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Comments to "New at Reason":
Cerro | June 4, 2007, 9:31am | #
Okay, I'm sold on the idea that we can't stop determined people from getting into the country.So, little border control. But then if we try to disincentivise immigration by making it hard for them when they get here, for example by requiring registration, we all know that they'll still come and we'll end up with an underclass of illegals. That doesn't seem like a particularly humane option to me, plus it'll make people turn to crime etc.
So,if we can't keep them out, and we can't persuade them not to come, then what the hell can we do?
If the answer is that there's nothing we can do, then we can be sure of an awful lot of immigration, that's for sure. But large-scale immigration and a welfare state just don't work together, and it seems to me far more likely that people will want to hang on to the former rather than the latter. So, demand for curbing immigration will rise and we'll be back to square one.
Seems like a conundrum to me.
Your thoughts/solutions/silver bullets?
BakedPenguin | June 4, 2007, 9:33am | #
Probably Chapman's best article since he started writing for Reason.One of the lesser talked about points of the immigration debate is that the assumption, by those who oppose a more open stance on immigration, that the government is competent to staunch the flow of people across the borders. Given the history of the War on Drugs, this is a highly dubious belief.
As with the WoD, there may well be further encroachments on the Bill of Rights to enforce a "War on Immigration". We could see a parallel line of events happening. Indeed, it appears it is already starting with the ...increased our efforts to seal the Mexican border, migrants have been diverted to remote areas that are harder to patrol, so much so that the rate of apprehension has actually fallen. So the Border Patrol steps it up a notch, then the smugglers figure out other ways, etc. etc. Government spending spirals as first enforcement and later punishment are increased. As the new policies are deemed ineffective, "zero tolerance" type policies are called for. People start getting years in prison for hiring "illegals". More tax money is spent on a pointless cause while human lives are ruined for engaging in honest economic activity (e.g., hiring employees, looking for a better job).
Of course, this doesn't address the heart of the matter. As someone pointed out on a previous thread, if the activity in question was not immigration but rather murder, we wouldn't care about the costs to arrest and prosecute those who commit it. So the "argument from efficiency" if I may call it such, is at best a secondary argument. As I see it, the real argument is whether a person's immigrating from one country to another in and of itself violates the rights of others. I have yet to hear a convincing argument that it does.
thoreau | June 4, 2007, 9:49am | #
I don't have the energy for repeating all the same arguments, counter-arguments, and counter-counter-arguments in Yet Another Immigration Thread, so I will just post the following:Whatever MikeP says is probably cool.
Seriously, the immigration threads almost always go over the same ground. Why not just periodically post a thread called "Immigration--Discuss!"?
AmericanResistance | June 4, 2007, 9:51am | #
Chapman and the other open borders/amnesty advocates don't understand that to solve the immigration problem all you have to do is (1) militarize the border with Mexico and (2) make the fines and prison terms for hiring illegals so harsh, no one will do it. It will also cause all of these illegal aliens to leave the country. We just have to stand up and be tough.AmericanResistance | June 4, 2007, 10:06am | #
I also want to know why Chapman and other open-borders adovcates want to sell-out western civilization and our culture for $$$$$?carrick | June 4, 2007, 10:11am | #
Dear AR, not to worry. The US culture (or a least some of the worst aspects of the US culture) are sweeping the world.Globalization is not going to destroy the "american" way of life. It is just the opposite in fact.
carrick | June 4, 2007, 10:14am | #
The one-world government is us.When MacDonald's and Hollywood can't to the job, we have marines and rangers to help out.
highnumber | June 4, 2007, 10:16am | #
Open borders: still in favor.carrick | June 4, 2007, 10:23am | #
I don't like the "open borders" phrase.I think I'll take the pro-life/pro-choice naming convention and go pro-migration.
Mark Luedtke | June 4, 2007, 10:42am | #
I addressed this at Townhall, but I'm very surprised to see such a government-centric philosophy presented at Reason. The American people, not the government, can most certainly stop the hiring of illegal aliens, but only if they have an economic incentive. My post from Townhall is included below.--
Steve Chapman claims that America can't realistically stop illegal immigration. Once again a conservative expresses the opinion that only government can solve problems, and since government can't solve the illegal immigration problem, the problem is unsolvable. This is a crock, because its fundamental assumption is wrong - that the only possible solution to verify immigration status is dependent on government.
Hardliners think the way to get rid of illegal immigrants is to get rid of the jobs they fill. In the Senate bill endorsed by President Bush, advocates of tougher enforcement got a new system for employers to verify that their workers are entitled to be here. Anyone newly hired (and, in time, anyone with a job) would have to pass a check of federal databases.
It's a fine idea in theory, but note that it requires government authorization for every employment decision in a large, dynamic economy, an approach that is just slightly at odds with the free market. It also presumes a level of efficiency that conservatives do not usually expect of government.
It's a terrible idea in theory and would be worse in practice. This is how big-government conservatives and big-government liberals destroy America. Both liberals and conservatives mistake America for the federal government. America was made great by its people, not the government, and the American people can solve this problem. The federal government can't stop illegal immigration, but the American people can.
American employers are more than capable of effectively identifying the citizenship of their prospective employees. We don't need any special ID card. We don't need any big-government plan. All we need to do is provide employers and incentive to verify citizenship of their employees, and that incentive is already built into existing law - send employers who don't verify citizenship to jail.
Mr. Chapman is right that free market forces drive American employers to hire illegal aliens at lower wages than Americans will take for the same work. In the absence of any penalty for hiring illegal aliens, we can't stop the southern invasion. No fence will stop it. Militarization of the border won't stop it.
But when employers are faced with the prospect of going to jail, as proscribed by law, for hiring illegal aliens, they will stop hiring them. They will review the IDs and citizenship of their employees and they will thoroughly check the citizenship documents of prospective employees. Currently employed illegal immigrants will lose their jobs, and they will be unable to find new jobs. With no market incentive for being in America, illegal immigrants will go home and work to build the economies of their own countries and Americans and legal immigrants will take the open jobs at fair market wages.
There will still be a problem with counterfeit documents, but the vast majority of illegal immigrants don't buy counterfeit documents. They don't need to because our government refuses to enforce the law against employers. Our government wants illegal aliens to provide labor at sub-market prices.
The government is the problem. The people are the solution. All we need to do is enforce existing laws. By having employers take the jobs for illegal aliens off the market, the illegal alien invasion will be reduced to a manageable amount for existing authorities to handle. Hard-core illegal aliens who won't leave will be caught and deported. Counterfeiters, having a greatly reduced market and comparably reduced funds, will be arrested and convicted.
Highway | June 4, 2007, 10:52am | #
Mark Luedtke, please tell me if I've summarized your post correctly:The government can't stop illegal immigrants.
"The People" can stop illegal immigrants.
How?
By getting the government to punish more harshly those people who hire illegal immigrants. And then the government can go after the counterfeiters who provide illegal immigrants with forged documentation.
Would this be a correct summary? And if it is, wow, it makes my head hurt.
jimmydageek | June 4, 2007, 10:52am | #
But when...there, fixed that for ya....
Oh, wait, that hasn't worked out?? Damn...
highnumber | June 4, 2007, 10:54am | #
Mr Luedtke,Be prepared for the internal inconsistencies within your comment to be pointed out by someone with more time than I have.
carrick | June 4, 2007, 10:54am | #
Nice try Mark, except you are mostly wrong.Employers do not hire low-cost labor so they can offer low prices. Consumers demand low prices, so employers hire low-cost labor or go out of business.
