March 07, 2006
The Illegal Alien "Gold Card"
By
Michelle Malkin
Nearly five years after the
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, our borders remain
porous. The deportation system remains broken. The
government's tracking systems for criminal illegal
aliens and visa overstayers remain incomplete. So,
what's Washington's latest homeland security solution?
"Gold Cards" for illegal
aliens.
I kid you not.
This week, the
Senate Judiciary Committee began debate on a
proposal by committee chairman Sen. Arlen Specter
(R-Pa.) that would create a "Gold Card" program
for illegal aliens who
broke the law to get into the United States before
Jan. 4, 2004. Applicants for the gold card would
supposedly undergo a background check by the Department
of Homeland Security, then be eligible for two-year work
visas that could be renewed
indefinitely.
Forever.
If that isn't the dictionary
definition of amnesty, I don't know what is. Indeed,
Specter's plan amounts to an unprecedented mass
governmental pardon for millions of immigration
law-breakers (plus their spouses, children, and, by
extension, their employers). There's nothing in his
measure that bars Gold Card holders from obtaining
eventual U.S. citizenship.
This proposal is a gargantuan
political and bureaucratic disaster. It's a slap in the
face to millions of naturalized Americans who followed
the rules to follow their dreams, and to millions more
legal applicants who are waiting in line to get here.
Open-borders activists talk dreamily of bringing
illegal aliens
"out of the shadows"and into the American mainstream, while
snubbing all the
legal immigrants who have
never hid from the law, disguised their true
identities, or otherwise deceived authorities to live
and work in the U.S.
Which side is the party of law and
order on, anyway?
Amnesty-pushers argue that the Gold
Card plan for illegal aliens is the only way to "deal
with reality," and that immediate mass deportation
is "not practical." Phony arguments. The reality
is that the massive chasm at
Ground Zero was facilitated by
lax immigration enforcement. Business as usual is a
recipe for
another gaping hole. The policy decision is not
between
mass amnesty or
mass deportation. It is a matter of prioritizing:
Will Washington put enforcement first or not? Will it
clean house,
strengthen the borders,
support rank-and-file interior enforcement
employees,
investigators,
detention and
deportation officers, and Border Patrol agents? Or
will it
undermine them?
Will it
punish employers who
knowingly hire illegal aliens? Or will it abet them?
Will it enforce the laws on the books and make sure
there are sanctions for immigration law-breaking? Or
will it ignore those laws and create more
incentives, rewards, and chaos instead?
Here's more of a reality check. The
Department of Homeland Security is in an abysmal
position to screen millions of Gold Card applicants (not
to mention the untold numbers of
con artists who have entered the country illegally
since Jan. 4, 2004, and would try to
game the system). Specter's proposal gives the U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services Bureau at DHS 18
months to conduct background checks for an estimated 10
million applicants—on top of the 7 million it already
can't handle. According to a draft General Accounting
Report obtained by the Washington Times this
week,
fraud is so rampant at the bureau that can't tell
how much there is and will not have a fraud-management
system in place until 2011. The USCIS director of the
agency's office of security and investigations resigned
last month because of lack of support for investigative
and enforcement priorities. [Immigration
agency falters in handling fraud cases,
By Stephen Dinan, March 6, 2006]
Bill West, who served nearly three
decades in federal immigration enforcement and retired
as Chief of the National Security Section for the Bureau
of Immigration and Customs Enforcement in 2003, warns at
The Counterterrorism Blog:
"Immigration benefit fraud is hugely widespread and the
resources to attack it are few and spread very thinly.
The proposed new immigration policies floating between
the Administration and Congress, …if passed will only
overtax our already overwhelmed immigration agencies
beyond the breaking point."
Meanwhile, the rest of us chumps
should figure out how to break some laws and get a hold
of the handy
Get Out of Jail Free/Gold Card. I heard it's going
to come with
frequent flyer miles, too.
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.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.