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The
Realpolitik of Immigration
Since when is it racist to enforce one’s laws?
[Vincent Fiore] 4/5/06
One
has only to reference the showing by some 500,000-plus legal
and illegal Mexican aliens in Los Angeles last weekend to realize
that the discussion regarding
Immigration and its legality and security concerns is now “The” topic
of discussion across America.
But perhaps “showing” is too kind a word to describe what took place
this past week, as hundreds of thousands protested--it seems to the casual observer
even--the “right” to be in the United States illegally.
It was, instead, an onslaught of ungrateful, mostly Mexican nationals that held
up banners that read slogans like “This is stolen land” and “Chicano
Power.” Of course, what protest is complete without the pre-requisite burning
of the American flag, and the reference of President Bush as a “Nazi.”
Guest
Contributor
Vincent
Fiore
Vincent Fiore is a Staff Writer for
The New Media Alliance. Columns can be read regularly on TheRealityCheck.org.
[go to Guest index] |
Even high
school students across Texas and California, adorned in such
rebel-conscious fashion as Che Guevara T-shirts, took
to the streets, flashing gang signs, and protesting for an alien’s
right to be here illegally.
The sad part is, most of these young idiots (and if you’re
wearing a Che shirt, you ARE an idiot) will never take the time
to find out just who and what Che Guevara was.
Yes, America. Here is that discussion over immigration that we
have been putting off ever since Ronald Reagan threw the country
a high, hard one by granting amnesty to some four million illegal
aliens via the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986. It
was said back then that it was the “practical” thing
to do in light of the circumstances.
And déjà vu-like, the American people were told
then--as they are being told now--that security at the border
would be so improved as to never let immigration get out of hand
again. So let’s grant amnesty to the illegal masses, and
then let’s get tough!
Indeed. Apparently, getting tough up on Capitol Hill in regard
to immigration reform meant about as much as Bill Clinton’s
nationally televised admonition to the nation: “I did not
have sexual relations with that woman, Miss Lewinsky.” It
was sensationally false, and nervy to boot.
Well, the practicality of 1986 has turned in to something of
a political maxim in 2006. I think it is just another way of
stating the Realpolitik of the issue of immigration. Everyone
has a piece of the issue that they clutch onto, but few have
any complete answers.
This is because--whether anyone you know will admit this to you
or not--the issue of immigration is multifaceted in its complexity
and solution. I know some of my observations will generate more
than a few heartfelt e-mails towards me, but so what? That’s
why it called an op-ed, folks.
First off, there is a real need for these people to be here.
If you doubt this, you doubt the evidence of your own eyes. There
really are jobs that Americans do not want to do, especially
those just starting out in the work force: the young. I am not
just talking about picking tomatoes here. In New York, as in
most major liberal cities, car wash salons, landscapers, fast-food
emporiums, and many trade-related jobs are unfilled by young
Americans.
If you doubt this, walk into a Wendy’s, or look who’s
up on the roof doing the thankless job of a rip-out. I am in
the trades, and I know this as fact. Even the lure of decent
starting pay, medical benefits, and profit-sharing opportunities
cannot seem to sway the American young people of the country.
Does this mean that I want and believe in cheap, illegal labor?
No. I want competitive prices, yes, but the price we pay as a
country is way too high. Additionally, I have always believed
that whatever savings were realized by paying Pedro five dollars
an hour instead of paying Peter eight dollars was eaten up by
the taxes one pays to subsidize Pedro’s life here among
his American “landlords.”
The solution? Get our kids motivated again; and parents, stop
spoiling them with everything from iPods to cars by their sixteenth
birthday. Americans are the hardest working people in the world.
This should include the future of the country that seems too
busy with the instant gratification that life in the United States
offers.
As a side note to this, a real discussion needs to be had regarding
the minimum wage. It was never meant to support families on,
but to ingratiate a youngster into the world of earned pay. Raising
the minimum wage will lead to less jobs in the long run, and
even less opportunities for Americans to find employment, gainful
or otherwise. When one makes five dollars a day, as they do in
Mexico, America’s minimum wage looks like lotto to them.
Next, security is a major issue here. What good is anything Congress
or the president does if ten years later, we find ourselves in
the same boat? Remember, the Reagan administration and that Congress
dealt with the same problem as we are today, only the numbers
have changed significantly. The United States is a republic,
which means it is a land governed according to law. We have the
laws on the books already, so it hardly seems necessary to make
more. Just enforce what’s there, for starters.
The idea of 700-mile fences, thousands of additional border agents,
and robotic surveillance of the border is all well and good,
but how does one legislate the will to actually want to stop
illegals from entering the country?
Economics is probably the biggest single concern regarding illegal
immigration, but it is a two-sided argument. If it’s true--and
it is in some respects--that hiring illegals makes it easier
for business to lower its price to the public, does the public
stand ready to sacrifice price over principle? Americans are
clearly against illegal immigration, and are nearly of one voice
when it comes to security of the border.
Great, you say. If things were to drastically change regarding
illegal immigration, will paying $4.99 for a head of lettuce
make Americans pine away for those good old days of cheap goods,
brought to you courtesy of cheap and illegal labor? In my opinion,
this is the question that drives Congress.
We will all wait to see what type of bill comes out of the Senate
next week. The House has already passed a bill that deals with
security only, something that most Americans agree with. The
two bills will then go to conference, where a final bill comes
out to be voted on, and signed into law. It is a bill that will
not only affect the 11 million illegals in the country, but the
290 million citizens that have the right to be here.
Aside from the obvious concerns that are being discussed all
across the country, there are those who seek to turn this debate
into something else.
For those of you who delve into the media-driven and supported
cries of “racism,” enough already. Since when is
it racist to enforce one’s laws? For anyone to engage in
calling an American citizen “racist” because he or
she has genuine concerns over the social and economic impact
of mass immigration into the country displays a racism all their
own, and that racism is one of anti-Americanism.
If all those disparate groups and organizations of “non-whites” have
not figured out what ails the American people most in all this,
let me explain it to you: assimilation.
And for all my friends over at La Raza, and the “Spanish
Council” for this, and the “Mexican Caucus” for
that, an old saying comes to mind here: “América,
lo ama o sale de él.” CRO
copyright
2006 Vincent Fiore
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