If you want to stop poor mexicans from crossing the border, then you need to convince the entire US population that they should willingly pay higher prices for a whole range of products.
highnumber | June 4, 2007, 10:55am | #
Whoa, it started while I wasn't watching. More will come.jimmydageek | June 4, 2007, 10:57am | #
With no market incentive for being in America, illegal immigrants will go home and work to build the economies of their own countries and Americans and legal immigrants will take the open jobs at fair market wages.Let's see...tomatoes...yes...I'll start with that.
They can be imported from Mexico or elsewhere for much cheaper than Americans might be willing to do the job. All tomato farmers (lots in the state of Florida), kiss your business goodbye.
hmmm...oranges?...all sorts of produce??...
There's much more to it than simply paying fair wages to Americans...
William R | June 4, 2007, 11:03am | #
Chapman writes:Mexicans and Guatemalans and other illegal immigrants come here out of an elemental and healthy desire to improve their lot. Once they arrive, they get willing cooperation from Americans who find these foreigners can also enhance our welfare.Yes, they enhance the welfare state. Poor uneducated folks grow the welfare state. .
Chapman is just a big proponent of corporate welfare. All the gains employers get from hiring cheap off the books labor, but dumping all the expense on the taxpayers. It's not a free market. Very simple to understand. Ron Paul knows it, Milton Friedman knew it. Too bad the folks at Reason are just so hopelessly clueless .
AmericanResistance | June 4, 2007, 11:05am | #
I'll gladly pay higher prices for everything if it means America won't turn into a Third World country.Don't you realize the immigrants will replicate the same dysfunctional socities that exist in their own countries?
thoreau | June 4, 2007, 11:09am | #
I'll gladly pay higher prices for everything if it means America won't turn into a Third World country.How much does bread cost in Communist countries?
carrick | June 4, 2007, 11:09am | #
I'll gladly pay higher prices for everything if it means America won't turn into a Third World country.You are an anamoly, not even part of a small minority, compared to the overall population.
Don't you realize the immigrants will replicate the same dysfunctional socities that exist in their own countries?
Provide proof, or shut up.
AmericanResistance | June 4, 2007, 11:10am | #
"How much does bread cost in Communist countries?"Actually the price is quite low. Thats the problem. The problem in communist countries isnt the price, its the shortages.
But don't worry, given enough time the Third World immigrants will turn America into Chavez's Venezuela. Multi-culty paradise for all.
AmericanResistance | June 4, 2007, 11:11am | #
Provide proof, or shut up.Exhibt no. 1--Southern California.
thoreau | June 4, 2007, 11:16am | #
Exhibt no. 1--Southern California.A beautiful place with high real estate values and a booming economy?
The horror! The horror!
MikeP | June 4, 2007, 11:16am | #
Mr Luedtke,Be prepared for the internal inconsistencies within your comment to be pointed out by someone with more time than I have.
Mark Leudtke's biggest inconsistency is between his stance on this issue and his URL: freedomistheanswer.blogspot.com.
I hope for his sake that the blogspot freedomistheproblem hasn't yet been taken...
Jh | June 4, 2007, 11:17am | #
carrick says: "I don't like the "open borders" phrase.I think I'll take the pro-life/pro-choice naming convention and go pro-migration."
Nah. Seize the high ground. If you're for more immigration, you're "pro-free-trade".
Mike Laursen | June 4, 2007, 11:17am | #
Steve Chapman conducts a lonely search for sense and facts in the immigration debate.I'm on the open immigration side, but I was disappointed that the blurb above turned out to be misleading. I thought it was pointing to an article full of hard research and facts.
AmericanResistance | June 4, 2007, 11:17am | #
"A beautiful place with high real estate values and a booming economy?The horror! The horror!"
It has a cost of living that is off the charts, out of reach to ordinary Americans. Its also ruled by a liberal Democrat elite who depend on the low class immigrants for their votes and power base. It also has high taxes and a massive welfare state. Not to mention a huge gap between the rich and poor, with a shrinking middle class. Behold--the future.
carrick | June 4, 2007, 11:26am | #
Nah. Seize the high ground. If you're for more immigration, you're "pro-free-trade".Both "open borders" and "free-trade" carry a lot of emotional baggage.
So maybe the answer is pro-free-market.
carrick | June 4, 2007, 11:28am | #
AR, now you can post how Cubans are ruining Miami, and the Jews have locked up NY , and so on and so forth.But you still have not proved your point. Not even close.
AmericanResistance | June 4, 2007, 11:31am | #
So, carrick, you think that the mexican drug gangs in LA is a great thing huh? What about the cost of living, the welfare state, and the liberal democrat elite?Guatemalan gangs are multiplying all over the south now. Charlotte Atlanta and northern Virginia are in the midst of a gang epidemic.
jimmydageek | June 4, 2007, 11:36am | #
AR, what of the non-mexican drug gangs in LA?? Oh, those are fine since they're Americans, right??AmericanResistance | June 4, 2007, 11:37am | #
If there were only American gangs, the number of gangs total would be less. Yes or no?jimmydageek | June 4, 2007, 11:40am | #
American gangs are perfectly acceptable as opposed to ethnic gangs? Yes or No?AmericanResistance | June 4, 2007, 11:41am | #
No, they are not, I oppose all gangs. But closing the borders would drastically reduce the number of gangs. Yes or No?highnumber | June 4, 2007, 11:41am | #
If there were only American gangs, the number of gangs total would be less. Yes or no?Number of gangs or number of gang members?
If I am going to make up a BS answer, I want to be able to tweak it perfectly to the terms of the BS question.
carrick | June 4, 2007, 11:41am | #
So, carrick, you think that the mexican drug gangs in LA is a great thing huh?So what about black gangs, and chinese gangs, and russian gangs, and irish gangs, . . .
Saying that each new group of immigrants produces a new set of lawbreakers does not prove the immigration per se is bad.
Most of the gangs specialize in one black market or another. The libertarian solution is to stop criminalizing vices. Then the black markets will go away.
What about the cost of living, the welfare state, and the liberal democrat elite?
The liberal/progressive slant of the population of CA is independent of mexican immigration. So that set of complaints is mostly irrelevant, unless you want to narrow the issue to immigrants using welfare state services.
The major problem with attempting to close the border is that it drives unskilled labor into the black market.
It doesn't matter whether the topic is sex, booze, drugs, cigarettes, or labor. Criminalizing undesirable behavior drives it into the black market which causes bigger problems than the original "bad behavior" caused.
AmericanResistance | June 4, 2007, 11:43am | #
carrick, perhaps you missed the fact that Hispanics commit crimes (regardless of their income) at a far greater rate than natives. Maybe that explains why latin america is so dysfunctional.carrick | June 4, 2007, 11:44am | #
perhaps you missed the fact that Hispanics commit crimes (regardless of their income) at a far greater rate than natives.Provide a link or keep it to yourself.
AmericanResistance | June 4, 2007, 11:44am | #
carrick-Go to VDARE and read for yourself. study after study confirms it.
carrick | June 4, 2007, 11:47am | #
Don't you realize the immigrants will replicate the same dysfunctional socities that exist in their own countries?You have yet to provide any substatial evidence to back up this claim.
