Results 1 to 2 of 2

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

  1. #1

    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Sacramento, CA
    Posts
    278

    Why Feinstein voted for amnesty

    Realities dictating an immigration compromise
    By Thomas Elias ,
    Tuesday, April 4, 2006
    Print E-Mail
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    The Minutemen volunteers now keeping watch for illegal immigrants on the Arizona-Mexico border can fulminate about lawbreakers all they want, but the facts on the ground guarantee their complaint will not really matter.
    That's because the estimated 12 million illegals now in this country are not leaving and no one is about to throw them out. The pressing need today, then, is not for punishment or criminalization, but for ways to assimilate them while also protecting borders and keeping the numbers stable. An attempt at this will be the essence of the federal compromise today's heated debate in Congress will surely produce.
    Much of this was put in bas relief by the landmark demonstrations of last month and those that have continued since.
    Before March, no demonstration in American history ever involved as many as 10 percent of the persons affected by whatever issue aroused the event.
    That's why it meant so much when gigantic crowds turned out across California and the rest of the nation to protest tough immigration measures OK'd by the House of Representatives.
    There were at least 500,000 in Los Angeles, 300,000 in Chicago, 200,000 in New York City and tens of thousands more in places like San Jose and Atlanta. Together, they added up to almost 2 million by police estimates; more if you accept the figures purveyed by march sponsors.
    In short, if you accept three things -- the police numbers, the federal estimate of 12 million illegal immigrants now residing in this country and the assumption that most demonstrators were undocumented -- then this was proportionately the largest demonstration ever involving persons affected by one issue.
    The huge demonstrations and many smaller ones by high school students that followed made it plain that one aim of hard-line, anti-illegal immigrant advocates will never happen; no one can deport every illegal alien.
    Which means some kind of compromise must occur, and that's just what appears to be emerging from the ongoing debate in the U.S. Senate.
    While sheer numbers preclude any law demanding deportation of all illegals, there will be a larger-than-ever effort to secure borders. Few in Congress are resisting the idea of building large walls covering hundreds of miles in border areas that get the most illegal traffic.
    At the same time, tunneling under the border will likely become a felony. In one Senate floor speech, California Democrat Dianne Feinstein reported visiting a well-lighted, half-mile-long, eight-foot-high tunnel leading from a warehouse in Tijuana to another in San Diego, with 300-pound packages of marijuana found at either end.
    "Today," she said, "there is no law that makes building or financing such a tunnel a crime."
    Almost certainly, it will be a federal offense soon. Also almost certain is a doubling of the Border Patrol's size over the next five years, adding about 2,500 troopers per year.
    But harboring or employing illegals will almost surely not become a felony, as the House bill provides. Not only would enforcement require a host of new federal agents, but it could lead to arrests of clergymen and others guilty of little more than feeding and housing the desperately needy.
    Less clear is the shape of the guest worker plan also likely to be part of the eventual compromise. There is too much opposition to allow a repeat of the amnesty program OK'd by President Ronald Reagan in 1986, one that produced more than 3 million new United States citizens.
    But a recent Feinstein experiment debunked the common claim of anti-immigration activists who argue that American citizens or legal immigrants can be found to fill virtually all jobs now taken by illegal immigrants. Feinstein had welfare departments in all 58 California counties post notices advertising jobs in agriculture, detailing locations and working conditions. Not one person responded anywhere in the state, she reports.
    "That was pretty convincing evidence to me that Americans don't choose to do this work," she said.
    But it must be done. Strawberries and almonds and oranges must be harvested. Cars and dishes need to be washed and hotel rooms cleaned. When the Minutemen helped cause a momentary drop in illegal immigration last fall, farms throughout the Central Valley reported severe labor shortages and complained they might lose part of their crops.
    So immigrant labor is necessary, and it will continue. But history indicates that guest workers won't usually return home when their allotted time is up, instead blending into the population and the economy.
    So far, no one offers a remedy for this reality.
    Which means that while compromise is now all but a sure thing, it is also certain the outcome will not please anyone with strong feelings on either side of the illegal immigration issue.
    Which, of course, is what compromise is all about.
    It will not be enough to send a letter. We will have to march on washington and dictate terms in the white house

  2. #2
    Senior Member WavTek's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    North Carolina
    Posts
    1,431
    Also almost certain is a doubling of the Border Patrol's size over the next five years, adding about 2,500 troopers per year.
    Judging by past performance and President Bush's refusal to enforce our laws, there's nothing certain at all.
    REMEMBER IN NOVEMBER!

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •