2/15/2018 - Derek Hunter Townhall.com
There are few things in
Washington that everyone agrees on – ask a Democrat and a Republican what the
weather is like and you’re likely to get complete different answers. But there
is one thing they all agree on: the current immigration system is messed up.
I don’t use the popular
word “broken” because something isn’t really broken when so many people simply
ignore it.
That’s the biggest
problem with the immigration system, cities and states (and for decades the
federal government) have ignored the law and are implementing their will
instead. A major part of the appeal of Donald Trump as a candidate was that he
promised to enforce existing law, which sadly has become a novel idea when it
comes to immigration.
Since the system isn’t
really “broken,” but is going to be “fixed” anyway, things are likely to
change. In that change there is a chance, slim as it is, to make things better.
But how?
President Trump has
proposed some good ideas, though at a high cost – amnesty and, eventually,
citizenship for 1.8 million illegal aliens. Those ideas include an end to the
visa diversity lottery, a stupid idea that is the equivalent of pulling names
out of a hat to increase the “diversity” of people moving to the country. If
there’s a more insignificant factor in picking who should be allowed legal
status in the country than what they look like it would have to be nose
size.
But such is the stupid
state of our immigration system. Again, not broken, just dumb.
Another good proposal
from the White House is to end chain migration.
Chain migration is when
someone moves to the country legally, then is allowed to bring in family
members. It’s understandable if someone who moved here wants to bring their
kids and their spouse, but anyone beyond that should be off limits. If you
can’t live without your siblings, parents, etc., you probably shouldn’t leave
where you’re from. Moving to the United States is not a right, it is a
privilege, and it needs to be treated as such. Prioritizing anyone simply
because they’re related to someone else lucky enough to be granted that
privilege, and not based on what they can offer the country, is insane and
needs to be ended.
And that’s the main
question we should be asking when it comes to everything related to
immigration: what do we get out of it?
Priority should be
given to people who have skills, have educations, have something to offer and
add to the country to make it a better place. And that’s the one question
liberals want to avoid like the plague. To them, immigration is an opportunity
to import more voters and replace the ones their policies are costing them.
Among the groups of
immigrants liberals hate, and ones any immigration deal should include an
increase of, are EB-5 visas.
Unlike the H1B visa
program, which was supposed to bring in high-skilled workers and has been
bastardized and exploited by tech companies for cheap labor, the EB-5 visa
requires recipients to actually bring something to the table.
In order to get an EB-5
visa an immigrant must have money to invest in a business, between half a
million and a million dollars, minimum, depending upon where they want to move
to. And that investment must be in a business that employs people, a minimum of
10 people. Unlike pulling names out of a hat, the country actually gains when
an EB-5 visa recipient moves here.
Since there is a
benefit to the country, and our politicians are, well, our politicians, the
EB-5 visas are capped at 10,000 per year. Yes, we have a strict limit on the
number of immigrants with money to invest that we’ll allow into the country
that is well short of the number of immigrants we’ll accept by drawing names
out of a hat based on their country of origin.
Maybe the system is
broken? No, the system would work if it were enforced and some adjustments were
made based, again, on what should be the only criteria that matters: what does
the country get out of it?
So, yes, build the
wall, and end chain migration. I think it’s a mistake to grant amnesty that
leads to citizenship to anyone, I’d much prefer some kind of permanent
residency with no chance of citizenship for the so-called DREAMers, especially
1.8 million of them when only about one-third of them could even be bothered to
sign up for it. And kill the “diversity lottery.”
But any immigration
deal should include an increase in the EB-5 visa program. It’s the one program
about which there is no question whether or not there is a benefit to the
country. Which, sadly, appears to be the one thing the debate over immigration
reform is not about.
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