Tim Cavanaugh | September 14, 2004
Brian Doherty makes the case for letting in people who want to work.
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Just as money is the root of all evil, borders are the roots of
terrorism.
Down with all borders!
Abolish the Coast Guard! Abolish border agents!
more grumbling and shouting...
I don't know where to begin.
But, here's a pointer: don't try to build your article on Asa
Hutchinson's false
choice argument. Of course there are millions of illegal aliens
in the U.S. The Bush administration - and previous administrations
- have encouraged them to come and to stay.
In the first five months of this year, just one company in the
whole U.S. was fined for immigration violations. Doherty might want
to decide whether to quote as an authority someone who's clearly
not doing his job.
I doubt whether Doherty has read the 9/11
Commission Staff Report. That provides some shocking details on
how various terrorists have gamed our immigration system. And, I
doubt whether he's read this round-up
of all the chatter about al Qaeda infiltrating via our southern
border. If he had, I doubt whether he'd be so sanguine about
terrorists infiltrating the U.S.
All the government has to do is recognize that if someone wants
to work here to better themselves, and someone else wants to hire
them to do so, that's not a federal issue. That's
America.
Flooding the U.S. with cheap foreign labor is hardly the American
way.
Here's a better idea,
courtesy of the late Barbara Jordan:
"The Commission decries hostility and discrimination against immigrants as antithetical to the traditions and interests of this country. At the same time, we disagree with those who would label efforts to control immigration as being inherently anti-immigrant. Rather, it is both a right and a responsibility of a democratic society to manage immigration so that it serves the national interest."
The vast majority of Americans want stricter immigration controls
and an end to illegal immigration. They don't want to end illegal
immigration by declaring Open Borders.
Check out my Immigration
category for much more.
Let's just think, for a moment, about the national security
objections to open immigration. Now, obviously there are other
objections, and any solution I come up with for the national
security objection might still pose other problems. Having made all
of those caveats, just for a moment let's focus on a single
objection and see what we come up with.
From a national security standpoint, there would be nothing wrong
with Jose Schmoe (the Mexican version of Joe Schmoe) coming here to
work. (Yes, there may be plenty of other problems, but as I said,
let's take a single issue for a moment.) Well, unless you buy the
theory that there are MEChA sleeper cells preparing a Reconquista.
But I digress.
So, from a national security standpoint there would be no problem
letting Jose Schmoe in after he's passed a background check
against, say, terrorist databases, plus convictions here or abroad
for violence, theft, fraud, etc.
Now, the problem with this is that Yusuf Terrorist (Arabic for "Joe
Terrorist") could get a fake passport and come in. Hmm....
Well, first of all, that problem also exists in the status quo.
Second, he'll need to find a good forger. Good forgers couldn't
stay in business if their only clients were terrorists. They need a
broader clientele to make it worth their while to make fake ID
instead of, say, working for Enron, going to law school, or running
for public office.
Where do they get their broader clientele? Well, the drug trade and
non-violent illegal immigrants certainly provide some of it.
Hmm...
Maybe if we legalized drugs and opened immigration to non-violent
people we could undermine some of the infrastructure that
terrorists might use to enter the US. Or, if nothing else, we could
drive up the price of that infrastructure. The biggest problem I
see here is that the Saudis funding Al Qaeda could just compensate
by charging more for oil ;)
Still, I can't see a substantial bump in the terrorist influx if we
allowed all non-violent people who pass a background check to enter
the country. Well, until Vicente Fox gives a signal for the MEChA
sleeper cells to start their Reconquista....
15 illegals living in a 50'x 10' trailer house sending 85 to 90% of their paycheck back to a small village in Mexico or central America does wonders for inflation in those villages , not to mention the county tax base of single family homes in this country. I read that over $4 billion was sent from Texas alone in 2003.
Hydroman-
And, as we all know, nothing goes over better on a libertarian
forum than arguments in favoring of maintaining the tax base...
;->
Good article Brian. I've read Dr. Hoppe's arguments before and they sound just as wrongheaded now as they when I read them the first time. Can't say that I by the argument that government should act like a private property owner.
An obvious part of a solution has to be a national ID, with
biometric data. If you can't produce it when requested, BAMMO, over
the border you go.
I don't see how one can really crack down on illegal immigration
without it.
Also, if I remember correctly, one of the things that caused a stir with Barbara Jordan's Commission (as well as the 911 commission) is the call for national ID.
Trey's 4:54 comment reminds me of the Leno piece several years back that imagined asking people on the street questions that legal immigrants have to answer correctly to get their citizenship. Stuff like, "who was the 18th president?" and, "What are the three branches of government?" Put everyone who couldn't answer the questions in a paddy wagon for shipping off to the border. The wagon was quickly filled. Ahhh...the good old days.
