Republished on VDARE.com on May 24, 2006
Read My Lips: No New Amnesty
By
Ann Coulter
May 17, 2006
On the bright side, if President Bush's
amnesty proposal for illegal immigrants ends up
hurting Republicans and we lose Congress this
November, maybe the Democrats will impeach him and we'll
get Cheney as president.
At least Bush has dropped his infernal references to
slacker Americans when talking about illegal immigrants.
In his speech Monday night, instead of 47 mentions of
"jobs Americans won't do,"
Bush referred only once to "jobs Americans
are not doing"—which I take it means other than
border enforcement and intelligence-gathering at the
CIA. For the record, I'll volunteer right now to clean
other people's apartments if I don't have to
pay taxes on what I earn.
Also, someone must have finally told Bush that the
point about America being a "nation of immigrants"
is moronic. All nations are "nations of immigrants"—as
Peter Brimelow pointed out brilliantly in his 1992
article in National Review on immigration, which
left nothing for anyone else to say (Time
to Rethink Immigration?).
Of the
"nation of immigrants" locution, Brimelow says:
"No discussion of U.S.
immigration policy gets far without someone making this
helpful remark. As an immigrant myself, I always pause
respectfully. You never know. Maybe this is what they're
taught to chant in schools nowadays, a sort of
multicultural Pledge of Allegiance... Do they really
think other nations sprouted up out of the ground?"
Brimelow then ran through the
Roman, Saxon, Viking, Norman-French, Welsh and
Celtic immigrant influences in
Britain alone.
Instead of a
moratorium on new immigration, I'd settle for a
moratorium on the use of the expression "We're a
nation of immigrants." Throw in a ban on
"Diversity is our strength"
and you've got my vote for life.
Bush has also apparently learned that the word
"amnesty" does not poll well. On Monday night, he
angrily denounced the idea of amnesty just before
proposing his own amnesty program. The difference
between Bush's amnesty program and "amnesty" is:
He'd give amnesty only to people who have been breaking
our laws for many years—not just a few months. (It's the
same program that allows
Ted Kennedy to stay in the Senate.)
Bush calls this the "rational middle ground"
because it recognizes the difference between "an
illegal immigrant who crossed the border recently and
someone who has worked here for many years." Yes,
the difference is: One of them has been breaking the law
longer. If our
criminal justice system used that logic, a single
murder would get you the
death penalty, while
serial killers would get probation.
Bush claimed the only other alternative—I assume this
is the "irrational extreme"—is "a program of
mass deportation." Really? Is the only alternative
to legalizing tax cheats "a program of mass arrest of
tax cheats"?
This is the logic of the pro-abortion zealots (aka
"the Democratic Party"): Either lift every single
restriction on abortion or ... every woman in America
will be impregnated by her father and die in a
back-alley abortion!
Those are your only two answers? Do you need another
minute?
How about the proposal made on
Brimelow's Web site, Vdare.com, that illegal
immigrants be told they have two months to leave the
country voluntarily and not have their breaking of our
immigration laws held against them when they apply for
citizenship from their home countries—or not leave and
be banned from U.S. citizenship forever?
Or how about just not giving illegal aliens green
cards—as Bush is proposing—and deport them when we catch
them?
Instead of choosing immigrants based on the longevity
of their lawbreaking, another idea is to choose the
immigrants we want, for example, those who
speak English or have special skills. (And by
"special skills" I don't mean giving birth to an
anchor baby in a border-town
emergency room.)
Why not use immigration the way sports teams use the
draft—to upgrade our roster? We could take our pick of
the world's engineers, doctors, scientists, uh ...
smoking-hot Latin guys who stand around not wearing
shirts between workouts. Or, you know, whatever ...
As Peter Brimelow says in his book Alien Nation: Common Sense About America's Immigration Disaster,
why not choose immigrants who are better than us?
Bush thinks it's not fair to favor people with
special skills—a policy evidenced by his
Harriet Miers pick.
How about this: It's not fair to want to go out
with someone just because that person is attractive and
has a good personality because it discriminates against
people who are ugly with bad social skills! That's
our immigration policy.
Press
"1" for English;
press "2" for a new president ...