AmreicanResistance | June 4, 2007, 11:47am | #
hey, which one of you followed what happened to Lewistown, Maine? Its not full of Somali immigrants, who are soaking up welfare, and some of them dont even know how to use a doorknob or a toilet! sounds like fun, doesnt it?thoreau | June 4, 2007, 11:48am | #
And if they had just kept my Italian ancestors out of the US there'd be even less organized crime.Arguing that a subset of any ethnic group commits crimes means nothing. Antarctica probably has almost no crime because there's nobody there.
highnumber | June 4, 2007, 11:52am | #
Time to ignore "AmericanResistance(ToFacts)." He or she has clearly marked him/herself as a prejudiced bigot.Mike Laursen | June 4, 2007, 11:57am | #
Its also ruled by a liberal Democrat elite who depend on the low class immigrants for their votes and power base.Actually, it's here in Northern California that we have the "liberal elite". Their power base are just ordinary middle-class people, who are mostly liberal. And very strong support from unions. I haven't seen much evidence that "low class immigrants" around here are involved in politics.
Southern California is fairly conservative with the notable exception of the Hollywood area, where those danged liberal movie people congregate. Orange County, south of Los Angeles County, is a notorious bulwark of conservatism -- the home of John Wayne Airport, for christsakes.
Rhywun | June 4, 2007, 12:00pm | #
If there were only American gangs, the number of gangs total would be less. Yes or no?And violent crime wouldn't be shooting thru the roof like it is now! Oh, never mind.
William R | June 4, 2007, 12:10pm | #
thoreau | June 4, 2007, 11:16am | #Exhibt no. 1--Southern California.
A beautiful place with high real estate values and a booming economy?
The horror! The horror!
Yes and California is turning to an anti freedom pro union leftist paradise. Productive people are fleeing. Utah, Nevada, Idaho, Colorado, and Texas are filling up with California's fleeing the Mexican invasion.
VM | June 4, 2007, 12:15pm | #
"hey, which one of you followed what happened to Lewistown, Maine? Its not full of Somali immigrants, who are soaking up welfare, and some of them dont even know how to use a doorknob or a toilet! sounds like fun, doesnt it?"what a fucktard. Of course it's not Somalis, you vulgarian. It's students at BATES COLLEGE.
Bates: the Brown Univ. of NESCAC.
Whee whee whee! The siren of racism drowns out your ignorant words.
*Opens Formula 409 triumphantly
highnumber | June 4, 2007, 12:18pm | #
Productive people are fleeing [California].I thought people were worried that Mexican immigrants were coming to California.
Rhywun | June 4, 2007, 12:25pm | #
Utah, Nevada, Idaho, Colorado, and Texas are filling up with California[n]'s fleeing the Mexican invasionAnd they do nothing but bitch about it.
William R | June 4, 2007, 12:27pm | #
Mexican invaders, illegal aliens are turning California into a Chavez leftist union paradise.Tom Walls | June 4, 2007, 12:27pm | #
Here's a novel idea.Instead of all the hoo-ha about making illegals eligible for taxpayer-funded services, how about allowing US citizens to opt-out of the system and work under the table? hell, if Bank of America is allowing immigrants to open bank accounts not associated with a SS number, why not make that standard practice for everyone?
William R | June 4, 2007, 12:39pm | #
Tom Walls | June 4, 2007, 12:27pm | #Here's a novel idea.
Instead of all the hoo-ha about making illegals eligible for taxpayer-funded services, how about allowing US citizens to opt-out of the system and work under the table? hell, if Bank of America is allowing immigrants to open bank accounts not associated with a SS number, why not make that standard practice for everyone?
And how much a chance do you think something like that has of becoming law? It ain't gonna happen. Face it, this massive demographic shift is going to turn the country left. National health care. More and more regulations. Short sighted corporate types cutting their own throats down the line in order to get cheap labor today.
Rhywun | June 4, 2007, 12:42pm | #
Mexican invaders, illegal aliens are turning California into a Chavez leftist union paradise.I think American citizens have proven themselves quite capable of accomplishing the same thing all on their own.
What would you sacrifice 0.5% of GDP growth for? | June 4, 2007, 12:44pm | #
Minimum wage @ $15/hr anyone?Chucklehead | June 4, 2007, 12:55pm | #
AR, what of the non-mexican drug gangs in LA?? Oh, those are fine since they're Americans, right??Don't forget the Chinese gangs.
Although you feel violent again an hour after fighting them.
William R | June 4, 2007, 1:03pm | #
Rhywun | June 4, 2007, 12:42pm | #I think American citizens have proven themselves quite capable of accomplishing the same thing all on their own.
Unions were dying. With this massive influx of poor, unskilled, and uneducated unions are on going to be on the rise again.
Pig Mannix | June 4, 2007, 1:19pm | #
highnumber | June 4, 2007, 10:16am | #Open borders: still in favor.
Open borders: still not in favor.
North American Union: still in favor.
jimmydageek | June 4, 2007, 1:20pm | #
Chucklehead | June 4, 2007, 12:55pm | #AR, what of the non-mexican drug gangs in LA?? Oh, those are fine since they're Americans, right??
Don't forget the Chinese gangs.
Although you feel violent again an hour after fighting them.
Damn it, chucklehead! A little warning would be nice before you post something that induces spitting out drinks...
Aren't you supposed to fight the one that's pointing towards you, too?
hier is a clip demonstrating the problems with gangs. Note Highnumber beating the drum at the beginning of clip.
but as you can see hier, good ol' Amurikan ingenuity can take care of the hoards, regardless of color (of uniform).
MikeP | June 4, 2007, 1:34pm | #
Open borders: still in favor.North American Union: not in favor.
North American Common Market: in favor.
North American Community: in favor.
Something akin to what the European Union is becoming -- a distantly governed agency of protectionism for the big economies against the interests of the small? Nope.
Cesar | June 4, 2007, 2:03pm | #
AR, I don't think Latin Americans are inherintly leftist. If they are leftist in California, I think its pretty much because they areassimilating to that particular culture.Mexican immigrants are forming a huge part of the population of Texas now, but has Texas become more liberal? Hardly! Its still as conservative as ever.
Mike Laursen | June 4, 2007, 2:03pm | #
Yes and California is turning to an anti freedom pro union leftist paradise. Productive people are fleeing. Utah, Nevada, Idaho, Colorado, and Texas are filling up with California's fleeing the Mexican invasion.Where to start...
First, people in California aren't anti-freedom. Northern California liberals are very strong on civil rights, but have different ideas of what constitutes economic freedom than you or I may have. They may be ignorant of economics, but most of them mean well and are not anti-business. And Southern California is conservative.
Second, people are still coming to California. Do you have statistics that show more people are leaving than coming here?
Third, unless you can site surveys of people who have left California, you and I are both guessing why they are leaving. My guess, from actually having lived here all my life, is that they are looking for a lower cost of living. The number one expense in most Californians budgets is housing, and high housing prices have more to do with land use policy.
Cesar | June 4, 2007, 2:10pm | #
People are leaving California for Nevada, Arizona, and Utah because of the cost of living.The same thing is happening in the east--people are leaving New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania for Virginia, North Carolina, and Georgia. And theres no Mexican Invasion(tm) in Northeast as far as I know.
carrick | June 4, 2007, 2:42pm | #
When I lived in Phoenix, the primary reasons that Californians gave for leaving Calinfornia were traffic (and commute times) and property values. These are linked together. It was nearly impossible for people to live within a reasonable commute of where they worked -- at least for the middle class.They didn't leave because CA was too liberal. In fact, they frequently brought that attitude with them, and they wanted to change Arizona.
peterike | June 4, 2007, 2:53pm | #
** sigh **Oh we just CAN'T stop the illegals, like we can't stop drugs. Yes, because we have never actually tried to do either. I mean, really tried.
