in binding Hispanics to the
Republicans as the civil-rights legislation did in
linking
blacks to the Democrats."
As VDARE.COM readers will know,
given that the Republican Party has pandered to the
ethnic and cheap-labor lobbies
on immigration for decades without reward, this is
pure fantasy—although Republicans like
George W. Bush, dumb enough to sell their souls for
a
post-dated check, seem to believe it.
Tired Sophism #6: America
Needs Immigrants
"The United States needs
the skills, energy, savvy and willingness to work hard
of our illegal immigrants."
Given that illegal immigrants have
demonstrably less of these qualities than native
Americans, as judged by
crime rates and
welfare dependency, this is just false.
“Willingness to work hard” is a code word for
cheap labor.
I am very glad we don't live in a
country where people have to “work hard” in the
sense of this word that would have applied at the
Homestead Steelworks in 1890. Tight labor markets,
which force high wages and terms of employment favorable
to the employee, are a big part of why.
Let's keep it that way.
Tired Sophism #7: Laws Are
Irrelevant
Finally, Morris finally reverts to
outright leftism and comes out with this gem:
"They are illegal only
because our laws have been nativist and short-sighted."
This is just the standard
sub-Marxist drivel about
all laws being merely the arbitrary inventions of
the ruling class. Nothing is ever illegal in a serious
way, i.e. because a legitimate, democratically-elected
government, reflecting the
will of the American people, made it illegal.
And note, of course, that "nativist"
is taken to be an epithet, an
obviously evil thing. The idea that a nation could
have a legitimate preference for its own people,
just like a
family prefers its own, never occurs to him
But thanks, Dick, for admitting
it’s an amnesty.
Explain that to
George W. Bush next time he consults with you.
Robert Locke (email
him) is a former associate editor at
FrontPageMagazine.com (archive
here).