Thomas Sowell
Jun 6, 2006
Many stores held sales over the Memorial Day holidays. In Washington,
the Senate immigration bill has been selling our birthright for a
message of political pottage.
Far from "controlling the borders" as advertised, this bill
reduces our existing control of the borders. Under a provision inserted
at the eleventh hour by Senator Arlen Specter, the Senate bill forbids
the federal government from building a fence without first consulting
with the Mexican government.
In fact, state and local governments are also forbidden by this
bill to take any border control actions without first consulting with
their Mexican counterparts. In other words, if the city of San Diego
wants to put up any sort of barriers, it would have to consult with the
municipal authorities in Tijuana before doing so.
This legislation was never about border control. The laws already
on the books at this very moment allow us to control the borders, to
build any fence we choose, without consulting the government of Mexico.
The laws already on the books allow any illegal alien to be
arrested and expelled. Those laws are simply not being enforced. If a
Los Angeles policeman arrests an illegal alien and reports him to the
federal authorities, it is the Los Angeles cop who will be in big
trouble.
Border Patrol agents can knock themselves out capturing people
trying to enter the country illegally but nothing happens to most of
those people, even the ones organizing the smuggling of people and
drugs into this country.
An Associated Press dispatch reports: "The vast majority of
people caught smuggling immigrants across the border near San Diego are
never prosecuted for the offense, demoralizing the Border Patrol
agents, according to an internal document obtained by the Associated
Press."
In other words, we have make-believe border control and the
current Senate legislation will weaken even that, all the while talking
about "tough" enforcement. That "tough" enforcement is a promise but
legalizing illegal aliens is immediate and irrevocable and its
consequences irreversible and lasting far into the future.
"Border control" is just political cover for legalizing illegal
aliens. The two things are put together in a package deal that is like
horse-and-rabbit stew, whose ingredients are one horse and one rabbit.
Border control is the rabbit.
The word games played about "amnesty" deliberately confuse the
issue of violations of American law with the issue of acquiring
American citizenship.
The fact that the Senate bill has requirements -- described as
"tough," like everything else -- for acquiring citizenship is
irrelevant to the question of letting the violations of law go
unpunished.
Robert Rector of the Heritage Foundation, who has over the years
done some of the most incisive analysis of census and other statistical
data, projects the actual consequences of legalizing the existing
illegal alien population in the United States to extend far beyond the
12 million estimated to be here now.
These 12 million people are not test tube babies. They have
parents and they will have children. Nor are their other family members
likely to be kept out after the illegals are made legal.
Over the following 20 years, Dr. Rector projects that the real
increase in this population living in the United States to be 103
million, not the 12 million that everyone is talking about.
This is one of the most reckless gambles with the future of this
nation ever taken by supposedly responsible members of Congress. The
idea that we must consult with Mexico before controlling our own
borders is staggering -- and revealing.
The Mexican government has already shown its utter contempt for
our laws by publishing booklets advising its citizens how to enter the
United States illegally and how to take advantage of American welfare
state provisions.
Mexican president Vicente Fox has even had the nerve to warn that
his "friendship" with the United States is at risk if we pass
immigration laws he doesn't like. Consulting with his government is
truly putting Vicente Fox in charge of the hen house.