I can stop 'em both in about a day.
Oh you're in the US illegally? We shoot you. Dead. Oh you're selling drugs illegally? We shoot you. Dead. The same day we catch you.
How long before pretty much nobody is coming to America illegally? Or selling drugs? And the traffic jam at the crossing into Mexico is 500 miles long?
Simple, easy, low-cost. You need only make the punishment far outweigh the potential gain. This has been the whole problem with our approach to crime. The punishment should not "fit" the crime, the punishment should overwhelm the crime.
Yeah I know, I know. It'll never happen. Then how about blocking money transfers to Mexico and other countries? And how about making random catch-and-deportations of illegals (I can get you about 50 at the local Fairway supermarket if they're too much "in the shadows" for you), and when we catch them we confiscate everything they have and return them with literally the clothes on their backs? How about we kick their kids out of schools?
I can go on and on. There are dozens of things you can do to simply make it not worth it to be here illegally. None of them cost much. Instead, we have open border nitwits thinking we have an inexhaustible capacity to absorb people with little inclination to join our culture and for whom any sort of enforcement is just too "mean spirited."
And why is it that liberals are so keen about letting in the unwashed hordes? Hmmmm, for decades now the Left has been screaming about women's rights, animal's rights, and gay rights. Yet they want to continue importing millions of men for whom women's rights stop at the end of their belt strap, who treat animals with ghastly cruelty (find me a cock fight or a dog fight, and I'll find you a bunch of illegal Hispanics) and who detest gays. Makes sense. But then of course they'll vote for Democrats, so I guess the Left considers that a wash.
obviously someone who understands "marginal deterrence".
whee whee whee! I saw peterike not wash his hands after he peed! And he sprinkled and didn't wipe the seat. whee whee whee!
Cesar | June 4, 2007, 2:58pm | #
"Yet they want to continue importing"For the last fucking time, nativists, we haven't "imported" anyone since 1808.
carrick | June 4, 2007, 3:01pm | #
"Give me your tired, your poor,Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!"
But only if your white and from Europe.
MikeP | June 4, 2007, 3:07pm | #
I kept reading peterike's comment waiting for the final, "Of course it would be ridiculous to so punish people who are simply trying to build themselves a better life by their own efforts."But it never came.
I suppose it's a truism: A reductio ad absurdum argument doesn't work with people who hold absurd beliefs.
peterike | June 4, 2007, 3:14pm | #
"whee whee whee! I saw peterike not wash his hands after he peed! And he sprinkled and didn't wipe the seat. whee whee whee!"Uh, yeah, whatever. Speaks more to your obsessions than mine.
"Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free.."
Screw your huddled masses, they are not my problem. That piece of maudlin Commie agit-prop should have been torn from the Statue of Liberty long ago. It was nothing but a later add-on that completely distorted the original meaning of that now-blindfolded statue.
"I kept reading peterike's comment waiting for the final, "Of course it would be ridiculous to so punish people who are simply trying to build themselves a better life by their own efforts." But it never came."
It's called "get in line." And you are a fanciful dreamer if you think these are nothing but people trying to "build themselves a better life." Please. Spare me your sentimental hogwash.
Cesar | June 4, 2007, 3:19pm | #
"It's called "get in line.""There is no line.
"" And you are a fanciful dreamer if you think these are nothing but people trying to "build themselves a better life.""
What are they here for, then? Is it TEH RECONQUISTA!!!!!!one11,?
carrick | June 4, 2007, 3:19pm | #
original meaning of that now-blindfolded statuethat would be justice, not the statue of liberty
That piece of maudlin Commie agit-prop should have been torn from the Statue of Liberty long ago.
so much for an enlightened conversation
so bye-bye troll
Rick H. | June 4, 2007, 3:24pm | #
I can stop 'em both in about a day.When someone states, in apparent seriousness, "The clear answer to [social problem x] is wholesale, state-sponsored murder!" it makes me realize I probably wouldn't be a very good parent.
peterike | June 4, 2007, 3:28pm | #
"There is no line."Oh so we agree on something.
"What are they here for, then?"
It's called milking the system. It's called taking with no interest whatsoever in giving back.
Regarding the dreary poem: "Emma Lazarus devoted herself to Zionist and Marxist causes after hearing about the pogroms in Russia in the 1880s."
Lazarus was a Marxist and a very bad poet. The poem was added about 20 years after the statue was raised. Wikipedia even notes: "Since 1903, the statue has been associated with Emma Lazarus's poem "The New Colossus" and has acquired a new meaning as a symbol of welcome to immigrants."
It was meant as a beacon to liberty, not as a welcome mat for every poor slob on earth. But then, back in those days, it wasn't so easy to get in and the streets weren't paved with free medical care and welfare checks.
Cesar | June 4, 2007, 3:32pm | #
"It's called milking the system. It's called taking with no interest whatsoever in giving back. "Have you been asleep since Clinton's first term or something? The Welfare Reform Act of 1996 bars all immigrants (legal or illegal) from food stamps, TANF ("welfare") medicare and medicade. What exactly can they milk?
Maybe you refer to the fact they send their wages home? I guess you are one of those idiots who still believes in mercantilism. Yes, they dont spend all of their money here. But they have already added to the wealth of the economy simply by producing something. And the money which they send home is often used to buy things--which can include American goods.
Public schools? Well, they pay sales and property taxes like everyone else, so unless you are willing to take your kids out of school, too, quit your bitching.
highnumber | June 4, 2007, 3:34pm | #
Ooooo, the classic redirect!"Immigrants are bad because Emma Lazarus liked the commies." I like, I like. Somebody call Dienstag. He'd love this.
MikeP | June 4, 2007, 3:37pm | #
It's called milking the system. It's called taking with no interest whatsoever in giving back.Let's hypothesize that there was no way that illegal immigrants could now (as is the law since 1996) or ever get welfare. Let's further suppose that they could not even get free medical care or public schooling.
How many of the 500,000 illegal immigrants per year do you think would no longer come?
I think the answer to that question is, to the nearest 100,000, zero. Therefore, I don't think the illegal immigrants come here because of either the perception or reality that there is free money to be had on this side of the border.
peterike | June 4, 2007, 3:38pm | #
The stuff about illegals not getting welfare and medical care and paying property taxes (you mean the twenty people living in the rental house down the street? they are paying a proportionate level of property tax?) is too laughable to even address. Please go to City Journal and get yourself a reality check."When someone states, in apparent seriousness, "The clear answer to [social problem x] is wholesale, state-sponsored murder!" it makes me realize I probably wouldn't be a very good parent."
That's pretty funny, if illogical. Ok, last comment of the day. And hell, probably forever. Commenting is so pointless.
Anyway, it's not "wholesale" murder. You only have to do it a few times before everyone gets the message. You just have to show you're serious. We have utterly lost the will to do that. Hell, we won't even put the terrorist vermin we catch in Iraq up against the wall, we've grown so gutless. Too wrapped up in our own moral self-regard I guess.
I would leave it with a final question. Answer seriously now. Despite whatever delicate misgivings you have about such a plan, I ask you. Would it work? If we make execution the punishment for illegal entry into the country, does illegal entry more or less stop? Yes or no?
