May 01, 2003
Meeting With Mexicans Bad For Bushies – And America
By
Juan Mann
Attorney General John Ashcroft apparently doesn’t spend
much time chatting with
Mexican diplomats about
United States immigration policy. And that’s a good
thing.
Last May 24,
then-Immigration Service Commissioner James Ziglar met
with Mexico’s finest. And
here’s what Ziglar was inspired to say about his
duty to detain and deport the millions of illegal aliens
in the United States:
"No one likes the idea
that people came into the country illegally, but it's
not practical or reasonable to think that you're going
to be able to round them all up and send them home. . .
. We need to set up a regime where we don't have to
spend so much of our time and effort in enforcement
activities dealing with people who are not terrorists,
who are not threats to our national security, who are
economic refugees."
Pretty much
the same thing just happened when current Secretary of
Homeland Security
Tom Ridge met with Mexican diplomats in San Diego,
California, this April 24. Ridge did not support the
whole enchilada of
amnesty for illegal aliens – to the dismay of his
Mexican guests. But he made these
shocking remarks:
"How we deal with the presence of men and women and
families that was initially unlawful but has
proven to be productive is one of the biggest
challenges that we have in our country."
Emphasis added!
VDARE.COM Note to Secretary Ridge:
Whaddya mean, “initially”? When did “the
presence” of illegal aliens become lawful?
And what’s “productive”
about having so many illegal aliens around anyhow?
But back inside the Beltway, far
out of reach of Mexican politicos, Attorney General John
Ashcroft sends a different message.
Ashcroft recently affirmed that
detaining illegal aliens for Immigration Court hearings
in the
Executive Office for Immigration Review goes hand in
hand with “considerations of sound immigration policy
and national security.”
In this April 17 decision,
In re D-J-, the Attorney General struck down a
measly $2,500
immigration bond for an illegal alien asylum-seeker
from Haiti, and ordered the alien detained during the
EOIR process.
The original $2,500 bond was set by
a Miami immigration judge and approved by the
Board of Immigration Appeals in Falls Church,
Virginia. Upon paying this bond, the illegal alien
would, of course, have been free to disappear in the
United States and the EOIR
deportation abyss.
In rebuking the EOIR, Ashcroft
wrote that
“releasing [the asylum-seeking alien] or
similarly situated undocumented seagoing migrants, on
bond would give rise to adverse consequences for
national security and sound immigration policy.”
But it gets better. Ashcroft wrote:
“There
is substantial risk that granting release on bond to
such large groups of undocumented aliens may include
persons who present a threat to the national security,
as well as a substantial risk of disappearance into the
alien community within the United States.
“[E]vasive
behavior -- [at the time of entry] does not
provide reassuring evidence of the [alien’s]
likely reliability in appearing for future proceedings …
even sporadic successful entries fuel further attempts.”
There’s been the usual
hue and cry about the decision from the usual
anti-law enforcement, pro-illegal alien suspects–as
syndicated columnist Michelle Malkin has
documented.
But VDARE.COM says: Bravo, Mr.
Ashcroft!
And we add a helpful suggestion
about detaining and deporting illegal aliens on the
Mexican border.
Helpful suggestion: It’s time to
stop the
invasion in places like
Arizona and
California – where illegal alien behavior is just as
– in Ashcroft’s term - “evasive.”
Whether by land or
by sea, illegal alien opportunists all exploit the
detention
revolving door and EOIR’s
permanent amnesty.
Ashcroft’s In re D-J-
masterfully shows that releasing rootless
recently-arrived illegal aliens has consequences - even
if the alien is not Beltway sniper
Lee Boyd Malvo or foiled subway bomber
Gazi Ibrahim Abu Mezer. Both were released on bond
for EOIR Immigration Court but had other plans than
appearing for hearings.
Hopefully, the next time Bush
Administration officials meet with our neighbors to the
south, they’ll heed the Attorney General’s ringing
words:
“[e]ncouraging
. . . unlawful mass migrations is inconsistent with
sound immigration policy and important national security
interests.”
And, Mr. Ashcroft, on
Cinco de Mayo, stay home!
Juan Mann [send him
email] is a lawyer and the proprietor of
DeportAliens.com.