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Immigration is one of the most controversial
issues facing the American people today. Ever since the terrorist attacks of
September 11, 2001, loud voices in the media are pointing to "open borders" and
hinting at dangerous "illegal aliens" who are stealing jobs and overburdening
public services. Last year, the voices finally reached the House of Representatives.
In December, it passed a bill that calls for arresting and deporting all illegal
aliens, imposing stiff penalties on employers who are employing them, and building
a 698-mile $2.2 billion fence along the U.S.-Mexican border. Since then, the
Senate has been trying to inject a touch of moderation and compromise which
presently looks as if it is going to fail.
It is difficult to imagine the state of mind and the grasp of legal knowledge
of the legislators who voted for the bill. They would make it a felony to be
in the United States illegally and penalize employers for hiring illegals.
A felony is a grave crime which, in federal law, is punishable by more than
one year's imprisonment. It must be tried by a jury which takes an oath to
act fairly and without preconception. The jurors must hear witnesses testifying
against the accused and, if they believe that there is sufficient evidence,
the accused may be indicted. The court then must appoint counsel for the accused,
who may challenge the indictment. At the close, the judge instructs the jury
concerning the verdict; if found guilty, the accused is condemned to serve
more than one year in a federal penitentiary. Of course, the convict is free
to apply to a higher court for appeal.
If the House Bill should become the law of the land, we must brace for federal
indictments of millions of people found to be illegal residents and for imprisonment
of millions of men and women who are found guilty. This simple scribe cannot
fathom the time and effort it will take to prosecute some ten million illegal
aliens. He cannot imagine the magnitude of police effort to find them, arrest
them, and haul them to court. And he cannot fancy the new federal prisons needed
to incarcerate millions of illegal aliens. He is saddened by the Bill that
would incarcerate more millions in the country that already has the one of
the highest incarceration rates in the world.
The House Bill would make it a felony for businessmen to hire illegal workers.
If found guilty of knowingly employing illegal aliens, they would have to share
prison cells with the workers they hired. And employers who do not properly
check the nationality of their employees and who incorrectly fill out the required
paperwork could be fined up to $25,000. "It does not take too many of those
fines to drive small business out of business," says John Gay of the National
Restaurant Association. And this scribe would like to add, it does not take
too many of those fines to drive some American farmers off their land. And
he can only conjecture what federal marshals will do to a farmer who simply
refuses to investigate and ascertain the nationality of his hired hands.
Human nature is the same everywhere; people are suspicious of everything alien.
They may admire themselves and their institutions but dislike and disdain foreigners.
Immigrants may speak a foreign language and often live in distinct ethnic neighborhoods,
frequently shunned and feared, but they come because they are eager to improve
their living conditions. Adventuresome poor young people strike out for a new
country. They may do whatever it takes, even risking their lives and their
families' livelihood to improve their lot in life. Early immigrants usually
assist later immigrants, especially other members of the family. Until recent
times, agriculture was their main occupation. Since a given area of land supports
only a certain population, young men and women moved to the new world where
land was believed to be available. People also moved because social and economic
laws were too rigid and political and religious regulations too disagreeable.
During the colonial period, many immigrants came to America as indentured servants
who were bound for a period of service, usually seven years. While many died
during their servitude, some later rose to wealth and influence.
During the nineteenth century, American railroads received large areas of
land which they used to attract young men working on construction and settling
on their land. American industry, which expanded rapidly, contracted for immigrant
laborers, even paying their passage to the United States. Indeed, throughout
the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the United States was the favorite
country of immigration, attracting some 60 percent of all migrants. Yet, they
always were the objects of suspicion, mistrust, and apprehension, especially
when they arrived in large numbers. During the mid-nineteenth century, many
Roman Catholic immigrants arrived and settled in Eastern cities; they were
the targets of a Know-Nothing Movement which sought to elect only
native-born Americans and agitated for a 25-year residence qualification for
citizenship. It swept the polls in Massachusetts and Delaware, and almost captured
New York State in the 1854 election. During the 1860s and 1870s, Chinese workers
were imported to California in great numbers to work on the construction of
railroads. The Burlingame Treaty of 1868 between the Chinese and U.S.
governments actually encouraged Chinese immigration, but as soon as the railroad
construction slowed down and the economic boom gave way to a recession, the
heavy influx of Chinese caused much apprehension and friction. Ethnic tension
and conflict soon led to the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882.
During the 1890s, the pattern of immigration changed significantly. The majority
of immigrants came from Eastern and Southern Europe, from Poland, Russia, the
Balkans, and Italy. They were disliked and distrusted just like all earlier
newcomers. After much agitation, wrangling, and dispute, Congress practically
closed the borders to all aliens except Northern and Western Europeans in 1924
by passing the National Origins Act. Setting quotas by nationality
as recorded by the 1890 census, it granted the largest quotas to British and
German nationals. Forty-one years later, in 1965, Congress responded to President
L. B. Johnson's skillful prodding by enacting a sweeping Civil Rights Act replacing
the national-origin-quota system with a"relations system" welcoming children,
spouses, and parents of U.S. citizens. President Johnson tried to lay to rest
old ethnic tension and conflict, and instead concentrate on economic conflict.
