June 27, 2007
Bush’s Border
Patrol Betrayal
By
Henry McCulloch
The Houston Chronicle
reports the Border Patrol is on a recruiting
drive—supposedly as a
“[K]ey
component of the Bush administration's renewed efforts
to
broker a pending immigration-reform law by
ramping up security at the border.
''’We're pulling out all the stops,’ said Todd Fraser, a
Border Patrol spokesman in Washington, D.C.”
[Border
patrol races to sign up thousands, By
James Pinkerton, Houston Chronicle June 25, 2007]
This may sound like good news. But
it should make anyone concerned about the
National Question and the
chicanery of the Bush administration and its
Congressional open-borders co-conspirators very
nervous. The quote above gives the game away: Bush and
his
assorted brains are pushing a
Potemkin-village non-solution to our border
problems in yet another attempt to con Americans into
supporting, or at least accepting,
their amnesty/”guest” worker giveaway of
American citizenship and
abolition of our borders.
We can’t fall for it. (Not that
any regular
VDARE.COM readers are likely to.)
Expect any recruiting under this
program to be purely for political consumption. Expect
it to be rushed and thoughtless—as Border Patrol
mouthpiece Fraser admits in the quote above. Expect
affirmative action favoritism to rule the
recruiting and selection.
Which brings me to my major concern
about this whole fraudulent enterprise: the
institutionalizing of
dual, or at best divided, loyalty in federal
employees whose
sole allegiance should be to the United
States, and whose
sole concern in carrying out their duties
should be the interests of Americans and the United
States.
Affirmative action in this case
means aggressively
recruiting Hispanics.
Undivided loyalty is very far from
the case in the U.S. Border Patrol today. The Border
Patrol
recruits heavily in areas along the Mexican
border—it’s an easier sell as Border Patrol agents from
near the border don’t have to go far from home to be on
station. And of course our “diversity”-obsessed
Federal Government likes it because these areas now have
heavily Mexican and
Mexican-American populations from which to
make affirmative-action hires.
But since the major purpose of the
Border Patrol along the Mexican border (when the
Administration allows it to do its job, that is) is to
keep Mexicans from entering the United States
illegally and to
return expeditiously those who
make it across, does it make any sense to
have the ranks of those who are fighting America’s real
war be full of people with strong
national and
familial ties to Mexico—often people
themselves born in Mexico?
(As an aside, how many of today’s
Border Patrol agents are only here and in their jobs
because
a Mexican relative was amnestied in 1986,
allowing the future agent to come to America? Forbidden
question, I know—but perhaps worth asking.)
Border Patrol agents
Ramos and Compean seem to be worthy
exceptions to my concern about divided loyalty—and maybe
that’s why the
Bush administration, at the Mexican
government’s behest, is making sure they languish in the
federal pen for a long time to come, pour encourager
les autres not to
get too serious about keeping all those
potential
George P. Bush voters from bringing their
family values across the Rio Grande river.
What to make, though, of
Rene Sanchez, Mexican-born Border Patrol
agent and intimate of Mexican drug smuggler and regular
border-jumper,
Osbaldo Aldrete-Davila, whose wounding became
the pretext for
incarcerating Ramos and Compean?
Sanchez, who took extraordinary
steps to help build a case against his Border Patrol
colleagues, on all evidence seems to feel far greater
solidarity with a Mexican
narcotraficante than with his
Mexican-American comrades. Is this the sort of man we
want patrolling the Mexican border?
The back pages of newspapers are
now replete with stories (for the most part the
major media are studiously uninterested) of
Border Patrol agents who have broken their oaths and
helped smuggle illegal aliens into the United States.
While not all of the surnames in the papers are Spanish,
most are.
Recently the
National Guard has been sent in to beef up
the border patrols—and three men from the Texas National
Guard have been
charged with smuggling aliens. Two of them
were Hispanic.
Nevertheless, the Bush
Administration makes it clear as can be that it will do
nothing to address this
prudential concern. Quite the contrary. In
addition to slashing standards and training requirements
across the board, it is recklessly courting the risk of
dual loyalty—or even primary loyalty to Mexico and
other Latin American countries—in its Border
Patrol high-speed recruiting drive:
“The
Border Patrol recently has conducted recruiting fairs in
cities including
Houston, San Antonio, Dallas, Detroit and
Edinburg in the Rio Grande Valley.
“To
draw more interest, the age limit for recruits has been
raised to 40 from 37.
“To get
recruits into the field more quickly, the Border Patrol
is cutting its training schedule at its
New Mexico academy from 91 to 81 days.
“In
October, a new Spanish test will allow those who pass it
to shave 30 more days from their academy training,
Fraser said. According to Border Patrol officials, this
test
could benefit about half of all recruits,
because the agency is heavily recruiting Hispanic
trainees.” [emphasis added]
Not only will Hispanics—those most
likely to have
divided loyalties about securing our
southern border—be preferred over other
candidates for affirmative-action reasons, they will be
preferred on the basis of Spanish language skills. To
the extent Spanish is made a prerequisite for Border
Patrol service, ordinary Americans will be made
ineligible
for jobs working for their own government.
(Another aside: Why is
Spanish proficiency necessary for border
patrolling in the first place?) As Peter Brimelow has
documented, the
forced national bilingualism of Canada has
operated to create
enormous preferences in government employment
for French-speaking Quebecois. Do we want the same sort
of divisive preference regimes here? Especially since
Spanish is not an American national language, as French
is in Canada.
This Bush Border Patrol recruiting
drive has two purposes.
The short term purpose is to
provide political cover for an illegal alien amnesty and
“guest” worker (read
American-displacement) program that would
dwarf our
1986 mistake,
massive as that was.
The second, long-term purpose is to
Hispanicize the Border Patrol even more—with no thought
about what that does to the Border Patrol’s
effectiveness. (Maybe, though, given President Bush’s
emotional Mexicanism, it is very well thought
out.)
Of course, if the
Bush Administration succeeds in using the
Security and Prosperity Partnership of North
America to draw the United States into a North American
Union, the Border Patrol will be irrelevant.
Our politicos will have succeeded
in abolishing America’s borders—by
abolishing America, period.
Henry McCulloch (email
him) blogs frequently for VDARE.COM.