Will Congress turn its back on you: when it comes to immigration? The immigration legislation before Congress casts the die not only for cultural and national ruin, but also for a North American Union.Way back in 1986, Sen. Ted Kennedy For other persons named Ted Kennedy, see Ted Kennedy (disambiguation). Edward Moore "Ted" Kennedy (born February 22, 1932) is the senior United States Senator from Massachusetts and a member of the Democratic Party. (D-Mass.), then, as now, the principal agent of leviathan leviathan (lēvī`əthən), in the Bible, aquatic monster, presumably the crocodile, the whale, or a dragon. It was a symbol of evil to be ultimately defeated by the power of good. leftism left·ism also Left·ism n. 1. The ideology of the political left. 2. Belief in or support of the tenets of the political left. left in the Senate, sponsored an immigration immigration, entrance of a person (an alien) into a new country for the purpose of establishing permanent residence. Motives for immigration, like those for migration generally, are often economic, although religious or political factors may be very important. bill. Then, as now, illegal aliens had flooded the country. And then, as now, the Senate had an answer: amnesty. Kennedy said a few things worth remembering: "This amnesty will give citizenship to only 1.1 to 1.3 million illegal aliens. We will secure the borders henceforth. We will never again bring forward another amnesty bill like this." "Never again" is a mighty long time, much longer than the 21 years that have elapsed e·lapse intr.v. e·lapsed, e·laps·ing, e·laps·es To slip by; pass: Weeks elapsed before we could start renovating. n. since Kennedy made his fulsome promise. Illegal aliens are 10 times the number they were then. Americans are angry about them, want to build a wall at what used to be the border with Mexico, and seek punishment for employers who hire illegals. Legislators such as Rep. Tom Tancredo Content may change as the election approaches. , R-Colo., have proposed legislation to do those things. Yet now, Kennedy, with President Bush, offers the "compromise" hatched in the Senate on May 17, while the U.S. House of Representatives, shunning Tancredo and his supporters, cobbled cob·ble 1 n. 1. A cobblestone. 2. Geology A rock fragment between 64 and 256 millimeters in diameter, especially one that has been naturally rounded. 3. cobbles See cob coal. tr. together the STRIVE Act (H.R. 1645). Though the Senate bill's sponsors deny the truth, Rep. Elton Gallegly Elton W. Gallegly (born March 7 1944), an American politician, has been a Republican member of the United States House of Representatives since 1987, currently representing the 24th District of California (map). of California quickly summed up what the Senate's monstrosity monstrosity 1. great congenital deformity. 2. a monster or teratism. is: "amnesty, amnesty, and amnesty," for at least 12 million aliens who illegally crossed the border with Mexico. That apt description also fits the STRIVE bill. Both bills, Americans are told, "solve" the problem of illegal immigration "Illegal alien" and "Illegal aliens" redirect here. For other uses, see Illegal aliens (disambiguation). Illegal immigration refers to immigration across national borders in a way that violates the immigration laws of the destination country. , which legislators promised to do, in an efficient if novel and bold manner. In mid-May, we learned just how bold the Senate solution was: it would stop illegal immigration and deal with illegal aliens by legalizing the 12 million illegals, and, for all intents and purposes Adv. 1. for all intents and purposes - in every practical sense; "to all intents and purposes the case is closed"; "the rest are for all practical purposes useless" for all practical purposes, to all intents and purposes , dissolving the border with Mexico. The ultimate object of the political elites pushing amnesty is not simply amnesty to legalize le·gal·ize tr.v. le·gal·ized, le·gal·iz·ing, le·gal·iz·es To make legal or lawful; authorize or sanction by law. le the illegals, of course, but something far more subversive, given the language of the STRIVE bill. "Immigration reform Immigration reform is the common term used in political discussions regarding changes to immigration policy. In a certain sense, reform can be general enough to include promoted, expanded, or open immigration, but in reality discussions of reform often deal with the aspect of " is a Trojan horse See Trojan. Trojan Horse hollow horse concealed soldiers, enabling them to enter and capture Troy. [Gk. Myth.: Iliad] See : Deceit (application, security) Trojan horse in the plan to create a North American North American named after North America. North American blastomycosis see North American blastomycosis. North American cattle tick see boophilusannulatus. Union modeled after the European Union European Union (EU), name given since the ratification (Nov., 1993) of the Treaty of European Union, or Maastricht Treaty, to the European Community . * Reform or Revolution? "Reform," of course, is the word politicians use when they want to slip one by the people who elected them, and on that note it's worth rehearsing the old adage that Americans are safest when Congress has adjourned. The immigration legislation before the Senate, and the so-called STRIVE bill before the House, prove that one a dozen times over. The Senate "compromise" was announced by Ted Kennedy, who was surrounded by nine senators (seven of them Republican!) and two Bush administration Cabinet secretaries. President Bush swiftly burbled his approbation: "I want to thank the members of the Senate who worked hard [on the compromise legislation]. I appreciate the leadership shown on both sides of the aisle." He added: "Immigration is a tough issue for a lot of Americans. The agreement reached today is one that will help enforce our borders, but equally importantly, it will treat people with respect. This is a bill where people who live here in our country will be treated without amnesty, but without animosity." The president lied. Americans can only hope that patriotic members of Congress derail de·rail intr. & tr.v. de·railed, de·rail·ing, de·rails 1. To run or cause to run off the rails. 