4/15/2019
- Brian Lonergan Townhall.com
Despite the best efforts of the Trump administration over
the last two years, the situation at our southern border is a mess. The numbers
of those seeking entry into the United States and those apprehended by
immigration agents are surging. Even Barack Obama’s former homeland security
director now concedes
that there is a crisis at the border. While the anti-borders media and
politicians seem to only care about family separations, there is another problem
that apparently must not be spoken: high-volume, unstructured immigration
brings with it infectious diseases that are a threat to all Americans.
This is something of a taboo subject because the left has
made great efforts to shut down any debate or mention of it. If you have
legitimate concerns about infectious diseases at the border, surely you must be
a Cro-Magnon nativist who wants to spread fear and dehumanize a large
population, presumably because they are mostly indigent people of color, right?
The elephant in the room of this argument is the
ever-expanding collection of facts and testimony from those on the ground at
the border. Last month, over 2,200 people exposed to a mumps outbreak
in at least two immigration detention facilities had to be quarantined for 25
days. It was reported that in the past year 236 detainees have had confirmed or
probable cases of mumps in 51 facilities.
In 2016 authorities confirmed 22
measles cases in Arizona’s Eloy Detention Center, a privately managed facility
of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
National Public Radio last month interviewed a Border Patrol
official who reported
that more migrants are arriving with communicable illnesses such as flu, mumps,
impetigo and even one case of flesh-eating bacteria.
The Immigration and Nationality Act mandates
that all immigrants and refugees undergo medical screening exams. However, this
applies mostly to those who apply for immigrant or refugee status prior to
their arrival in the U.S.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) website
lists communicable diseases
that would cause a migrant to be deemed inadmissible. They include
tuberculosis, syphilis, gonorrhea and leprosy. The agency also states that
“Ideally, each new migrant should receive a complete health assessment that
includes screening for migration-associated illnesses.”
Given that the situation at the border is the opposite of
ideal, it’s likely that not all migrants are being given sufficient medical
exams. Immigration agents confirm that they are overwhelmed by the recent surge
and there aren’t nearly enough doctors available to process everyone. Add to
that our current policy of catch-and-release, and it’s not hard to see how
migrants with untreated, communicable illnesses could end up in schools,
hospitals and other public places throughout the country.
To counter this reality, the mainstream media has sought out
medical professionals to throw water on the idea that unfettered illegal
immigration brings with it a threat of infectious diseases. One expert reassured
us that there is nothing to fear because immunization rates in migrant feeder
countries are comparable to those in the U.S. So we are to believe that the
same Third World countries that are rife with poverty, illiteracy, corruption
and narco-terrorist gang violence also have top-flight healthcare comparable to
that in the prosperous, First World United States.
Another report from NBC News made the apocryphal claim
that not only is there no evidence that migrants are spreading disease, but
migrants actually prevent disease by working in the healthcare field once they
arrive here.
Keep in mind that all of the reports on migrants with
infectious diseases refer only to those in the custody of U.S. immigration
officials. At least a good number of them are receiving some degree of medical
examination. That is not the case with those who simply enter the U.S.
illegally at any point along the border where there is no wall or point of
entry. We have absolutely no idea what diseases they may carry or where they
are in the country.
Even at the high-water marks of immigration flow into
America, new arrivals were put through a standard battery of medical tests.
Immigrants who came through Ellis Island in the late 19th and early
20th centuries were required to first stop at a quarantine checkpoint
near Staten Island where doctors would look for symptoms of diseases such as
smallpox, yellow fever, plague, and cholera. Only after the ship passed
inspection were immigration officers allowed to board and begin processing the
passengers.
Is the point of this article that illegal aliens coming to
America are inherently bad people or somehow inferior to Americans because they
may carry infectious diseases? Absolutely not. It is to indict the current,
chaotic immigration policies that lure those people here with the promise of
easy entry into America and the “opportunity” to find jobs that exploit them
for substandard wages.
A prudent immigration system that keeps the flow of migrants
at a manageable number would be able to provide necessary medical checks for
all applicants. That is the best system for migrants as well as the current
residents of their new home country. What we have in place now fails both
parties.
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