I wonder how much of our relatively low inflation these last few
years has been due to Mexican labor?
I think the one of the biggest problems is bilingual education. It
keeps 'em from assimilating.
Trey-
According to some reports, immigrants tend to oppose bilingual
education, wanting their kids to learn English ASAP. The biggest
proponents are supposedly 2nd and 3rd generation Americans of
Latino descent who feel cheated out of their "heritage."
I guess I should be furious that the schools never taught me in
Italian, German, or Gaelic. I lost out on my heritage.
Oh, and to be clear, most 2nd and 3rd generation Americans of Latino descent aren't big on bilingual ed, but the activists supposedly come from those sorts of backgrounds.
I always find it interesting how few libertarians note that it's "gaming the system" to allow virtually unfettered immigration. I guess when you're screwing with the equilibrium of the market it only is a bad thing when it's in FAVOR of labor and against capital.
Okay, M1EK, what the hell are you talking about? How is
"virtually unfettered immigration" "gaming the system"?
And while I'm admittedly not sure what all you mean, I will point
out that market "equilibrium" is not a static phenomenon but rather
is fluid and thus always changing. Furthermore, such "equilibrium"
is not something that can be determined in any way but to allow the
market to freely operate and then see where it goes. It's for both
these reasons that I use scare quotes.
I'll also say that allowing people to work where they choose seems
pretty pro labor to me.
All that said, feel free to enlighten me!
fyodor-
In all fairness, a short-term effect of immigration will surely be
lower wages, which certainly doesn't benefit laborers already
here.
Yes, yes, in the long-term greater prosperity for all can
potentially occur, but M1EK has a point about the short-term
effects. Not that the short-term effects should a priori justify
restrictions on immigration, but denying economic realities won't
help the case for free immigration of all non-violent people who
want to come here.
thoreau,
I don't deny that possible* effect at all. But I'm
wondering what he means by "gaming the system." Is that just a
fancy way of saying he doesn't think there would be good results?
If so, I think he should just come out and plain say that. Or if
there's something larger that I'm missing, I'm curious for him to
tell me what that is, if he can. And he's the one apparently
accusing others of some sort of hyposcrisy born of anti-labor
prejudice. I'm pointing out that the libertarian position isn't
inherently anti-labor. I don't think it was incumbent upon me to
address every possible aspect of the issue to make that point and
for it to be a valid point.
*I say "possible" effect for a couple of reasons. First of all, as
Doherty points out, immigration laws (as enforced, as the Lonewacko
will gladly point out) have had very little effect on limiting the
number of immigrants and have actually had the effect of increasing
their length of stay. Plus, legal immigrants have the power to ask
for more pay. That's partly because of minimum wage laws, which I
don't think are a particularly good idea, but in any case, they're
there; PLUS, even in lieu of minimum wage laws, legal immigrants
may be able to ask for more money because they would be negotiating
from a more secure position. Thus, while I don't deny for a moment
that more workers equal lower pay in lieu of any other
considerations (is allowing free procreation an anti-labor position
because it increases the number of workers??), I think it's far
from clear that allowing freer legal immigration would
necessarily have that effect, even in the short run.
fyodor: First of all, as Doherty points out, immigration
laws (as enforced, as the Lonewacko will gladly point out) have had
very little effect on limiting the number of immigrants and have
actually had the effect of increasing their length of
stay.
You misunderstand. Our immigration laws are NOT being enforced.
There were 1000 or so companies fined for immigration violations a
decade ago. In the first five months of this year, just one company
was fined. Asa Hutchinson (quoted in the Doherty piece) is in
charge of those investigations, and he's not doing his job.
Let's say we do the Doherty Plan (hereinafter "OB"). We'll keep
minimum wage laws and workplace safety laws in place, right? [1]
Here's what a wage table would look like:
$7 busboy
$7 bagboy
$7 checker
$7 copy editor
$8 brain surgeon
$9 nuclear physicist
....
Even with those low prices, won't some illegals still come over?
Like, the ones who can't get into the program for some reason, or
who come from unfavored countries. And, won't some employers still
hire some of those illegals? After all, they'll probably work for
less than minumum wage and they won't be concerned about those
nasty workplace safety laws or all that cumbersome paperwork. In
fact, that's why some companies prefer illegal workers rather than
going through the hoops of hiring legal workers. The ease.
So, to keep OB running steadily, aren't we going to need to enforce
some form of law against illegal immigration? Otherwise, all those
new illegal immigrants would undermine the OB.
So, if we're going to end up having to enforce against illegal
immigration, why don't we do that now?
And, can we ever entrust an administration that flatly admits it's
not enforcing the laws to ever enforce the laws under the OB or any
other plan?