2. this train before it leaves the station. If the Senate bill passes intact, or in some invidious in·vid·i·ous adj. 1. Tending to rouse ill will, animosity, or resentment: invidious accusations. 2. amalgamation with the STRIVE bill in the House, we can say hasta la vista to the border with Mexico. Unsurprisingly, the world's greatest deliberative de·lib·er·a·tive adj. 1. Assembled or organized for deliberation or debate: a deliberative legislature. 2. Characterized by or for use in deliberation or debate. body did not have a copy of their 380-page bill ready for public inspection, but enough details have emerged to let us know that if stopping illegal immigration is its purpose, it's a dog that just won't hunt. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency. Associated Press (AP) Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world. , the bill's major provisions fall into four categories. Perhaps the bill's worst provisions apply to illegal aliens already here. "They could come forward immediately and receive probationary legal status," AP reports, and the bill creates a new "four-year 'Z' visa" for all illegals who landed here before January 1. Illegals can "adjust status to lawful permanent residence" simply by paying a $5,000 fine, but the head of a family must first return home. How the government would ensure these people return home is anyone's guess, given that it claims it cannot deport de·port tr.v. de·port·ed, de·port·ing, de·ports 1. To expel from a country. See Synonyms at banish. 2. To behave or conduct (oneself) in a given manner; comport. them now, but at any rate, the bill also permits anyone under 30, brought here as a minor, to procure a green card in three years instead of eight. "Undocumented farmworkers who can demonstrate they have worked 150 hours or three years in agriculture can apply for green cards." But green cards for "Z visa" holders won't be issued until the border and workplace security measures Noun 1. security measures - measures taken as a precaution against theft or espionage or sabotage etc.; "military security has been stepped up since the recent uprising" security are in place, which will take about 18 months. The bill also includes a new "guest-worker" program. These workers will hold "Y" visas, renewable three times. Nearly a half-million could get them initially, but that figure will change "with annual adjustments based on market fluctuations." The bill requires a worker to go home before renewing it, but again, one wonders how or whether the government will enforce this provision. Nor does the bill forget "future immigrants," and it will continue, at least partially, the insidious practice of "chain migration," which enables an immigrant to pack his entire family across the border. Though an immigrant could bring a spouse and minor child, he could not bring adult children and siblings. The bill simply assumes a line of customers from the border to Mexico City Mexico City Spanish Ciudad de México City (pop., 2000: city, 8,605,239; 2003 metro. area est., 18,660,000), capital of Mexico. Located at an elevation of 7,350 ft (2,240 m), it is officially coterminous with the Federal District, which occupies 571 sq mi . The government will pass out 380,000 visas a year "based on a point system, with about 50 percent based on employment criteria, 25 percent based on education, 15 percent on English proficiency and 10 percent on family connections." This last measure upsets liberals and some religious activists because "family unification principles," leftist left·ism also Left·ism n. 1. The ideology of the political left. 2. Belief in or support of the tenets of the political left. left House Speaker Nancy Pelosi avers Avers is a municipality in the district of Hinterrhein in the Swiss canton of Graubünden. , "have been fundamental to American immigration." As border security goes, the bill would require the federal government to hire 18,000 new border patrol agents, build 370 miles of fence along the border with Mexico, create 200 miles of vehicle barriers and take other security measures, including installing radar and camera towers, adding unmanned aerial vehicles
As far as work goes, the bill would require employers to verify, electronically, the eligibility of new employees, and it would increase penalties for employers who break the law. What the bill doesn't explain, of course, is how any of this benefits the American people An American people may be:
Reported the Post,
When Sen. Edward M. Kennedy
(D-Mass.) declared last
week that unnamed "stakeholders"
would decide whether
Congress overhauls immigration
law this year, Latino organizations
in Washington understood exactly
what he meant.
