November 30, 2004
What Part Of Enforcement Don’t They Understand?
By
Michelle Malkin
The obtuseness of the
open-borders lobby never ceases to amaze. Here we
are, three years after the 9/11 hijackers easily
exploited lax borders, and the OBL continues to argue
that cracking down on illegal immigration and tightening
terrorist-friendly loopholes is
"anti-immigrant."
Banging. Head. Against. The. Wall.
How do you maintain sanity when
wading through the
emotional drivel that passes for the OBL’s
reasoning?
Tip: Whenever they say
"anti-immigrant," substitute
"pro-enforcement." And shout it at the
top of your lungs.
Political correctness is the
handmaiden of terrorism. By smearing the overwhelming
majority of Americans who support
real borders as
racists and
xenophobes, the OBL obscures its deadly agenda:
sabotaging our existing immigration laws and blocking
any new efforts to punish those who abuse the system.
Flavia Jimenez of the National
Council of La Raza illustrates perfectly this blustering
open-borders tactic in a hysterical
"action alert" this week titled:
"STOP ANTI IMMIGRANT PROVISIONS FROM BECOMING PART OF
THE INTELLIGENCE REFORM BILL."
La Raza and their fellow travelers
argue that tough enforcement measures "needlessly
scapegoat all immigrants," are "extraneous"
and "harsh," "would not have prevented the
terrorist attacks and will not make us safer," and
are "non-solutions that will only drive people
further underground and cause panic among immigrant
communities."
"Extraneous?"
These same critics had no problem
when a $1 billion illegal alien health care bailout for
border hospitals was tacked on to the mammoth
Medicare Prescription Drug bill.
"Non-solutions?"
The 9/11 commission itself blamed
"a lack of well-developed counterterrorism measures
as part of border security, and an immigration system
not able to deliver on its basic commitments, much less
support counterterrorism."
"Anti-immigrant?"
If you actually read the
immigration enforcement provisions supported by House
Judiciary Committee Chairman
James Sensenbrenner and his fellow maverick House
Republicans (side note: just once, I’d like to see the
mainstream media call a Republican other than John
McCain a "maverick"), you will see clearly and
unequivocally that these vital measures are
anti-terrorist.
Anti-criminal.
Anti-fraud.
And above all, pro-enforcement.
Open-border activists not only
oppose the most-publicized provision that would deny
driver’s licenses to illegal aliens, they also oppose
provisions:
As usual, mainstream reporting on
these specific immigration-related measures at issue has
been skimpier than a Bratz doll’s wardrobe. That’s
because so many national editors themselves subscribe to
the open-borders gospel. Since 9/11, the
New York Times,
Los Angeles Times,
and
Washington Post
have published countless news items and
editorials decrying immigration enforcement:
sob stories about families caught evading
deportation orders;
foreign students complaining about new registration
requirements violating their "privacy;" Latino
activists
outraged about
Border Patrol agents doing their jobs;
Middle Eastern tourists protesting visa screening
measures; illegal aliens clamoring for protection of
their "rights."
Rep. Sensenbrenner and his GOP
colleagues face not only the OBL on the
left and in the
media, but also at the
highest echelons of the Bush administration.
The mavericks need all the help
they can get.
Before it’s too late, call the
White House now and yell:
It’s the enforcement, stupid!
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
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