And, with all these low wages, will these people still get the
benefit of our social services, like schools, health care, SS, etc.
etc.? [2]
If so, wouldn't this end up being a massive transfer of money from
the average taxpayer to those companies that hire $7/hour bagboys
and such?
And, won't this mean even more remittances for Mexico? [3] And,
won't that give them a greater stake in our immigration laws? And,
won't they try to influence whatever laws we have even more? [4]
What if we want to change the OB program in some way that's
beneficial to us, but wouldn't be beneficial to Mexico? Wouldn't
they use their new influence to prevent the changes we want to
make? And, wouldn't this give Racial Demagogues even more power
than they already have?
[1] Otherwise, we could build nice camps for our $1/hour bagboys
from Bangladesh.
[2] If not, why don't we just reinstate slavery? Check that, even
slaves got health care of a sort.
[3] Remittances (money sent from workers in the U.S. to family and
friends in other countries) are now Mexico's #2 source of income,
right behind oil. In fact, remittances are 4/5 as much as oil
income.
[4] Pitching local city councils and worse. Search for maus
here.
Anybody who advocates open borders immigration should be forced
to live in those communities destroyed by said immigrants. This is
the same as the old and honorable maxim, "Those who want war should
fight it."
All else is hypocrisy.
Open Borders is morally untenable, there is no check against those who just want to work at waging war on us. Immigrants, who just want to work, are falsely being defined as incapable of doing anything of negative moral significance, which defines them outside morality, and ouside humanity, since morality doesn't apply to them. The concept of work is equivocated, one is left with the unstated assumption that all work done by immigrants has to be all to the good. In general, an openness as promiscuous as that suggested above, is sure to be biased towards favoring opennness to evils, since the manifestly valuable doesn't need any special openness from us.
Libertarians oppose racial preferences and social welfare
programs, yet favor immigration policies that increase the
constiuency for both.
Doherty scoffs at "concern for "cultural integrity" and "national
identity," as if such concern is trivial, apparently it does not
occur to him that only a certain culture will produce people who
find libertarian belifs appealing.
This belief that culture does not matter is why libertarians think
they can persuade low skill, low wage immigrants of the benefits of
not having welfare, public schools, government health care and race
quotas, when they can't persuade native born Americans to elect a
Libertarian candidate to any office higher than dogcatcher.
A policy like free immigration, is the last, not the first, change of laws that libertarians should advocate. In order not to commit treason by officials diverting public funds to the foreigner, there must be no possibility of redistribution of income. If there were no public expenditures other than the justice system, which is over $500 per person in America today, and imagining also another $500 per capita for a minimal military, every single immigrant would have to be guaranteed to pay at least that much in revenue to the government, or a traitorous redistribution will occur. Of course, anarchists have no reason to care about that.
"money is the root of all evil..."
She may have been wrong, but I remember my Southern, Bible-thumping
English teacher in 10th grade telling me that the actual quote from
the Bible is "love of money is the root of all evil."
I don't agree with that either, but I thought I'd point out the
difference.
carter,
"Libertarians oppose racial preferences and social welfare
programs, yet favor immigration policies that increase the
constiuency for both."
Yeah, so?
If that's illogical, then it's also illogical for libertarians to
be in favor of blacks and women having the vote since both those
groups vote in a decidedly nonlibertarian manner.
To explain: a right is a right and bad policy that hurts people is
bad policy that hurts people. That correcting a bad policy that
interferes with people's rights and hurts them might have negative
short term effects on "constituency" demographics is just one of
those unfortunate side effects a principled person has to
accept.
me oh my,
That's like saying that Abolitionists in the north should have been
forced to live in the south where communities would be "destroyed"
by abolishing slavery. Etc., etc.
And BTW, I live in Denver. A roommate once had his car smacked by
this Mexican dude. The guy took off into this enclave for illegals
and disappeared. No one there would cooperate with the cops. Sure,
this could have happened even if the guy didn't have to worry about
being deported, but when getting caught for a small crime means
getting kicked out of the country, people have much greater
incentive to stay outside the law. So I've already seen how futile
attempts to limit immigration have already harmed my community.
Lonewacko,
Sorry, but after seeing the "Doherty Plan" denoted as OB
and nuclear physicists getting $9 an hour, I just couldn't get
through anymore of your treatise! :-)
Ugh--yet more ideological libertarian nonsense. "Cheap labor" is
not really cheap labor at all, but subsidized labor. Ideological
libertarians love to pontificate about "willing employers" and
"willing employees," yet they forget about the unwilling taxpayer,
who is left to pay for education ($7K per kid/per year), health
care ($10,000
per family), and housing assistance. This doesn't even include
services generally not considered "welfare" in any way, such as
police, courts, jails, roads, and public transportation...and
low-skill workers put a disproportionate strain on the law
enforcement system.
