November 02, 2006
Chertoff’s Pre-Election Puffery On Border
Control
By
Donald A. Collins
The pre-election puffery continues
unabated. With mid-term elections only days away, we are
getting the full court press from every trumpet (Should
I say "strumpet"??) in the Executive branch about
their serious efforts to contain the immigration
invasion.
In an October 31 Washington Post
article by Spencer S. Hsu, we hear that paragon of happy
talk, Homeland Security Secretary
Michael Chertoff, announcing that
"Immigration Arrests Down 8% for Year".
Let’s check closely the Secretary’s
latest words of comfort. The Post story says:
"Chertoff
credited the drop of nearly 100,000 apprehensions
largely to
the Bush administration's strategy of deporting
virtually all
non-Mexican border crossers as fast as they are
caught, deterring them and others in what had been the
fastest-growing group of illegal immigrants. After
quadrupling the previous four years, apprehensions of
'other than Mexican' border crossers fell 57,144, or 35
percent, to 108,026 last year."
Since the crossings by illegal
aliens are estimated by most at 3 million a year or more
in recent years, this mighty effort is a three percent
(3%) improvement. Imagine this man’s chutzpah! The
Post notes, "Chertoff cited 'a very, very
significant increase' and 'dramatic' shift in U.S.
targeting of employers whose business models are based
on the use of illegal labor. The United States brought
716 criminal worksite enforcement arrests and charges in
2006, up from 24 in 1999 and 25 in 2002" 'Although
people will squawk about it, the answer to those squawks
is to go ahead and finish the job of a comprehensive
strategy.' "
Does “comprehensive strategy”
mean what we know it must mean–more amnesty?
At Chertoff’s success rate we can
comfortably believe that only 2.9 million illegal aliens
will be crossing every year into our country. So what
will add only 2.9 million a year for the next 44 years
until 2050—assuming none bring in families which of
course is not true, or that their fertility is low,
which is not true—will equal another 128 million added
to our present 300 plus million. Mighty close to the
commonly-quoted figure of
500 million living here in 2050.
Now of course we should also talk
about those who come here with
legal visas, many of whom, probably half,
over stay those visas and disappear into America,
sopping up public services aplenty, while we taxpayers
watch incredulously as our government does nothing.
We citizens are running out of
legal or electoral options since our government ignores
enforcing existing laws and fails to pass effective new
ones. Is it time for a
Jeffersonian revolution? How do we do that? Anyone
caught arguing about
bad government policy in DC is likely to end up in
the slammer. How about a summer or winter in Guantanamo!?
Of course the apprehensions now are
about the same as they have been for years for years.
The poor Border Patrol has been left out to swing in the
wind by a Congress whose corporate paymasters seek total
obeisance on the open border question: "Leave it open
or we don’t pay you."
According to Spencer Hsu in the Post,
"Under the old
catch-and-release policy in the summer of 2005, 80
percent of non-Mexicans apprehended at the border were
let go inside the United States, pending their hearings,
because of a shortage of
detention space. But for the past three months, all
non-Mexicans have been held pending expedited
deportation."
Gee, could the public’s great
awakening on this issue and the impending elections have
been heeded?
Don’t count on it after November
7th.
As for the fence to be built under
a bill Bush ceremoniously signed last week,
looking like he had sucked on a lemon, the Post
tells us,
"Chertoff
declined to say whether or when DHS would complete 700
miles of a double-layered fence on the U.S.-Mexico
border recently approved by Congress and the president.
Instead, he cited plans over the next three to six years
to build a
'virtual fence' that includes physical barriers,
electronic remote sensing and vehicle barriers, or other
measures where fencing is impractical or ineffective."
Many experts note that the virtual
fence is virtually useless. Like the government now in
power.
Donald A. Collins [
email
him], is a freelance writer living in Washington DC and
a board member of FAIR, the Federation for American
Immigration Reform. His views are his own.