This post was published in The Wilson Times April 6, 2019.
Immigration has become the
Gordian Knot of American politics, the issue that is impossible to unravel and
keeps advocates on both sides tied up.
It wasn’t always this way.
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, immigration
was viewed as an overall positive for the United States. The Statue of Liberty
(dedicated 1886) symbolizes that national attitude: “Give me your tired, your
poor, your huddled masses, yearning to breathe free … .” In those days,
unskilled immigrants could find jobs at decent wages. But the U.S. labor market
has far fewer manual labor jobs and more jobs that require advanced training or
skills.
In the 1980s, U.S.
politicians realized that illegal immigration, particularly from Mexico and
Central America, was reshaping America without any study, planning or control.
President Reagan and Congress agreed on the 1986 Immigration Reform and Control
Act to crack down on illegal immigration and provide a means for illegal
immigrants already here to come clean and be naturalized as citizens.
The law created paperwork
for illegal immigrants to apply for legal status and required employers to
check the legal status of employees. The law granted amnesty to 3 million
illegal immigrants, but it did not slow the pace of migrants crossing the southern
border. In fact, the migration accelerated, adding another 10 - 14 million
illegals to the U.S. population.
Since then, Congress has
been unable to find a consensus on what to do about the illegal immigrants
already among us or the millions more who might cross the border illegally in
the future. In his 2016 presidential campaign, Donald Trump simplified the
complex problem with three simplistic words: Build That Wall. For all his
exaggerations and persistence, Trump has not found a solution to the issue. A
wall can be breached, climbed over, tunneled under or blown up and cannot
stanch the flow of illegal immigrants at a price Americans are unwilling to
pay. (And Mexico has refused to pay for a wall, as candidate Trump promised
they would.)
The basic problem is not
people crossing the border illegally; it is the corruption, violence, poverty
and economic hopelessness of Mexico and Central American countries that drives
residents to risk everything for an opportunity to work and compete for the
American Dream. The problem will not go away until those high-emigration
countries improve the safety and economic opportunities of their residents.
U.S. immigration policy should include helping those countries reform.
David Frum, writing in the
April issue of The Atlantic, puts the immigration problem in perspective. Illegal
immigrants are also swamping European countries. Like Mexicans or Salvadorans,
these immigrants would rather live in a prosperous country than live a Third
World existence.
Part of the problem has been
the willingness, even eagerness of U.S. employers to hire immigrants, who often
are more eager to work than native populations. Immigrants provide some
positive benefits for the U.S. economy, and some negative effects as well.
Immigrants contribute to the economy; their birth rate keeps the U.S.
population from declining. Immigrants require more government assistance than
native born, on average, in costs such as subsidized housing, medical care,
specialized education and so forth. U.S. businesses can’t get along without
immigrants, but illegal immigrants offer less help. The current policy of
accepting low-skilled, poor immigrants has long-term negative impacts on Social
Security and Medicare.
Frum suggests we need to
reconsider laws on refugees and asylum seekers. If the criteria for asylum are
fleeing violence and poverty, much of the world’s population is eligible.
Frum also provides a dose of
reality for those on the left who claim Americans should welcome all immigrants
because we are all neighbors: “Without immigration restrictions, there are no
national borders. Without international borders, there are no nation-states.
Without nation-states, there are no electorates. Without electorates, there is
no democracy. If liberals insist that only fascists will enforce borders, then
voters will hire fascists to do the job liberals refuse to do.”
Hal Tarleton is a former editor of The Wilson Daily
Times. Contact him at haltarleton@myglnc.com.
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