The bottom line is, living in a country with a well-developed
infrastructure is expensive--and some jobs simply don't pay enough
to cover these costs because we have an oversupply of low-skill
labor.
birch barlow,
Okay, let's deport all the people whose incomes don't cover the
costs of infrastructure!
I know, that's not very serious, is it. Well then, not all
of them, just enough of them so that we no longer have "an
oversupply of low-skill labor," howzat?
The guy took off into this enclave for illegals
anddisappeared.
Thanks for making my point for me, Fyodor. Looks like Fred Reed was
right.
These businessmen are saving so much money by importing a vast new
underclass...and nothings better than a penny saved. But just wait
until the Mexicans start voting all of that money back. (They've
already started, ha, ha.) It will be the death of democracy, just
as Aristotle predicted.
At least once the constitution is rescinded you libertarians will
have something better to complain about.
Fear, fear, fear. But it doesn't make much sense to advocate maintaining a free society with oppressive means. That sounds awfully similar to what Putin is setting out to do....
Fear, fear, fear. But it doesn't make much sense to advocate
maintaining a free society with oppressive means. That sounds
awfully similar to what Putin is setting out to do....
For the record, when somebody responds in this manner, it means he
doesn't have any real arguments.
Some of the arguments in this thread seem to boil down to
"Liberty only works for affluent white people."
Also, in case you haven't noticed, white people aren't supporting
libertarian policies that much either. In fact, how could it hurt
to bring in a bunch of people who say "I'm going to get a job
whether the government likes it or not!" Might not make things
better, but probably won't make things worse either.
One more thought: If liberty only works for educated white professionals, how about we import a bunch of French people? :)
Have a little foresight? What sort of government do you think uneducated low skilled illegal immigrants want? The welfare state or your libertarian utopia?
For the record, when somebody responds in this manner, it
means he doesn't have any real arguments.
Or that he's made the relevant arguments already and finds it
tiresome to repeat himself.
Okay, let's deport all the people whose incomes don't cover
the costs of infrastructure!
I know, that's not very serious, is it. Well then, not all of
them, just enough of them so that we no longer have "an oversupply
of low-skill labor," howzat?
There's a difference between saying we need to deport people and
saying we shouldn't bring in more people who can't support
themselves without taxpayer subsidies. BTW, I think we should try
to deport illegal aliens, but mostly by indirect means, i.e.
employer sanctions and stricter controls on who can receive
government benefits rather than forcible deportation.
Some of the arguments in this thread seem to boil down to
"Liberty only works for affluent white people."
Bringing in the race and class warfare, I see. Being opposed to
high levels of unskilled and illegal immigration has nothing to do
with wanting to "keep America white" as the far left (and some
loose borders libertarians and conservatives when it suits their
argument) would have it. It has to do with wanting to bring the
best and brightest from all over the world who can contribute to
our high-tech economy. Right now we are bringing in anyone who
decides to walk across the border, regardless of the strain they
impose on our education, health care, welfare, law enforcement, and
transportation systems. There are probably hundreds of millions if
not billions who would come to the U.S. if they were
able--shouldn't we be picking the best and the brightest, who will
truly enrich our country, rather than simply strain our
infrastructure so WalMart and other businesses dependent on
low-skill labor can be a little more profitable (at taxpayer
expense)?
Also, in case you haven't noticed, white people aren't
supporting libertarian policies that much either.
The fact that white people are hostile to libertarianism is not an
excuse to bring in an underclass that is even more hostile
to libertarianism.
Our politicians are so concerned about keeping non-Americans out. I wonder how long it will be before they start to try to keep Americans in.
It is wrong for open-borders advocates to suggest that immigrants are blameless for taking net public subsidy, and thus ought not to be punished for such aggression. The illegal immigrant can be stopped from continuing his practice of aggression on the net taxpayer by deporting him, but citizens can't. If a class of people are defined as never to be blamed for acts of aggression, involving the receiving of the proceeds of aggresion which fits the definition of treason, they have been defined as existing outside morality. To do that is to classify them as subhuman.
Clarification: it is the officials who channel the people's tax money, in a manner fitting the definition of treason, not the foreigners themselves. The open-borders position of such and such libertarians, is open to the charge of pacifism and refusal to support the existence of military and border defense. To define all border-crossers as non-aggressors is to embrace a traitorous pacifism. They have no argument to support such positions; which is why they are immediately reduced to such ad hominem approaches as to imply that anyone who disagrees is motivated by racial or class prejudice. They attempt also an appeal to the authority of economic theory; while conveniently leaving out of account the fact that the theories they invoke, apply to the global utility function, and not to that of the nation; or they disregard factor price equalization.
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