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NEW YORK, JANUARY 9
SOMETHING had to give, and when that is so, democracy is at its most useful. The mess in our immigration laws festers. And if it is so that President Bush was moved to try to do something about it in anticipation of November's national election, why should that surprise, let alone dismay us?
We shouldn't allow our general relapse on illegal immigration to blind us to our own acquiescence to the impasse brought on. For those who believe in free movement of labor such a position would never survive a national plebiscite. Beginning in 1965, we simply surrendered on the subject of Western Hemisphere immigration. The 1965 law effectively eliminated restrictions on immigration from this hemisphere through its family-reunification provisions. It can be argued that much the same thing would have happened without that law. In the U.S., the average wage is $32,000, ten times the average Mexican wage. Laws attempting to seal the border were in the tradition of King Canute ordering the tide to stop.
But to acknowledge that the kind of insulation we needed in order to repress Latino immigration was not easy to devise does not excuse ignoring the laws we had. We discovered little by little, under the pressure of local politics and judicial intervention, that restricting immigration is not done by pen strokes. If the nation had asserted itself on immigration policy, we might have made some headway. Eight million illegals testify to the irresolution of our immigration laws. We discovered that you can't do something that California, Arizona, Texas, and Florida won't permit: so we surrendered.
The vital aspect of that surrender touches down on a great issue we are facing, which has to do with free trade. In one recent debate among the Democratic presidential hopefuls, most of those who had voted for NAFTA and the ...
Source: HighBeam Research, Bushwhacking immigration.(on the right)(immigration law)