March 14, 2005
Immigration Lawyers: Undercut by – Immigrant
Competition!
By
Juan Mann
The latest National Data
report on VDARE.com from Edwin Rubenstein provides
statistical support for the proposition that private
immigration lawyers are led by a bunch of
political zealots better at shooting their group in
the foot professionally than profitably practicing law.
Rubenstein cites several reasons
for the relative financial underachievement of the
American Immigration Lawyers Association’s (AILA)
members. AILA’s non-corporate clients are poor, aliens
don’t really need expensive lawyers much, and there are
countless federal and state agencies —not to mention the
private sector
banks,
mortgage companies, and
health care outfits — that will trip over themselves
to help illegal aliens at every turn.
In addition, illegal aliens are
frequently better off remaining illegal if they do not
have an avenue available to file a petition for
adjustment of status to
permanent residence. Most, if not all, of these
folks were smoked "out of the shadows" by the last
Section 245(i) amnesty bonanza.
Those illegal aliens who do not
have immigrant petitions on the horizon can just wait it
out for the next amnesty. And if the
Bush Betrayal doesn’t come through anytime soon,
they can always accumulate time —ten years as an illegal
alien in the U.S., that is —in order to apply for the
current rolling
amnesty for all under Section 240A(b) of the
Immigration Act.
But I have another theory
explaining Rubenstein’s immigration attorney salary
numbers.
It’s the same reason why just about
every other
job class in America is facing an assault of
low-wage competition —immigration!
In a nutshell, immigration law is a
hotbed of "diversity." The "cheap labor"
competition that AILA faces from the bottom of the
barrel of the legal profession, licensed and unlicensed,
has a definite immigrant flavor.
AILA attorneys, even though
card-carrying handmaidens of the Treason Lobby, are in a
constant battle of wage competition against sleazy
lawyers, ethnic fixers, resident aliens, fraudsters and
"notarios" —Spanish-speaking notary publics or
even income tax preparers —that are actually doing the
jobs that American immigration lawyers won’t do!
The AILA 2003
salary table tells the story.
Here are the driving forces:
But
instead of being upset about "notarios" entangling
unwitting aliens in the EOIR litigation bureaucracy
prematurely, AILA’s energy might be better spent toward
actually cleaning up their little corner of the legal
profession.
Then they
might finally realize that the massive, uncontrolled
immigration that they love so much is actually degrading
the quality of their livelihood too.
Juan Mann [send him
email] is a lawyer and the proprietor of
DeportAliens.com.