2/26/2015 - Victor Davis Hanson Townhall.com
A federal judge has temporarily
blocked President Obama's executive order that overrode existing immigration
law. The result is more acrimony and chaos.
It is a good time to remember that
there are more than just two types of immigration -- legal and illegal. There also
exist liberal and illiberal approaches to immigration.
Take liberal immigration. It is
governed by laws passed by Congress and signed and executed by the president.
Nearly all Americans accept that no individual can pick and choose which
federal statute he chooses to obey, depending on his own perceived
self-interest.
Liberal immigration would be
entirely legal, meritocratic and ethnically blind. Skills and education would
matter more than proximity to the border or political clout.
The numbers of immigrants would be
balanced by liberal considerations: the need for skilled newcomers to avoid
dependency on American society, and concern that their arrival not harm the
economic aspirations of poor working citizens.
Liberal immigration would aim at
rapidly integrating and assimilating immigrants in accordance with further
classical liberal principles. America is not a multicultural society where
appearance is essential to our characters, but a uniquely multiracial nation
bound by common values where race becomes secondary.
In contrast, illiberal immigration
would be the opposite of the above.
A president by fiat would nullify
existing laws and order federal agencies to ignore them. Or he would issue
executive orders contrary to both his prior promises and to the Constitution.
President Obama did not, as he
alleges, override Congress because it failed to act on immigration. Instead he
ignored it because Congress would not act in a particular fashion that he found
ideologically akin to his own beliefs.
Illiberal immigration would also
mean that new arrivals could ignore the cost, time and inconvenience of
applying for visas. Instead, they would simply enter the U.S. illegally and not
be transparent about their illegal status.
Illiberal immigration would turn
policy away from ethnically blind considerations to focus on ethnic criteria.
It would assume that the enforcement
of federal immigration law and the making of immigration policy should react to
particular ethnic and political lobbying groups.
Illiberal immigration would not
concern itself with the impact of arrivals on the host country, especially the
costs incurred by the public or the effect on the wages and services of the
poor and working classes.
Also, illiberal immigration would
seek -- both explicitly by political intent and implicitly by sheer numbers --
to undermine easy assimilation, in hopes of creating bloc constituencies with
group concerns rather than individual concerns.
Illiberal immigration would
encourage romance for, not disappointment with, the country left behind. And it
would result in demands on, rather than gratitude to, the newly adopted
country.
The reason why immigration is now a
mess is not because there are no liberal solutions, but because there are so
many illiberal stumbling blocks.
Many Americans are willing to allow
some sort of exemption to the immigrants residing here illegally. Such an
exemption would offer a pathway to permanent legal residency to the majority of
immigrants here illegally if some liberal criteria were first applied.
First, close the border to illegal
immigration to prevent recurrence of these problems. Texas authorities report
that 20,000 foreign nationals have crossed the state's southern border with
Mexico in just the last two months.
Ensure that those who have committed
crimes in the United States, or who have no history of work but instead only a
record of dependency on entitlements, return to their nations of origin.
Those who have just illegally
arrived in cynical anticipation of amnesty should likewise return home to go
through the process legally.
Make immigration a meritocratic
system that does not take into consideration the particular country of origin
or ethnic background of the would-be immigrant.
What is holding up legislative
compromise and what drove President Obama's executive order is illiberal
opposition to what most Americans see as a liberal compromise. The advocates of
open borders apparently do not wish an end to easy entry without regard to the
law.
They do not wish to deport foreign
nationals who have broken U.S. laws, or who have no history of productive
employment, or who have just arrived in anticipation of amnesty. They do not
wish to reform legal immigration to a completely meritocratic system that might
not necessarily favor the current preponderance of arrivals from Latin America
and Mexico -- and thus might not enhance the political clout of ethnic
operatives.
And they most certainly do not wish
to end admission to the U.S on the basis of cheap labor. To do that would
increase the wages and bargaining power of working Americans.
The solution to the immigration mess
is not to threaten militancy if a particular political agenda is jeopardized.
It is not to slam a federal judge who demands adherence to the law. And it is
certainly not to scapegoat a generous host for not agreeing to political
demands of guests.
The answer instead is simply to act
legally -- and liberally.
No comments:
Post a Comment