Townhall.com - 7/23/2013
- Harry R. Jackson, Jr.
Meet Sandra and Isaac (not their real names). Both
hold advanced degrees and are in the United States on H-1B work permits,
temporary workers’ visas which allow them to stay here as long as they are
employed by a company that cannot find qualified Americans for their jobs. They
pay income and social security taxes; they do not collect welfare or take
advantage of other entitlement programs.
Sandra and Isaac, like many members of my church,
are highly educated, law-abiding West Africans who would love to become
Americans citizens or at least permanent legal residents. Unfortunately, their
Green Card applications have been mired in decades of red tape. Yet a bill
being debated in Congress right now would put 11 million people who entered the
country illegally (or overstayed their initial visas illegally) on a “path to
citizenship” that would add to Sandra and Isaac’s bureaucratic nightmare.
The proposed “reforms” being debated in Congress
right now avoid the word “amnesty,” but would ultimately legalize over ten
million illegal immigrants in exchange for a promise to increase border
security. You do not have to be a policy expert to see that there are several
problems with this approach. I will offer a partial list of my own concerns:
1. We’ve tried this before and it didn’t work.
Our country actually enacted a similar “path to citizenship” under President
Reagan. The 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act legalized over three
million illegal immigrants with the promise that further entrance of illegals
would be halted or at least significantly reduced. Instead, the number of
people living here illegally has more than doubled since the passage of the
law. Its original sponsors, Alan Simpson and Romano Mazzoli, have admitted that
the law did not achieve its intended ends.
2. Allowing unlimited numbers of low-wage
workers into the country will continue to undercut the wages and job prospects
of the poorest Americans. It is not upper level managers or CEO’s who lose
their jobs when we receive ten million low-wage laborers over our borders.
Studies consistently demonstrate that black employment rises in response to
enforcement of immigration law. While unemployment nationwide hovers around 8%,
black unemployment remains 13.2%. Might employers find a way to hire some of
those blacks if we decided to enforce our immigration laws instead of loosening
them?
3. Many countries are using American money to
prop up their own corrupt and incompetent governments. We all know that
many illegal immigrants are sending money back to their home countries; the
total amount is unknowable, but it is probably more than $30 billion a year.
While this is a completely understandable and noble act on a personal level,
its scale allows American prosperity to subsidize the often incompetent and
corrupt leadership of illegals’ countries of origin. While this may bring some
immediate relief to certain individuals, over the long term it merely prolongs
the suffering of the masses of people who do not have relatives sending them
money from more competently governed countries.
4. A new influx of individuals eligible for
numerous federally funded entitlement programs will bankrupt our already
strained system. Our entitlement system is already badly broken. According
to a Congressional Research Service study released in 2012, Federal and State
welfare spending was more than one trillion dollars in 2011. Obamacare is set
to add 30 million new people (not including any newly legalized immigrants) to
government funded health insurance. Even the most pro-amnesty advocates admit
that the taxes paid by newly naturalized illegals will not come close to
offsetting the federal and state benefits they are likely to receive.
5. Almost no one believes the bill will result
in greater border security. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano
admitted to Congress last year that terrorists who want to harm Americans enter
the US from Mexico “from time to time.” A Rasmussen poll released in May showed
that just 30% of American voters trust the government to take steps to secure
the border if the immigration bill passes Congress.
6. The people who would be responsible for
implementing and enforcing the new law oppose it. Representatives for
employees of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and U.S. Citizenship
and Immigration Services called proposed reforms “a dramatic step in the wrong
direction.” The Senate bill, they say, does nothing to address border security,
nor does it address how the millions of new citizenship applications can be
processed in the timeframe required.
Why are both major parties toying with such a
deeply flawed bill? Quite simply, Democrats will get a huge influx of voters,
and Republicans will continue to provide various corporations with cheap labor.
Republicans also hope to shed the image that they are anti-immigrant, although
this is not what happened after the Reagan Amnesty in 1986. It is long past
time for both parties to create an immigration strategy that can work.
Be
sure to let your representatives know that they need to take a step back and
apply real leadership and common sense, instead of pandering to various special
interest lobbies. Your voice does have power – call or e-mail them today!
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