After laboring in obscurity for decades,
groups such as the National
Council of La Raza, the Mexican
American Legal Defense and Educational
Fund, and the National Immigration
Forum are virtually being
granted veto power over perhaps the
biggest domestic issue coming before
Congress this year ....
"There's a real sense that the Latino
community is key to the solution
in this debate, so now they are reaching
out to us more than ever," said
Eric Gutierrez, lead lobbyist for the
Mexican American Legal Defense
and Educational Fund, or MALDEF.
"Neither party wants to make a misstep
politically."
Such groups were practically in the
room yesterday, maintaining contact
as Democratic and Republican senators
tried to hammer out a new immigration
bill.
The National Council of La Raza The National Council of La Raza (NCLR) is the largest Hispanic advocacy organization in the United States. The NCLR was founded in 1968 as a nonpartisan nonprofit organization dedicated to reducing discrimination and poverty and to improving the lives and economic opportunities of is just one of many "Latino" groups whose militant policies are starkly anti-American and baldly racist, yet Senator Kennedy just as frankly admitted such groups controlled the bill. The long and short of the bill is this: most of its provisions benefit illegal aliens, not Americans. A greater burden is placed on employers to ferret out illegals, who shouldn't be here in the first place, for instance, and the bill does not address some other important issues. Writing at the website of National Review, George Borjas at Harvard University Harvard University, mainly at Cambridge, Mass., including Harvard College, the oldest American college. Harvard College Harvard College, originally for men, was founded in 1636 with a grant from the General Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. explained what the bill really means: "Any 'reform' that gives amnesty to 12 million illegal immigrants without taking care of the underlying illegal-immigration problem is a lemon. After all, what guarantees that the current batch of 12 million illegal immigrants will not be replaced by another 12 million in just a few years? What guarantees that guest workers will not stay illegally in the United States after their visa expires? What guarantees that border enforcement will be taken seriously by the Bush administration in the next two years or by the Democratic administration after that?" Borjas asks a key question: what guarantees that the illegals who are supposed to go back home and apply for legal status will leave? Consider this remark from one illegal immigrant who spoke to Agence France Presse. "I don't really understand that much about the bill," he said, "but I'd have to be crazy to go back to Mexico to apply for visa now that I am already in the US. They wouldn't give me a visa there." Smart thinking. Surely, this muchacho isn't the only one of his ilk, and just as surely no one believes the head of a household will pack up and leave his family to return home and begin the long process of legalization LEGALIZATION. The act of making lawful. 2. By legalization, is also understood the act by which a judge or competent officer authenticates a record, or other matter, in order that the same may be lawfully read in evidence. Vide Authentication. . On that count alone, the bill is absurd. Its premise is that people with no respect for current immigration law will respect its reincarnation. Truth is, if they do not obey the law now, they will not obey it in the future. So the answers to Borjas' questions, to borrow from Gallegly, are nothing, nothing, and nothing. Americans have no guarantee that illegal aliens won't continue surging across the border and set up another crisis in five or 10 years requiting yet another "reform" that is actually amnesty. "An amnesty is an amnesty," Borjas wrote, "no matter how it is packaged and spun. The guest-worker program will surely enrich employers, but will exacerbate the downward trajectory in the economic status of poorer workers" This, of course, doesn't matter to the elites, who claim they need those poor workers "to do the jobs Americans won't do." The Real Plan: North American Union Of course, the United States doesn't "need" to legalize 12 million illegal aliens for a non-existent labor shortage, which raises the question of why the political elite want to do so. On VDARE.com, immigration analyst Juan Mann, who also runs the DeportAliens.com website, explained the amnesty clauses in the STRIVE bill and something even more ominous: its creation of a supranational Supranational An international organization, or union, whereby member states transcend national boundaries or interests to share in the decision-making and vote on issues pertaining to the wider grouping. border-control policy. Among the amnesty provisions in STRIVE, are a new worker program, and amnesty for children under 16 years old, farm and forestry workers, and illegal aliens related to victims killed on 9/11. Persecuted religious minorities will receive enhanced asylum and the bill also creates a non-immigrant worker program. Still, Mann wrote, "My advice [is to] keep your eye on the ball ... and the ball is called the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America The Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America is a continent-level dialogue, founded on March 23 2005 by the governments of Canada, Mexico, and the United States. The reason given for this agreement is to enhance security and economic cooperation in North America. (SPP (1) (Scalable Parallel Processor) A multiprocessing computer that can be upgraded by adding more CPUs. (2) (Standard Parallel Port) The