September 16, 2009 Mud Slinging Now The Only Weapon Left For The Open Border Crowd
On Tuesday, September 15, 2009, the
Washington
Post, featured a story entitled,
Lots of Fear Remains Over Economy, Job Losses
[By Jon Cohen and Jennifer Agiesta] while on Page A4
it reported that
Immigration,
Health Debates Cross Paths (by Spencer Hu)—a
story which seems designed to show that mudslinging
is the only weapon left to immigration enthusiasts
who want open-border importation of low wage
employees or more members for their ethnic or
religious factions. [VDARE.com
note: The original headline on the web page was
Immigration Overhaul Supporters Ratchet Up Rhetoric,
which puts the
blame on America's Voice [email
them]
but it was changed for some reason.]
The Fear article notes that Americans are apprehensive about the
economy. Gee, not surprising. The Post says,
"Lower-income
respondents have felt the brunt of the economic
contraction more directly, with more than a third of
those with annual household incomes under $50,000
reporting a job loss at home, compared with about two in
10 of those with higher incomes."
Not a great time to bring in a bunch more low wage
workers, eh?
Then take the main point of the
Post
Immigration/ Health article: To say that those people
who think immigration should contain simple features
like, oh, enforcing present laws and making sure legally
resident workers get employed by businesses, are
"racists".
Yes, patriotic immigration reformers are concerned that
health care money goes to illegal aliens. So are the
vast majority of Americans. The studies on this issue
are very clear and without major overhaul of the present
bills the problem will not be fixed.
However, this quote from Hsu’s article tells you what’s
happening:
"Trying to beat back a furor over whether President
Obama's centerpiece initiative would subsidize health
care for illegal immigrants, liberal supporters of an
immigration overhaul on Monday called a main proponent
of that claim a hate group,’ citing its founder's ties
to white supremacists and interest in racist ideas, such
as eugenics.”
This "founder",
John Tanton,
a
retired ophthalmologist,
from a small Michigan town, perceived years ago in the
1970s that importing without need or care another 50
million aliens and their offspring would not be sound
policy. Essentially, the
Washington Post
is giving ink (again)
to the
Southern Poverty Law Center
smears.
Now, apparently, the time has come to pull out all the
stops to tie this gentle, caring intellectual, whose
perspicacity on the immigration issue has been
incredible, to
Joe Wilson,
who shouted
"You lie!"
during Obama's speech to Congress.
Tanton has for many years been expounding real
immigration arguments which make sense for the good of
the entire country–see my piece
Democrat Says: Without (Patriotic) Immigration Reform,
All Reforms Are Imperiled—Including Health Care.
For those totally reasonable, practical and patriotic
ideas, Tanton is now being targeted for
ad hominem attack—the only weapon those who want cheap labor and
open borders have left. Here is a section headed in bold
type so you can't miss it:
"In a
series of reports, the Southern Poverty Law Center and
the Anti-Defamation League have
focused on Tanton,
who founded FAIR in 1979. The groups quote from Tanton's
correspondence with Holocaust deniers and white
nationalist thinkers, his expressed interest in
anti-Semitic writers and the study of
eugenics,
and concerns about the "educability" of Hispanics and
the loss of a ‘European American’ majority.
"We
want to keep that drumbeat going so politicians know
when FAIR lobbyists speak to them, this is who they
represent," said
Heidi Beirich,
an SPLC researcher."
At least WaPo’s Hsu quoted Dan Stein, FAIR's President, but it almost seems
like "When did
you stop beating your wife"?
"Stein defended
FAIR's track record, cited its diverse membership and
said
the group ‘stands four-square against discrimination
based on race, ethnicity or religion.’ He said attacks
on Tanton are taken out of context and ‘simply do not
reflect the true character of the person,’ whom Stein
described as a ‘Jeffersonian or Renaissance man or
intellect’ whose interest and writings span a wide range
of issues.
“He
criticized America's Voice and allied groups as
‘juvenile mud throwers who seem unprepared to engage in
serious public debate.’"
Let's have a real debate. Health care reform of course
should not mean tax dollars to illegal aliens. Saying
that is reasonable, although it is frankly being used by
the opposition to call Dr. Tanton and other real
reformers
"racists". The vast majority of thinking Americans
which include so many citizens of Hispanic heritage,
understand that trying to bring in more and more
unneeded people, blowing our population up to 500
million by 2050, is simply madness and must be stopped.
As the Post's Cohen and Agiesta tell us:
"Nearly six in 10 Americans are now concerned about job or pay losses in
the coming months, little changed since February, and
there has been no increase in the percentage who see the
federal government's stimulus efforts as having an
impact, even as the pace of layoffs has eased in recent
months. And there is lukewarm public confidence that the
government is enacting measures to stave off another
financial crisis."
What better time for real patriotic immigration reform?
As Dan Stein so often and eloquently notes, when asked
about what to do about the millions of
illegal aliens
now in our midst, patriotic reformers have never argued
for rounding up and deporting all these folks. If we
simply enforced our laws and made it impossible for
people here illegally to get a job, then they would
melt away over time.
The deportation bogeyman was the creation of the same
people who are now resorting to
ad hominem
arguments.
The key to starting real reform is the
permanent extension of E-verify—the
website
through which, in short order 99% of the time, the legal
residence of job applicants can be verified.
E-verify is now inserted into various bills in the
Congress. Hopefully, it will be permitted to function
beyond its present expiration date of September 30. Donald A. Collins [email him] is a freelance writer living in Washington DC, and is Co-Chair of the Federation for American Immigration Reform's (FAIR) National Advisory Board. His view are his own. |