February 18, 2003
An Immigration Dictatorship
By Paul Craig Roberts
Are democracies democratic? Or do
elites determine political outcomes regardless of
majority opinion?
Look at last weekend’s massive
anti-war rally in London. Random interviews with
participants revealed that many were first time marchers
who were protesting not merely war, but Prime Minister
Blair’s habit of running
roughshod over British opinion. Marchers oppose
Blair going to war against Iraq without a vote. But they
also oppose Blair cramming
massive third world immigration down their throats
and signing away
British sovereignty to the
European Union.
No longer perceived as “New Labour,”
Blair is now perceived as an anti-democrat who is a
threat to British identity.
In a recent report from the Center
for Immigration Studies, Roy Beck and Steven Camarota
document an equally large divergence between elite and
public opinion in the U.S. The gap is enormous on
immigration. The latest
national poll conducted by the Chicago Council on
Foreign Relations found that
60 percent of the American public regard the present
level of immigration to be a “critical threat to the
vital interests of the United States.” In contrast, only
14 percent of elites--members of Congress, the
administration, leaders of church groups, business
executives, union leaders, journalists, academics, and
heads of major interest groups--share the public’s
concern.
The poll indicates that the public
and the elites do not have the same appreciation of
citizenship and commitment to protecting American
identity. Seventy percent of the public believe that
reducing illegal immigration should be a very important
foreign policy goal of the U.S. Only 22 percent of
elites believe that the high rate of illegal immigration
is a problem.
Roy Beck and Steven Camarota
report:
“It is
a well established fact in public opinion polling that
most Americans for nearly all of the last quarter
century have desired reductions in legal and illegal
immigration. However, in general, federal lawmakers have
moved in the opposite direction of their constituents’
desires, continually raising the numerical level of
legal immigration and failing to take steps to reduce
illegal migration.”
Elite vs. Public Opinion
An Examination of Divergent Views on Immigration
Center
for Immigration Studies
December 2002
Even post-September 11, after
illegal immigrants destroyed the
World Trade Center towers, a section of the
Pentagon, and thousands of American lives, the political
leadership of both parties continues to
advocate and
legislate policies that increase the flow of
immigration into the U.S.
Both
Rep. Richard Gephardt (D,Mo) and President George
Bush support amnesties for illegal aliens.
Rep. Barney Frank (D, Mass) pushed a bill through
the House Judiciary Committee that permits
non-citizen criminals to remain in the U.S.
Sen. Orrin Hatch (R, Utah) and Rep.
Chris Cannon (R, Utah)
support in-state tuition for
illegal aliens.
Senate Democrats inserted into the
Homeland Security bill provisions that permit immigrants
claiming asylum to be paroled into the U.S. before their
claims to asylum are verified.
Our elected representatives’
actions to increase immigration are a slap in the face
to those 82 percent of the electorate who desire the
opposite. President Bush continues to favor amnesty for
illegals despite the fact that 70 percent of the public
give him low scores on the immigration issue.
Mass immigration into Great Britain
has unleashed germ warfare on the
British people, sharply pushing up
HIV, TB and hepatitis B infection rates. According
to official government figures, immigration has resulted
in more than doubling the number of HIV cases. When
Anthony Browne, the Environmental Editor of the
London Times reported these facts recently, British
elites denounced him as a racist guilty of purveying
“naked hatred.”
In Britain it is becoming
impossible to report factually on immigration’s results.
Scotland Yard, the British equivalent to the FBI, now
has a Diversity Directorate. The
Diversity Directorate’s job is to intimidate people
from complaining about immigration and newspaper
reporters from reporting immigrant crime. In Blair’s
Britain, a factual statement about immigrants can make a
person guilty of
“inciting racial hatred,” thereby violating the
Public Order Act.
Will the Diversity Directorate pick
up Tony Blair for inciting hatred against Saddam
Hussein, hatred that is bound to spill over onto Muslims
in general? Isn’t inciting war against minorities worse
than reporting facts on immigrant crime and infectious
disease?
In the meantime, ask yourself: What
sort of government do we have? Is our government a
democratic dictatorship in which we elect our own
dictators?
Paul
Craig Roberts is the author with Lawrence M. Stratton of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice. Click
here for Peter
Brimelow’s Forbes
Magazine interview with Roberts about the recent
epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.
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