An Alien in the White House?By Sam Francis With Hillary Clinton and a
platoon of lesser luminaries at his heels, President
Bush descended on New York City's famous Ellis Island
last week to harangue
a bunch of new Americans with the insight that
"immigration is a not a problem to be solved; it
is a sign of a confident and successful nation."
Of course, a confident and successful nation doesn't
need many immigrants, but the President's visit was
really a sign that he has no plans to give up
pandering to new citizens whose votes he and his party
have decided to turn into their political base. How far Mr. Bush and the
Republicans will go to achieve that goal still isn't
clear, but there's no indication they're willing to go
quite as far as some movement conservatives want. Just
before Mr. Bush's Ellis Island expedition, two editors
of National Review
Online popped onto the screen with the recommendation
that Mr. Bush actually change the U.S. Constitution in
order to win immigrant votes. John J. Miller and Ramesh
Ponnuru unbosomed their grand strategy that by
peddling a constitutional amendment that would remove
the Constitution's exclusion of immigrants from being
eligible to serve as president of the United States,
Mr. Bush could expect to win the votes of-who exactly?
Immigrants in general? Hispanics?
Yuppy
conservatives who feel guilty for not being
liberals? The two editors never quite make clear what
voting blocs will be swayed by what they dub the
"Bush amendment." But that's not the only
reason their proposal is-next to the president's
sentiment that "immigration is a not a problem to
be solved"-probably the dumbest idea of the year,
if not the decade. In a nation that is really
confident and successful and therefore doesn't allow
millions of aliens to invade it, push out its natives,
and redesign its culture and politics, the provision
of Article
II, Section 1 that "no person except a
natural born citizen" can be eligible to serve as
president would not be important. It was important to
the Framers
who inserted it into the constitutional text because,
as Mr. Miller and Mr. Ponnuru suggest, they "may
have believed that the country's chief elected
official needed to possess an inborn sense of American
culture." But most citizens of a country do
possess that, and if you don't have many immigrants
anyway, there's no reason to exclude them from the
chief executive slot. But precisely because the United
States today has millions of immigrants and its
political class shows no sign whatsoever of thinking
we need fewer, the provision remains as important
as it ever was, and probably more so. Mr. Miller and
Mr. Ponnuru obviously don't share the Framers' quaint
superstition that the president should "possess
an inborn sense of American culture," and as a
matter of fact it's not very clear that either one of
them even knows what such a sense would involve. "An immigrant president
most likely would embrace America with the zeal of a
convert," they assure us. "He would be a
flag-waving patriot whose love of country exceeds that
of most native-born Americans. He would also probably
have been raised in the United States since early
childhood." How they know any of this is even
less clear, but most of it, even if true, is beside
the point. The point is not to have a
president who waves the flag more than anyone else or
pounds his chest about "patriotism" to the
point of tedium. The point is to have a president who
understands and is loyal to the historic
nation he leads. Presidents like Bill Clinton, who
thinks it's terrific the United States will soon cease
to have "a
dominant European culture," aren't that kind,
native-born or not. Neither perhaps is a president who
tells us that "immigration is not a
problem." You can wave the flag as much as you
want, but that says nothing about what you know and
believe about what the American nation really is. It's possible an immigrant would
understand that better than many native Americans and
indeed I know some who do. But most don't, and most
probably never will. By putting in the Constitution
the immigrant exclusion language, the Framers simply
did all
they knew how to do to ensure that whoever became
president would not only be born and raised in this
country but also would thereby acquire some
understanding of and commitment to it. Of course if you think being an
American means simply assenting to the "proposition"
contained in one sentence fragment in the Declaration
of Independence-which is what the editors of National
Review believe these days-then there really isn't
much point in keeping the exclusion in the
Constitution. Nor, for that matter, the Constitution
itself. COPYRIGHT 2001 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC. July 16, 2001 |
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