June 18, 2003
A Patriotic Immigration Attorney Proposes An
Amazing New Principle: Immigration Reciprocity
By Publius
As an immigration attorney, for ten years I’ve
watched uneducated and lawless immigrants receive free
passes-amnesties, social welfare, pro bono lawyering -
while the small number of truly qualified
legal migrants must crawl through an almost
impenetrable labyrinth laid down by the Departments of
Labor and Homeland Security. For instance, it took some
eight years for America to admit the
Finnish genius who invented the Linux operating
system. Meanwhile, an illegal immigrant who took part in
the
latest amnesty can gradually import his brothers,
sisters, parents and in-laws - in the name of the actual
principle driving U.S. policy: so-called “family
reunification.”
Providing immigration benefits to married brothers
and sisters has stretched this principle to a ludicrous
thinness. How can two separate families each with
spouses and children be considered members of one family
in need of reunification?
The single greatest task for immigration reformers is
to waft away the clouds of sentiment that justify this
unjust, irrational policy, and replace it with a program
that fits our national interest and is easy to explain
and defend.
I propose that we adopt the principle of
reciprocity.
Reciprocity simply means that America might limit
immigration from any other country to the numbers of
American citizens (of any ethnicity) who actually take
up residence in that country and become citizens. It
might even include providing similar health benefits,
similar
land ownership rights, similar language rights, and
similar social perquisites according to what that same
country offers
American emigrants. As Peter Brimelow
documented in
Alien Nation, applying this standard to
countries such as
Mexico--which are quite literally
xenophobic--would revolutionize U.S. policies.
Up to now, the public discourse on immigration has
been focused exclusively on American policies, and the
limits they impose on the wishes of would-be immigrants.
By calling for reciprocity between the U.S. and other
countries, we shift the grounds of the debate. Suddenly,
it’s relevant to discuss
Mexico’s
immigration policies,
work permits, health benefits to visitors and
illegal immigrants,
free education to immigrants, and so on.
If applied consistently, this principle would
stabilize populations of the world, instead of allowing
crowded countries to dump their excess populations -
still inspired by the divisive
racist and
nationalistic feelings that motivate their nations’
policies - on an unwitting America. Reciprocity would
not mean unlimited immigration - because immigration law
already contains several caps on admissions. (We can
argue about whether to shrink these numbers - later.)
Reciprocity would simply add a new cap to per-country
admissions - the exact number of American citizens who
moved to that country legally the year before. These
statistics are very easy to collect, and they could be
published every January to guide America’s visa-issuing
agencies.
Reciprocity is simple, clear, and fair. It offers
even the busiest congressman a way of talking about his
position on immigration that cannot immediately be
construed as mean-spirited and racist. In fact, he or
she can call opponents mean-spirited and racist, for
“implicitly endorsing” the exclusionist policies of
other countries. What a change of pace. It would even
allow them to engage in legislative efforts to “grade”
other countries on their immigration policies, much as
we now
grade other countries on their
civil rights,
slave trafficking, and
support for terrorism. Reciprocity allows
immigration reformers to be seen as the advocates of
human rights
abroad, as well as law enforcement at home.
Wouldn’t it be great to go on the offensive? To
debate Mexico’s receiving policy instead of America’s?
Reciprocity may be an unknown soldier in the
immigration battle. But it is the principle which
dominates American policy in almost all other areas:
taxation, water rights,
social security,
national defense, mutual
security pacts,
trade agreements, and so on. Sometimes it is trumped
by considerations of war and peace, but it is a concept
with which legislators and policy makers are eminently
acquainted.
There’s a certain West Coast politician who at least
once a year beats his breast about America’s old
immigration policies toward Japan. He actually argues
that these policies embittered the Japanese political
class, and brought on the attack at
Pearl Harbor.
The best way to answer this misguided line of
argument is to invoke reciprocity - to point out that
Japanese immigration policies were in 1930 (and still
are now) so
rigorous, xenophobic, and racist that only
marriage to a Japanese citizen gains one the right
to live in that country (not become a citizen), and that
Koreans of even fourth generation residence in Japan are
not
viewed as citizens, only permanent residents.
What was that about bitterness again?
How could the Japanese political class hate America
for imposing less stringent laws and vastly easier
requirements than they favored for themselves?
Oh, it was all smoke and mirrors to begin with, you
say? You’d be right.
Establishing the principle of immigration reciprocity
would end these guilt games for good – and much else
besides.
Publius [email
him] is an immigration
attorney