He called for a nationwide war against poverty, and proposed a vast program
of welfare legislation designed to create what he called "the Great Society." Most
successors have labored hard and long to make it ever greater.
Soon after the national-origins system had been abolished, Asian and Hispanic
immigration began to surge. By 1986, several million aliens were at work in
California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas. Congress tried to stem the tide
by passing the Immigration Reform and Control Act, imposing heavy
fines on employers who deliberately hired undocumented workers. The law also
granted amnesty to some three million illegal aliens. Soon thereafter, they
arrived in ever larger numbers from Mexico and other Central American countries,
which rekindled the old hostility to alien newcomers, but the ethnic arguments
were old-fashioned and out- of-date; they were supplanted by arguments of employer
greed and labor exploitation. The news media and the politicians who echoed
them charged that illegal immigrants steal jobs, over-burden public services,
pay no taxes, and refuse to assimilate. Labor union leaders who face their
unemployed members never tire of pointing at illegal servants and fruit pickers.
This academic observer is dismayed and disheartened by the old Marxian
arguments of employer greed and labor exploitation; their growing popularity
is a bad omen for future economic policies, but he also remembers the age-old
sway of ethnic argumentation of religious, social, national, and cultural differences.
He is appalled by the two-faced newsmen and politicians who are advancing economic
arguments, but pointing at aliens who visibly differ from them in racial characteristics.
Nearly all Hispanic immigrants are Amerindians or mestizos, that is, persons
of mixed European (Spanish) and native Indian descent. According to the Encyclopedia
Britannica, only fifteen percent of Mexicans are white, two percent of
Hondurans, and 1.6 percent of El Salvadorans. The racial ratios are similar
in all Central American countries.
Whatever the motivation of our legislators may be, the conflict is growing
and threatening. It may lead to one of the ugliest civil discords and struggles
in U.S. history. The pressures of illegal immigration are bound to continue
as the differences between U.S. and Central American standards of living are
substantial and may continue to grow. Present U.S. Gross Domestic Product per
capita is estimated at $38,000 a year, that of Mexico at $6,700, Honduras at
$7,300, El Salvador at $2,350, and Nicaragua at $800. If all expand at a satisfactory
rate of 3 to 5 percent, the differences would continue to widen and to increase
the pressures of migration.
The present road of legislation and regulation as delineated by the House
Bill leads straight to insoluble conflict and strife. Legions of demonstrators,
legal and illegal, in cities from coast to coast, are making this point. Some
500,000 people recently marched in Los Angeles, 300,000 in Chicago, and tens
of thousands more in cities like Phoenix and Denver. They included many native-born
Americans, marching out of compassion for those the House Bill might criminalize;
however, many politicians, mostly Republicans, expect to gather more votes
by promising more border fences, mass deportation, and other measures to protect
the culture. The legislature of Georgia already passed a Security and Immigration
Compliance Act which eliminates income-tax deductions for companies hiring
illegal aliens. The legislators of thirty other states presently are debating
some 75 Bills imposing similar restrictions on employers. The U.S. Department
of Homeland Security is implementing a new, revolutionary, state-of-the-art
approach to the illegal immigration problem. It will crack down on employers
who "knowingly and recklessly" hire illegal aliens, and, 54 private groups,
such as the border-patrolling Minutemen, announced that they will boycott companies
that favor liberal immigration laws; they may picket Tyson Foods, Wal-Mart
Stores, Bank of America, and many others.
Some legislators may want to work out a compromise reform bill that would
combine tougher border controls with a path toward legalization for most of
the ten million illegal immigrants already inside the United States, but a
compromise is likely to include provisions that force employers to confirm
the legal status of all employees and prospective hires. It would be a bureaucratic
nightmare costing employers billions of dollars and destroying countless businesses
and thousands of jobs. The economic and social consequences are too ghastly
to contemplate. A Bill authored by Senator John McCain and Senator Ted Kennedy
would legalize all illegal immigrants in the United States, open the door to
400,000 temporary "essential" workers per year and improve border security.
Illegals would have to pay $2,000 fines, learn English, undergo a background
check, wait six years to apply for a green card, and then head to the back
of the citizenship line. Such a bill obviously follows in the footsteps of
the 1986 Control Act that legalized more than three million undocumented people
and triggered the fresh surge of Latin American immigration. It would provide
a steady supply of labor but alienate many native-born Americans.
