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    Conservatives should oppose the Senate immigration proposal, and can gain much from

    National Review
    A Time to Fight
    Conservatives should oppose the Senate immigration proposal, and can gain much from doing so.

    By John O'Sullivan
    January 29, 2013

    Well, here it finally is: the long-threatened “bipartisan” comprehensive immigration reform proposal, and as the old joke has it, when the Stupid Party and the Evil Party get together, they come up with something that is both stupid and evil.

    The principles underlying the proposal (the actual bill will ascend from the depths next month) have been conveniently laid out by the senatorial “Gang of Eight.” If after reading them you feel an irresistible urge to send your bank-account number and a power of attorney to an e-mail account in Nigeria, or experience similar symptoms, you are advised to consult comments on the proposal from Mark Krikorian, from Charles C. W. Cooke, and from long-time Democrat activist and former New Republic writer Mickey Kaus.


    Between them, Mark and Mickey more or less demolish the policy arguments — pretexts really — within the proposed legislation as slippery, dishonest, and damaging socially and economically, while Charlie shreds the argument that Republicans should pass it even so for reasons of political self-interest. While I will have more to add on these specifics as the debate develops, I want to suggest the most important point for now: Defeating this legislation should be the main purpose of the conservative movement in the next twelve months. Here are a few reasons why:


    First, it’s a terrible piece of legislation and it deserves to be halted in its tracks. It will make some of America’s problems much worse without solving or ameliorating others. Opposing the legislation is an act of patriotism and political hygiene. Some conservatives currently doubt this and will want to be persuaded of its truth before signing onto the campaign to derail it. That is something that the bill’s opponents will have to do in detail and with evidence over the next few months. For the moment, however, we should state clearly the simple truth: This bill is both stupid and evil and we’re against it.


    Second, the conservative movement needs a good fight to get it off the canvas. This is a good fight and it’s a fight for the good. We should relish it.


    Third, the supporters of the bill are utterly confident of victory. They believe that they have steam-rolled Republicans and conservatives into accepting this dreadful legislation as inevitable. They have already ordered the champagne for the victory party. So the bill’s defeat would be correspondingly unsettling — no, frightening — for them. It would cast a pall of doubt over their conviction that America is now a liberal progressive country. And it would be thoroughly encouraging for every conservative, and for every opponent of every liberal measure in the Obama administration’s legislative quiver.


    Fourth . . . and if we lose in the end? Well, no one now expects us to win. The practical consequences for America of bad legislation will be tragic, of course, but our consciences will be clear, and our foresight and wisdom will be increasingly obvious as those consequences unroll. If our opponents emerge victorious but bleeding and divided, we will be far better off than if they had raced to a “bipartisan” triumph on chariots oiled by John McCain, Marco Rubio, Lindsey Graham, and Jeff Flake.


    Fifth, this is a fight in which the American people are on one side and all the “Bigs” are on the other. They have Big Business, Big Labor, Big Money, Big Media, Big Religion (usually known for its small congregations), Big Academia, and Big Activism. But all these forces — including the leaderships of both major parties in Congress — were in favor of the two earlier amnesty bills before Congress. Both of those bills were opposed by only a grassroots campaign supporting a few brave senators and representatives. But the grassroots won and the establishments were defeated. It can happen again, and the battle itself will demonstrate just which side of politics represents the people and which side the rich and powerful.


    Sixth, even if we lose, such a populist campaign would be a terrific organizing event. It could rally a third conservative movement, bringing over to the right another generation of blue-collar conservatives, as Goldwater’s campaign rallied the first conservative wave and the 1976 and 1980 elections brought over the Reagan Democrats in the second. This is an issue that people care about both for its own sake and because it crystallizes their sense that America is being hijacked by a progressive establishment that despises them.


    Seventh, such a campaign might also create a new group of leaders for the GOP. Remember that the fight to defeat the Panama Canal bill was a losing one. But it rallied the conservative movement and ensured that Ronald Reagan would be the Republican candidate in 1980. Reagan lost the battle over the bill, but he defeated the conservative establishment (led, ironically, by Bill Buckley on this occasion), winning the soul of the party. If conservatives force the issue, Marco Rubio might suddenly have to discover second thoughts (for the third time?) on immigration policy. And Ted Cruz is waiting in the wings . . .


    Eighth, a genuine knock-down, drag-out fight over this proposal would also make the American people much better informed about the entire immigration issue. At present most Americans know about the “DREAM Act” and little else. They have almost no idea that the current levels of legal immigration amount to approximately 1 million people a year, for instance, or that the proposed new legislation would invite much larger numbers than that into America. The polls over many years have shown that the more information voters have about immigration, the less likely they are to support liberalizing measures like the one now on offer. Those who support the bill fear this. They know that the longer and more vigorous the debate, the more likely they are to lose it. Conservatives have everything to gain by prolonging the debate and providing the facts.


    Ninth, Latinos, Asians, blacks, and other minorities are like other Americans in being only moderately informed about immigration. At present what they mainly know is the Big Media narrative that opposition to open borders is probably a synonym for xenophobia, racism, or “bitterness.” For this, Republicans are partly to blame because they almost never give a coherent defense of their immigration policies. (They close their eyes and hope the issue will go away.) In reality, there is a strong case for lower immigration on the basis of defending the rights and incomes of low-income citizens, including minority Americans. A political battle would compel conservatives to make this case to all Americans — including the substantial minorities within minorities who know this from experience. Treating Latinos and other minorities as intelligent fellow citizens whom we can convince of our common interests is more likely to win their support than Hispandering and Hispanicking.


    Tenth, this issue isn’t going away — as McCain et al. seem to think. Even if this bill goes through and an amnesty is granted, the same problem will recur in about a decade, as it has after every amnesty. Conservatives should hone their arguments now and, unlike the Hapsburgs, fight in the first ditch rather than in the last.

    — John O’Sullivan is editor-at-large of National Review.

    http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/339065/time-fight-john-o-sullivan

  2. #2
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    Our job, if we, the people, choose to accept it, is to educate the American people about illegal immigration ... as it stands now, ignorance on this issue abounds in our country.

  3. #3
    April
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    LETS STAY ON IT!!!!! ACTION Needed HERE!

    Illegal alien supporters are calling Congress for Amnesty

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