That's all I'm askin'.
Cesar | June 4, 2007, 3:39pm | #
Let me use this thread to address another thing people always get wrong. The poor are not the biggest looters of the public treasury. Nope. The Middle Class is. Between Social Security, Medicade, public schools, student loans, various tax credits for home ownership, etc, they are the bgigest welfare queens of all. But very few people bitch about them. Why? Because they poor are an easier target.Cesar | June 4, 2007, 3:41pm | #
peterike-Their landlord pays a all kinds of taxes for his property, asshat.
But I guess you have never used government money in your life. Nope, not you, you hard working industrious middle class productive individual. No student loans, didnt send your kids to public schools, never drove on an interstate highway, and no student loans. And Im sure you won't be collecting your social security check or medicare either. Nosiree!
peterike | June 4, 2007, 3:42pm | #
Get a clue, ya'll.http://www.city-journal.org/html/16_3_immigration_reform.html
"Connecticut’s Greenwich Hospital recently treated an illegal Guatemalan with severe drug-resistant TB, after his local hospital in Port Chester, New York, had gone bust from uninsured immigrants. The uncompensated bill for two and a half months of in-patient treatment totaled $200,000, not including the fees for the numerous specialists on the case, which probably added another $100,000 to $150,000. One surgery alone to remove a crippling accretion on his spine—a condition unknown outside the Third World—lasted an entire day. All of the Guatemalan’s associates tested positive for TB, and all worked in restaurants, reports his surgeon, Dr. Katrina Firlik, in the Wall Street Journal. Such episodes, invisible to conservative elites, make a deep impression on local taxpayers and insurance policyholders."
That's a lot of milk. Troll out!
Cesar | June 4, 2007, 3:45pm | #
City Journal--yet another anti-immigrant publication thats actually run by a British guy. Why don't you read this from the Washington Post-"A recent study using data collected through 2004 found that Hispanics in North Carolina (many of them immigrants, both legal and illegal) contributed $756 million in state taxes while costing about $817 million in public education, corrections and health care. That nets out to a modest $61 million drain on state coffers. But the study, by researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, also found that that deficit was dwarfed by the fact that Hispanics contributed more than $9 billion, or some 3 percent, to the state's economy in 2004, an amount projected to double by 2009."
jimmydageek | June 4, 2007, 3:46pm | #
I would leave it with a final question. Answer seriously now. Despite whatever delicate misgivings you have about such a plan, I ask you. Would it work? If we make execution the punishment for illegal entry into the country, does illegal entry more or less stop? Yes or no?No
highnumber | June 4, 2007, 3:50pm | #
Despite whatever delicate misgivings you have about such a plan, I ask you. Would it work? If weMore or less, yes.
Mike Laursen | June 4, 2007, 3:52pm | #
Answer seriously now. Despite whatever delicate misgivings you have about such a plan, I ask you. Would it work? If we make execution the punishment for illegal entry into the country, does illegal entry more or less stop? Yes or no?No, it wouldn't work. The need to make a living is powerful enough that people will still come here. What would happen is an escalation of violence.
William R | June 4, 2007, 4:31pm | #
Cesar | June 4, 2007, 2:10pm | #People are leaving California for Nevada, Arizona, and Utah because of the cost of living.
The same thing is happening in the east--people are leaving New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania for Virginia, North Carolina, and Georgia. And theres no Mexican Invasion(tm) in Northeast as far as I know.
Hilarious. Pathetic too.
Americans are fleeing California while foreign national move in. If Americans are leaving New York for Georgia, well that only makes sense.
Cesar | June 4, 2007, 4:33pm | #
"Americans are fleeing California while foreign national move in. If Americans are leaving New York for Georgia, well that only makes sense."Yeah, you know in some alternate universe where the South won the Civil War, people in the Confederacy are bitching for a wall on the Potomac.
William R | June 4, 2007, 4:38pm | #
Cesar has all the liberal BS talking points down. The Manhattan Institute is an anti immigrant rag. etc etc. Geeeshhh, Tamar Jacoby, the most fanatical pro illegal alien individual around works at the Manhattan Institute. then he rambles off those stats in North Carolina which are pure propoganda. Factoring schooling, medical, jailing, housing etc etc, illegal immigration is a huge drain on the state of North Carolina.Mike Laursen | June 4, 2007, 4:40pm | #
And, BTW, that's a pro-free-market libertarian position, so why is this such a contentious issue on an allegedly libertarian website?My guess is that a guy like AmericanResistance are just Googling for blogs that mention "immigration". He probably has no idea what kind of website Hit & Run is.
Cesar | June 4, 2007, 4:41pm | #
William R.-m RTFA. And Im not a liberal, anymore than you're a fascist.Cesar | June 4, 2007, 4:44pm | #
BTW, I don't agree with everything the Washington Post says. I just agree with them in this instance. They favor free trade, too, are you against that also cause it leans to the left on many other things?Hell, I agree with Marx on guns (arm the people) it doesn't make me a Marxist!
Rhywun | June 4, 2007, 5:16pm | #
Please go to City Journal and get yourself a reality check.I read it quite often myself--but not when it's Heather MacDonald, who's made quite the career out of lumping tribes together and saying how awful they are.
Ventifact | June 4, 2007, 6:16pm | #
this thread is highly atypical of H&R, I'll say...highnumber | June 4, 2007, 6:32pm | #
Ventifact,Open border/free trade folks fending off and ridiculing anti-immigration nativists is atypical at H&R? Not for an immigration thread.
highnumber | June 4, 2007, 6:43pm | #
Wait, no Lonewacko. You're right, Ventifact.Tacos mmm | June 4, 2007, 6:52pm | #
illegal immigration is a huge drain on the state of North Carolina.Illegal immigration is the only thing keeping NC agriculture, which depends on Christmas trees and tobacco, afloat. There are no, and I mean no, native born workers lining up to harvest either. Which, if you had ever had green tobacco sickness, or spent 16 hours a day trying to harvest trees off of a 45 degree slope, would be perfectly understandable.
If you think that NC doesn't need immigrants, you're obviously not talking to the farmers.
Burrittos yummy | June 4, 2007, 7:12pm | #
If you think that NC doesn't need immigrants, you're obviously not talking to the farmers.If you think that America needs to get its tobacco and Christmas trees from NC then you're not a libertarian.
A) Employers can hire whoever the heck they want, without government interference. Period. Workers can work for whoever the heck they want, without government interference. Period.
B) The federal government can, based on an artificial, oftentimes undemarcated arbitrary line winding through the Southwest that resulted from historical happenstance over a century ago, issue thousands of pages of laws, rules, and regulations interfering with free employer-employee relations, complete with a slew of taxes, fees, paperwork, and the mandatory ID cards so beloved of authoritarians everywhere.
****
The anti-Dan. T. comments:
Dammit, this quiz is too hard. Maybe I better flip a coin to help me to decide which of these outcomes results in more freedom.
Cesar | June 4, 2007, 7:27pm | #
"The anti-Dan. T. comments:"
I love how "Dan T." is now to trolls what "Xerox" is to copying machines and "Tivo" is to DVRs.
SIV | June 4, 2007, 8:27pm | #
No welfare- same number of illegal immigrants?Bullshit. With no free schooling EBT cards or medical care there would be fewer women and dependent children.
Other than the subsidies the main problem I see with current immigration "policy" is the selective enforcement against immigrants and employers based on class, skills and education.