This academic observer also questions such a compromise. He is doubtful that
some ten million men, women, and children can be made to jump through numerous
new political hoops to justify their existence and presence. Surely, a few
illegals will submit, pay a $2,000 fine, undergo a background check, wait six
years for a green card, and get in line for citizenship, but a large majority,
millions of them, may defy the new law and continue in their labors. They also
may march in the streets and wait to be arrested - by the thousands and
even hundreds of thousands. Last year, 1.2 million undocumented workers were
arrested inside U.S. boundaries, nearly 600,000 of them in Arizona. The new
law may double and triple these numbers which, sooner or later, may trigger
tragic events. As the candidates of both political parties out-tough each other
and the political crackdown on illegal aliens is getting ever harsher, enforcement
of the law, too, may become more arduous and hardheaded. It may even lead to
some maltreatment and injury of prisoners, which the media are likely to reveal
to the world. And if some illegal workers, for any reason, should ever be brutalized
or killed by border guards and trigger-happy policemen, no matter how few there
may be, the reports and pictures would horrify the American public and dismay
the world. Surely, such a law, just like the Bill adopted by the House, would
only intensify the storm that is swirling at the border.
It is unlikely that Congress will emerge with a sensible solution. Republican
Party leaders who determine the Congressional agenda are calling for ever higher
barriers along southern borders. They do not miss a day exclaiming: "Enforce
the law, enforce the law. This is a nation of law." They may prevail, but will
discredit the party with every drop of Latino blood spilled at the border.
As the storm intensifies, the Republican Party is likely to lose its political
clout for many years to come.
Politics, as practiced today, is the systematic organization of economic conflict.
This observer is saddened and hurt by political follies and fury that threaten
social peace and cooperation. He would make social peace the primary objective
and mission of his course of action. Peace be to this country and prosperity
within its borders. A one- or two-year cooling-off or truce in political agitation
and Congressional legislation may calm the tempers and clear the minds. He
would walk in the footsteps of the Founding Fathers who, in 1790, passed the
Naturalization Act granting citizenship to people "of good moral character" who
had been in the country for two years. He would grant amnesty to all illegal
aliens "of good moral character" who have been working for two years, as well
as to their spouses and children. Since frightened employers could not be expected
to testify about employment and good moral character, he would accept the testimony
of a worker's priest. Nearly all Latinos are members of the Roman Catholic
Church. If they wish to become U.S. citizens, he would expect them to return
to their native countries, at their leisure, and then reenter the United States,
with their working papers in hand, and commence the usual five-year naturalization
process. It is the way of peace.
The pressures of migration will continue to grow as long as the difference
between the rates of labor productivity and standards of living continues to
widen. No matter how high the border barriers may be and how many armed Minutemen
may patrol the border, they will come, risking their lives, in order to find
a new beginning in the country forged by earlier immigrants. To mitigate and
alleviate this pressure of migration, a sensible United States policy would
strive to reduce the pressures by diminishing the difference. It could promote
an unhampered private-property market order in Mexico and other Central American
countries, which would lead to rapid economic expansion, rising labor productivity,
and immediate reduction in the migration pressures. It would appoint the most
successful and knowledgeable American-Latino entrepreneurs to positions of
ambassador and consul in every Central American city, and expect them to share
their know-how freely. As the people hear them and follow their example, as
wage rates and standards of living approach U.S. rates, many illegal aliens
may even decide to leave their unfriendly environment and go back home.
It is unlikely that these dreams will come to pass. No federal government,
whether Republican or Democratic, is likely to promote an unhampered market
order in Mexico or anywhere else. New Deal, Fair Deal, and New-Republican administrations
like to conduct policies that closely resemble those enacted in Mexico. Surely,
Mexico is a one-party country. Its Partido Revolutionare Institutional (PRI)
has ruled the country from 1929 to 2000 and is likely to return to power in
this year's election. Charismatic Vicente Fox of the center-right National
Acton Party managed to interrupt the one-party rule in the 2000 election.
As PRI returns to power, the country must brace for more center-left to radical-left
policies that have characterized its policies since the beginning. We can expect
new rules and regulations, more social reforms, more redistribution of land,
and higher expenditures on education, housing, and healthcare. The rate of
inflation may accelerate again as the new administration increases its deficit
spending, and powerful labor unions such as the 90,000-member union of the
nationalized oil industry PEMEX and the huge national teachers' union make
their demands. The government-dominated communications media can be expected
to support all political interventions and controls. Economic conditions are
likely to deteriorate again, and more millions of young unemployed workers
will stream across the border and join their relatives and friends in California,
Arizona, and many other states.
Woodrow Wilson once reminded his countrymen that "our interests are those
of the open door - a door of friendship and mutual advantage. This is
the only door we care to enter." Many fellow-Americans would like to close
it now in the name of security and job preservation, locking out the hard-working
competition that made this country what it is today. If not friendship, what
will tomorrow bring?
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