Centronics parallel port that was used on the first PCs. ) plan." The STRIVE Act would move us closer to a common North American passport, he concludes, "but even more radical, H.R. 1645 also intends a common immigration policy for the United States, Canada and Mexico." The explanation for the continental immigration policy appears in Section 113. Apparently, Congress is no longer concerned with American national security; the section is titled, "Reports on Improving the Exchange of Information on North American Security." Section 113 requires "developing and implementing an immigration security strategy for North America that works toward the development of a common security perimeter by enhancing technical assistance for programs and systems to support advance automated reporting and risk targeting of international passengers." Stop the Insanity But that isn't all. Section 113 mandates "working with Canada and Mexico to encourage foreign governments to enact laws to combat alien smuggling smuggling, illegal transport across state or national boundaries of goods or persons liable to customs or to prohibition. Smuggling has been carried on in nearly all nations and has occasionally been adopted as an instrument of national policy, as by Great Britain and trafficking, and laws to forbid the use and manufacture of fraudulent travel documents and to promote information sharing." Incredibly, the section also requires exploring methods for Canada, Mexico, and the United States to waive visa requirements for nationals and citizens of the same foreign countries. In the post-9/11 world, one wonders what would possess any thinking member of Congress to suggest waiving visa requirements for any foreign national, much less those flowing across a border completely lacking security. No one knows how many terrorists have crossed the border with Mexico since 9/11. If the purpose of immigration legislation is securing the borders, waiving visa requirements certainly won't help if foreigners can cross them freely without harassment. Then again, the United States will not have borders. Rather, it will have a common "security perimeter," within which any foreign national from any country could travel once the SPP waives visa requirements. Nothing would stop a terrorist from landing in a country within the "security perimeter," but even if by some miracle the countries within the security perimeter were good partners in "perimeter control," American sovereignty will still have been lost. Having parsed the gobbledygook gob·ble·dy·gook also gob·ble·de·gook n. Unclear, wordy jargon. [Imitative of the gobbling of a turkey.] Noun 1. , Mann rightly asks, "What exactly will be the 'immigration security strategy for North America?' And will this new regional immigration policy have anything whatsoever to do with the interests of the United States?" Such an "immigration strategy" is not in the interests of the United States. It is, however, in the interests of the global corporate and political elites who want to create the North American superstate superstate Noun a large state, esp. one created from a federation of states . They can accomplish that by altering the relationship between the United States and its neighbors, i.e., by erasing the borders. That is why neither bill flatly suggests deporting illegal aliens, but rather simply accepts their ubiquity, the excuses being that the government could not deport them if it wanted to, but it doesn't want to anyway because "they do the jobs Americans won't do." Again, Borjas and others have repeatedly refuted this falsehood, which means the politicians pushing "immigration reform" have something else in mind. That would be the SPP. So the real purpose of both bills is not stopping illegal immigration, but exacerbating it by legalizing the criminal aliens already here, which requires convincing Americans their economy cannot survive without them. And once these 12 million are legalized, others will get the message. As well, "guest-worker" provisions would create an unimpeded unimpeded Adjective not stopped or disrupted by anything Adj. 1. unimpeded - not slowed or prevented; "a time of unimpeded growth"; "an unimpeded sweep of meadows and hills afforded a peaceful setting" flow of Mexicans into the United States, which would lower wages to the benefit of the SPP's corporate and political backers. Thus does the seemingly unsolvable "crisis" of immigration provide the opportunity the elites require to take the next irreversible step toward the North American Union. Without borders, illegal immigration is no problem. And neither are American law, sovereignty, and citizenship, which currently thwart the political and corporate elites pushing these two amnesty bills. The immigration legislation before Congress casts the die not only for cultural and national ruin, but also for North American Union. It would dissolve the United States. The American people can stop it if they wish, but how badly they wish to stop it is another matter. Some senators said they will vote for the bill because constituents are silent about it. If true, the country is lurching toward ruin faster than the most gloomy pessimist might think, which means now is the time for the American remnant to scale the ramparts. Recalling Kennedy's infamous promise back in 1986, now is the time to say "never again" And mean it. This treason can be stopped. To contact your senators and representative online in opposition to amnesty, go to www.capwiz.com/jbs/home. * For more information about these plans, go to www.jbs.org/nau. R. Cort Kirkwood is managing editor of the Daily News-Record in Harrisonburg, Virginia. |
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