Americans and legal residents are more expensive to employ as it is far riskier to hire them "under the table" and not comply with employment laws.
Cesar | June 4, 2007, 8:36pm | #
SIV-Immigrants, legal or otherwise, don't get EBT cards (again, people, please for the love of God read the 1996 Welfare Reform Act).
Tacos mmm | June 4, 2007, 9:07pm | #
Bullshit. With no free schooling EBT cards or medical care there would be fewer women and dependent children.Not only are you wrong about EBT cards, but the driving force behind the emmigration of entire families is not welfare, but family reunification. In the early 80's, before fences were built in Texas and San Diego, relatively few families relocated entirely. The men would come work in the US for a month or two, go home for a visit, and then come back. Now, however, since fences have restricted border crossing sites to desert areas, the border crossing journey is too dangerous to have to make over and over. So, working men bring their families with them, rather than cross the desert repeatedly. This is one of the well-studied, unitentional effects of fencing - and an important lesson in this debate, in that it hightlights that the unintentional effects of any immigration policy are likely to be as important, if not moreso, than the intentional ones.
Tacos mmm | June 4, 2007, 9:09pm | #
If you think that America needs to get its tobacco and Christmas trees from NC then you're not a libertarian.I don't, necessarily. I was simply citing it as an example of how North Carolina in particular benefits from immigration.
SIV | June 4, 2007, 9:53pm | #
Cesar, Tacos no EBT cards?YES THEY DO
Where the fuck do you guys live?
You do have to be legal to get food assistance
but the State doesn't expect the anchor babies to buy their own food so the card goes to a parent.
I live and work in immigrant heavy areas(and shop at Super Mercados) and I never used to see it- the last few years it has become common .Interestingly,when the shoppers are a family-including a father- it is unusual.Women with children you can expect it.
Don't forget the "welfare rights" movement and the incentives for social service agencies to find more clients.
peterike | June 4, 2007, 10:10pm | #
Yeah yeah, illegal immigrants never get ANY government assistance, because like there's ZERO fraud in government programs, right? But of course. But what about legal low-skill immigrants?"In FY 2004, the average low skill immigrant household received $30,160 in direct benefits, means-tested benefits, education, and population-based services from all levels of government. By contrast, low-skill immigrant households paid only $10,573 in taxes in FY 2004."
And of course the only difference between legal and illegal is a matter of time. Oh wait, sorry, that was just Fed gov't cost.
"At the state and local level, the average low skill immigrant household received $14,145 in benefits and services and paid only $5,309 in taxes. The average low skill immigrant households imposed a net fiscal burden on state and local government of $8,836 per year."
The only difference between legal and illegal is time. And illegals receive a reasonable portion of what legals get. Their children are allowed into schools (at an average cost of $9,600 per child per year). They walk into emergency rooms and get treatment. They drain resources from countless state and local programs that have no particular restrictions (welcome to your Sanctuary City!!). And of course the anchor babies they so readily pop out are eligible for everything.
"Illegal immigrants themselves are not eligible for means-tested welfare benefits, but illegal immigrant households do contain some 3 million children who were born inside the U.S. to illegal immigrant parents; these children are U.S. citizens and are eligible for and do receive means-tested welfare."
So stop with your pathetic "immigrants don't get any benefits" nonsense, because it's a lie and you know it.
This doesn't even begin to factor in the impending disaster to Social Security, as millions who put relatively little into the system (due to their low wages and often off-the-books wages) will suck out the same as everyone else. And Medicare.
"Based on my current research, I estimate that if all the current adult illegal immigrants in the U.S. were granted amnesty the net retirement costs to government (benefits minus taxes) could be over $2.5 trillion." (From the Heritage Foundation)
Oh and there's that little old factor of crime.
"Meanwhile, almost one in three Mexican-American males between the ages of 18 and 24 recently reported being arrested, one in five has been jailed, and 15,000 illegal aliens are currently in the California penal system."
But we're worried about who's going to pick Christmas trees in North Carolina.
Well how about this, from that hotbed of nativism, the NY Times. "In 2000, 65 percent of black male high school dropouts in their 20's were jobless — that is, unable to find work, not seeking it or incarcerated. By 2004, the share had grown to 72 percent."
If there is massive unemployment among unskilled black youth, why are we allowing even ONE unskilled Mexican into the country until the black unemployment rate is essentially zero? This is a huge ball that the black "leadership" has dropped. But that's hardly a surprise.
OK, open borders harpies, I have a question for you. No really, a serious question. Open border, ok, fine. Until when? When do they shut? When every Mexican and South and Central American is in the United States? When every African joins them? When ever Middle Easterner and Eastern European and Chinese and Indian shows up? When does it end, or does the logic of your position just happen to imply suicide for Western Civilization?
Yeah, it does.
It's sadly no longer in print from Amazon (funny, I got it last year), but if you open borders types want to understand your souls, you need to read "The Camp of the Saints."
William R | June 4, 2007, 10:42pm | #
Tacos mmm | June 4, 2007, 6:52pm | #"Illegal immigration is the only thing keeping NC agriculture, which depends on Christmas trees and tobacco, afloat. There are no, and I mean no, native born workers lining up to harvest either. Which, if you had ever had green tobacco sickness, or spent 16 hours a day trying to harvest trees off of a 45 degree slope, would be perfectly understandable.
If you think that NC doesn't need immigrants, you're obviously not talking to the farmers."
The above is so typical of those expecting and demanding subsidized labor. Bring in the cheap labor and pay em off the books. Dump all the expense on the taxpayers. If North Carolina agriculture needs illegal labor to survive, then perhaps it is time for it to fold up shop. Do something else. Or maybe they might try paying more so they can attract legal labor.
Book of the Month Club | June 4, 2007, 11:25pm | #
It's sadly no longer in print from Amazon (funny, I got it last year), but if you open borders types want to understand your souls, you need to read "The Camp of the Saints."But it is still in print.
peterike | June 4, 2007, 11:31pm | #
"But it is still in print."Huh. I searched on it, and only got links to used versions, one of them going for $105! Go figure. Must be a open borders type running the Amazon search engine.
Well that's good news, anyway. Everybody go read it. It should be required reading at every high school and college in America.
highnumber | June 4, 2007, 11:39pm | #
The above is so typical of those expecting and demanding subsidized labor. Bring in the cheap labor and pay em off the books. Dump all the expense on the taxpayers. If North Carolina agriculture needs illegal labor to survive, then perhaps it is time for it to fold up shop. Do something else. Or maybe they might try paying more so they can attract legal labor.What?!
Stop making farms use the labor that you determine is legal. Let them determine which labor they will use.
Let freedom ring, man!
Cesar | June 4, 2007, 11:53pm | #
Camp of the Saints?as VM would say WHEE! Its the French Mein Kampf.
Cesar | June 4, 2007, 11:57pm | #
For the record, yes, I read the racist screed. I got through the turgid writing style and racial paranoia, and I wasn't convinced.I can do a short synopsis here. Theres starvation in India, so millions of Indians hijack a ship and head for France. The French navy doesn't sink the ship, and the French army wont shoot them when they land. So they turn France into another India, and marginalize the whites there, even running a whorehouse so Indians can have their share of white women (funny how all right wing screeds have to throw the "minorities getting white women" thing?)
As I said above, the writing style is horribly turgid and boring .
