8/24/2015 - Ron Paul Townhall.com
What should be done with the estimated 15 million
people living in the United States without the legal right to be here? It seems
most politicians and many Americans come down on one or the other extreme.
Many Republicans, including Republican presidential
candidate Donald Trump, have the idea that they can round up 15 million people
and ship them back to wherever they came from. Many Democrats, on the other
hand, would grant them blanket amnesty, give them citizenship, and make sure as
many as possible are fully signed up to the welfare ranks.
Has anyone thought for a moment about how
difficult, expensive, disruptive and dangerous to our civil liberties it would
be to turn over every stone in this country to search for someone who might not
be here legally? How many billions of dollars would it cost? The government
would likely introduce a national identification card in effort to determine
who should be here and who should not.
The cards would no doubt be equipped
with biometric data to transmit to the government information about law-abiding
American citizens that they have no right knowing.
But on the other hand, how many billions of dollars
per year does it cost to provide federal, state, and local welfare and other
benefits to individuals who are not legally in the United States?
The situation seems impossible and it is true there
are no easy answers. I have suggested in my book "Liberty Defined"
that some status short of citizenship might be conferred on a case-by-case
basis. Perhaps a "green card" with a notation indicating that the
person is not eligible for welfare and not permitted to vote in the United
States. I don't think there is any doubt that many who come to this country
illegally simply want to work and will take jobs that Americans refuse to take.
The fact is, in a more libertarian society
citizenship itself would not be all that highly prized. Immigration could be
controlled to a degree using property rights instead of building walls and issuing
a national ID card. One very important "right" currently granted by
U.S. citizenship is the "right" to all the free stuff from the
government. A more libertarian society would likely have a more restrictive
immigration policy because entry into the U.S. would not be accompanied by
guarantees of free things and most property would be owned privately.
Similarly, the issue of birthright citizenship
would be much less difficult if acquiring American citizenship by the fact of
being born on U.S. soil did not grant the child the ability to take advantage
of the welfare state. Remove the welfare magnet and you will greatly reduce the
incentive to give birth here in order to gain citizenship for the baby.
Congress has within its power the authority to
clarify the 14th Amendment's definition of citizenship by making it clear that
it does not grant citizenship by birthright. Article I, Section 8 of the
Constitution is very clear: Congress has the power, "To establish a
uniform rule of naturalization, and uniform laws on the subject of bankruptcies
throughout the United States."
This power has been used in the past to clarify
birthright citizenship, including for the children of diplomats born on U.S.
soil and foreign prisoners who may give birth while in jail. There is no reason
Congress cannot provide further clarification of what the 14th Amendment means
when it refers to "subject to the jurisdiction" of the United States.
It is our weak economy, caused to a great degree by
the Federal Reserve system and the business cycles it constantly creates, that
makes the immigration situation worse for us. Neither extreme position is
correct because neither takes this into consideration. A move toward more
liberty would be the first step toward a normal immigration policy.
No comments:
Post a Comment