Send us your TB carriers...
Disease is the Achilles’ Heel of the open-borders
crowd. Contrary to their apparent imagining,
there was rigorous official screening of
immigrants back in the Ellis Island era: 1-3
percent of them were turned back every year.
With 1-3 million illegal border crossings every
year, nothing like these safeguards exist now.
This may be the unreported story of West
Nile Disease. It is certainly the unreported
story of America’s much touted but
unhistorical “commitment” to refugees.
By Scott McConnell
Same
story (but worse, of course) in Canada
Someone is coughing in the
subway, nearby. You can see a half dozen public
service ads extolling “safe sex,” but underground
neither morality nor prudence can protect from the
germs of your fellow passengers. In a cab with a
coughing driver, you can open the window wide, though
it’s December, calculating the risk-reward ration of
flu versus…tuberculosis.
TB is back.
Ten years ago, on the heels of the AIDS
epidemic, it was rising fast, but effective
countermeasures—including directly observed therapy
and even detention of patients stalled the disease’s
rise. But
now the drugs are weaker, the strains more difficult-sometimes impossible-to cure. And rates are rising.
Where is the disease coming from? Our immigration policy, that is courtesy of Bill
Clinton, The Wall
Street Journal editorial page, La Raza, George W.
Bush and dozens other culprits. Listen to Dr.
Lee Reichman of the Center for Disease Control.
“We’re now at the level that
to control TB anywhere we have to control it
everywhere. We’re doing a great job with native-born
Americans. We’re
not doing a good job in keeping down the incidence
among persons coming into the country.”
A CDC report notes that
immigrants are six times more likely to have TB than
Americans, and their rates are rising. VDARE notes
that in all of Dr. Reichman’s nuanced exposition of
the difficulties in diagnosing and treating this long
dread disease, he mentions not once the possibility of
actually reducing the number of TB carriers who enter
the country.
December 17, 2000