Ironically, India today is growing quickly economically and will probably be a developed country in my life time.
highnumber | June 5, 2007, 12:01am | #
Open border, ok, fine. Until when? When do they shut? When every Mexican and South and Central American is in the United States? When every African joins them? When ever Middle Easterner and Eastern European and Chinese and Indian shows up? When does it end, or does the logic of your position just happen to imply suicide for Western Civilization?If the borders were open, why would everyone keep coming? What would their incentives be? Jobs? Fantastic, if our economy keeps creating jobs to be filled, we'll need them.
Regarding "suicide for Western Civilization," tell me exactly what you are afraid of. The USA currently defines "Western Civilization." In fact, I think we could say that we have grown out of "Western Civilization" and surpassed it, superseded it. We are a melting pot. Every group of immigrants that the nativists said would destroy our culture made it stronger, made our country what it is today. I'd rather live in this country right now, going forward, than any other country that has ever been.
Cesar | June 5, 2007, 12:18am | #
peterike-I read your screed about how much immigrants cost us. How much do YOU cost us, pal? In fact, how much do native born middle class white males cost us every freakin year? I bet its a hell of a lot more.
We are all on the government crackpipe, asshat. Its just that social security, medicare, unemployment benefits, etc, they are all acceptable cause middle class people use them too.
William R | June 5, 2007, 12:25am | #
highnumber | June 4, 2007, 11:39pm | #Stop making farms use the labor that you determine is legal. Let them determine which labor they will use.
Let freedom ring, man!
Ohhh brother. Sure, I'll sign off on that if the farmers agree to pay for all the medical, schooling, jail, etc etc etc that the illegal labor will cost the taxpayers.
highnumber | June 5, 2007, 12:43am | #
William R,Really? You will? So, the only reason you are against open borders is the welfare state.
Cool. I'm against the welfare state too. From what I've read, enough "illegal" immigrants pay taxes and SS money (see, they get fake SS #s so their employers think they're legal and pay the payroll taxes, and sometimes the immigrants get TINs and pay the IRS themselves to be as legal as possible under the circumstances), or at least contribute enough to the economy that they cover these costs you worry about.
So, if we open border types can show you that this is the case, you are on our side, yes?
William R | June 5, 2007, 1:05am | #
Open border types are loons. Goods are services crossing borders is good. People aren't. Goods and services get used up. People stay and change the nature of things and not for the best. The welfare state isn't going anywhere. The more poor people we bring in only grows the welfare state. This isn't rocket science. We have enough poor people. They already have a claim on my paycheck. Why on earth would I favor bringing in more poor people. Build the wall, enforce the laws on the books. And lets start Protecting America's Sovereigntyhighnumber | June 5, 2007, 1:18am | #
So you lied to me?Mike Laursen | June 5, 2007, 1:19am | #
"In FY 2004, the average low skill immigrant household received $30,160 in direct benefits, means-tested benefits, education, and population-based services from all levels of government. By contrast, low-skill immigrant households paid only $10,573 in taxes in FY 2004."Hah! I counter your Heritage Foundation statistics with a Cato statement about your Heritage Foundation statistics: "Several state-level studies have found that the increased economic activity created by lower-skilled, mostly Hispanic immigrants far exceeds the costs to state and local governments,"
highnumber | June 5, 2007, 1:22am | #
Why did you lie to me, William R?Mike Laursen | June 5, 2007, 1:23am | #
Another quote: "When the payroll tax contributions of immigrants are taken into account, the Urban Institute found that the foreign born constitute a net fiscal windfall to the public sector of some $20 billion a year."http://www.cato.org/dailys/4-22-97.html
TGGP | June 5, 2007, 1:37am | #
Steve Chapman is wrong. The current wave of immigration started because Congress passed the 1965 immigration act, and another wave started after the 1988 amnesty. Eisenhower was able to clamp down on the southern border without even an act of Congress with Operation Wetback. A graph showing the effect of these acts of the government is here. Immigration restriction was effective from 1924 until 1965, it can be effective again (as such restrictions are effective in many other countries, with Mexico being far harsher to its own central american immigrants than the US is to Mexicans). The problem is that those in charge DO NOT WANT it to be effective. Kennedy on the left and Bush on the right (with those terms being what they are in current American politics) both can't stand restrictionists and are willing to screw over the Samuel Gompers and Tancredos that should be their base when it comes to this issue.Libertarian James Fulford has more on the successes of border/immigration enforcement in Chingo Blingo is Wrong - We Can Deport Them All.
highnumber | June 5, 2007, 1:42am | #
That's more like it!
fortyouncer | June 5, 2007, 3:00am | #
My perspective comes from the front lines of Los Angeles. I am sympathetic to the open borders argument, and it seems to me in the long run we will benefit economically from the all the illegal immigrants that come from the south. I know that the mexicans at least assimilate pretty damn fast.But I don't live in the long run, and now it seems that there are a lot of people that bear the cost of the mass illegal migration without getting the benefit (maybe they need to eat more of that cheap lettuce or buy a carwash). Those that bear the cost are those that have to live in the places like east L.A., boyle heights, El monte, pacoima, etc. Maybe all hispanics look alike to some of you, but some of the "mexicans" in those places are actually americans, drowning in the dirty, gang infested streets (with "soaring real estate prices" - why that's a good thing, i am not sure). I know I wouldn't live there.
I just think mabye we should consider a little more what they feel like having tons of 2nd world poor people dumped in their neighborhood so the rest of us can have a cheaper cost of living.
In other words, even though I support the theory of open borders, I thank god that I can afford to stay away from all people I support coming over.
John Rohan | June 5, 2007, 6:09am | #
TGGP - you are absolutely right. There's no inevitability to people crossing the border. Yes, its determined and resourceful people doing it, but that's why you need resourceful and determined people defending it.If I were to take Chapman's philosophy to its conclusion, (which is to do nothing about the border at all) then why bother even trying to stop the drug trade. Just let it happen, man!
Immigration is great. But uncontrolled immigration is not. You need to do it responsibly; when it happens to faster than the people can assimilate you end up with tremendous social unrest.
http://shieldofachilles.blogspot.com
Chad | June 5, 2007, 6:28am | #
I have to disagree with Chapman. Japan, for example, does not have millions of illegal immigrants, despite the fact that billions of people in the neighborhood make a few bucks a day rather than the first-world wages found in Japan. How do they do this? Magic? Maybe Chapman should ask.We could reduce illegal immigration by 90% simply by:
A: Actually punishing it to a significant degree. This means JAIL TIME and PERMANENT BANS, not being dropped just across the border so you can sneak back tomorrow.
B: Seriously punishing those who hire them. Again, JAIL TIME for egreious offenders and major fines for the rest.
Yes, we should have more immigration. But we could not possibly absorb the hundreds of millions that want to come here. We have to have a fair, orderly process for allowing people in - and those who cheat the system should be punished, period.
Nasikabatrachus | June 5, 2007, 6:59am | #
I haven't read the whole thread, but I've noticed an interesting undercurrent in the anti-immigration posters. They cite immigration as producing a whole range of problems--drug gangs, enlarging the welfare state, who knows what else--which are all essentially created by the government and then--this is the truly brilliant part--they advocate an expansion of the government to get rid of the problem!It boggles my mind. I realize that these issues are valid concerns, but the solution is not addition, but subtraction. We're not going to get rid of immigrants by any means, not when the incentive to hire them is so high--they have a superior work ethic to most americans, meaning they often can easily outbid americans at high wages--and the disincentive to stay in their home countries is so low--Mexico, for instance, has a horrendous government.
And one last point. Anti-immigration folks say they fear america being turned into a third-world country by immigrants. They say they are willing to pay higher prices for the privilege of not having to think about non-citizens actually contributing to the economy. But let me ask you, where do you think such wide-scale protectionism will lead us? It'll put our economy in the crapper, that's what it will do. The anti-immigration policies will NOT serve as a shield that will protect the u.s. until we can get rid of the disastrous drug and welfare policies--these policies will never be gotten rid of, not when the incentive on the part of the government is so high. It will merely serve to create the equivalent a national labor union. And we know what happens when we let unions have their way--entire factories devoted solely to housing lounging union members will be the least of our worries. Or do you think that people will give up their privileges to people who can outbid them in almost every way without a fight?
Chad | June 5, 2007, 7:22am | #
Nas: We have to be realistic. The government exists. Nation-states exist. They aren't going away. The problem I have with the libertarian logic in the immigration issue is that it refuse to acknowledge the very non-libertarian reality that we live in.In a perfect world, anyone could live anywhere they want, and it wouldn't affect anyone to a large degree or in an involuntary manner where another chose to live. However, the real world does not work this way. When someone moves to America and becomes "American", I suddenly gain all sorts of responsibilies towards them, and they gain the reverse in return. Given that these partnerships are NOT going away, it is clear that we DO, then, have the right to chose with whom we enter such partnerships with.
If you truly believe that we should have completely open immigration in THIS reality (by such a policy, I mean anyone can come as long as they can get here, possibly criminals excepted), please explain how you plan to deal with the several hundred million that would come. Who would feed them? Who would educate them and their children? Who would house them? Who would pay their Social Security and medical bills?
Remember, I need a real world answer, not "I am a libertarian and those problems are their business, not mine!"
MikeP | June 5, 2007, 8:10am | #
Remember, I need a real world answer, not "I am a libertarian and those problems are their business, not mine!"In the real world, the number coming will not be several hundred million -- at least not until many decades have passed, by which time the population trends of the world will have tipped over and, one would hope, a number more nations will be a lot wealthier.
Also in the real world, the US will not completely open its borders unless the problems caused by the immigrants are their business, not the US's.
You can't posit the fantastic hypothetical of protectionist Americans finally finding either a brain or a heart and opening the borders while forbidding the less fantastic hypothetical of their not tightly restricting the draw due to welfare.
MikeP | June 5, 2007, 8:25am | #
... protectionist Americans finally finding either a brain or a heart and opening the borders ...Actually, given the legion of fears that restricted immigration folk want to have validated, I should have added courage to the list.
Perhaps The Wizard of Oz was not an allegory about late 19th century politics after all, but an allegory on immigration!
Mike P,
If they could, half of latin America, half of Africa and Asia would want to move to US or Western europe. Even those people who are doing relatively good in their own countries in Asia and latin America would like to come here because the level of living standards, economics and social security in US and Western Europe is beyond what the countries from where these immigrants come can offer.
Nasikabatrachus | June 5, 2007, 8:51am | #
Chad said:"In a perfect world, anyone could live anywhere they want, and it wouldn't affect anyone to a large degree or in an involuntary manner where another chose to live. However, the real world does not work this way. When someone moves to America and becomes "American", I suddenly gain all sorts of responsibilies towards them, and they gain the reverse in return. Given that these partnerships are NOT going away, it is clear that we DO, then, have the right to chose with whom we enter such partnerships with."
Who is this "we"? I don't want my money being used to build a border fence or throwing people in jail for hiring good laborers. If we're talking about rights and voluntary association, we're talking about getting rid of the government.
"If you truly believe that we should have completely open immigration in THIS reality (by such a policy, I mean anyone can come as long as they can get here, possibly criminals excepted), please explain how you plan to deal with the several hundred million that would come. Who would feed them? Who would educate them and their children? Who would house them? Who would pay their Social Security and medical bills?"
Several hundred million? I thought your problem was that libertarianism was too unrealistic, and here you are saying that the population of the U.S. is going to be increased by hundreds of millions if you drop the border patrol. Let's assume the entire population of Mexico DID move to the U.S., though. Well, who feeds and educates mexcians NOW? Other Mexicans. Remember, these people are economic agents as well: they are just as capable of meeting supply and demand as we are. As for social security, that's a bad idea even if you don't have massive influxes of immigrants anyway.
Willliam R | June 5, 2007, 9:01am | #
highnumber | June 5, 2007, 1:18am | #So you lied to me?
How so ??
Nasikabatrachus | June 5, 2007, 9:05am | #
"If they could, half of latin America, half of Africa and Asia would want to move to US or Western europe. Even those people who are doing relatively good in their own countries in Asia and latin America would like to come here because the level of living standards, economics and social security in US and Western Europe is beyond what the countries from where these immigrants come can offer."And past a certain point, the push factors in the home country are outweighed by the home country's pull factors. For instance, all of the newly available capital left by millions of people leaving--many people are going to stay, and in a saturated labor market many people are going to come back, as well. Furthermore, as the number of people diminishes, the price of labor in the home countries will go up, meaning many people will stay to take advantage of that and, like before, the labor market in the countries that have experienced immigration will be saturated and it will be in the interest of many to go home. Besides, something like fifty thousand people a day enter the middle class in east asia because of the recent industrialization and increased freedom. SOMEBODY is gonna stay for that.
I agree. But, look at the number of failed and poor states around the world. And, at the moment, the goals of many millions of people of these countries are to get to the West. And that is a sheer number. America can still accept and provide for millions of immigrants without a considerable restraint on its social and economical structure. However, the influx of immigrants all at once, from all these states around the world as a result of open border would be unsettling, uncertain and unknown. So, all that is asked for is a humane border control that takes in consideration of aspiring and hopeful people beyond US border and those people within the border who are most likely to get negatively affected as a result of mass migration. The balance should be achieved.
Nasikabatrachus | June 5, 2007, 9:20am | #
gy, finding the balance requires subtlety, and the government can't do subtlety. It can't even figure out that labor unions cost the economy trillions of dollars over the years.I say, let "borders" be determined by property rights. That's something of a problem, given that most cities, which were formerly private associations, have been made "public," but that's a minimal problem compared to a system that turns agricultural workers into serfs and props up the drug trade, allowing drug lords to run armies.
highnumber | June 5, 2007, 9:22am | #
William R,First:
I'll sign off on that if the farmers agree to pay for all the medical, schooling, jail, etc etc etc that the illegal labor will cost the taxpayers.
Then, when I asked if we could show that the "illegal" immigrants aren't a drain on the welfare system:
Open border types are loons. Goods are services crossing borders is good. People aren't. Goods and services get used up. People stay and change the nature of things and not for the best. The welfare state isn't going anywhere. The more poor people we bring in only grows the welfare state. This isn't rocket science. We have enough poor people. They already have a claim on my paycheck. Why on earth would I favor bringing in more poor people. Build the wall, enforce the laws on the books. And lets start Protecting America's Sovereignty
You would never accept open borders, because you are a nativist, right?
William R | June 5, 2007, 10:53am | #
HighNumber, you're out to lunch boy. Nativist, bigot, restrictionist. When the name calling starts, you've lost the debate. I don't accept open borders. why would any sane person? I've always been upfront here. For example. I've said numerous times I don't think