October 24, 2005
Chertoff’s "Catch And Release" Trick Reveals Bush's
Secret Agenda
By
Juan Mann
"We are moving to end the old
‘Catch And Release’ style of border enforcement,
increasing removals by tens of thousands a year."—Department
of Homeland Security Secretary
Michael Chertoff told the
Senate Judiciary Committee on October 18.
Yawn. As
Peter Brimelow has
blogged, it never occurred to us at VDARE.com that
anyone would take Secretary Chertoff’s remarks
seriously. Peter suggested a two-point plan to
gauge the sincerity of any
"illegal immigration crackdown"—(1) is the
Expedited Removal law, on the books since 1996,
finally going to be implemented? (2) are lawyers, in the
shape of the
Executive Office for Immigration Review, going to be
gotten out of the way, so illegals can be summarily
deported? This Bush bafflegab failed on both counts.
But it does reveal something about
the Bush Administration’s real attitude to immigration
law enforcement—and toward the extraordinary elite drive
to merge the U.S., Mexico and Canada.
In his statement, Secretary
Chertoff trumpeted:
"Today I am announcing this goal for DHS: eliminate
completely the ‘Catch And Release’ enforcement problem.
Return every single illegal entrant—no exceptions.
What's more, it should be possible to achieve
significant progress in less than a year, as we apply
concentrated removal efforts with the support of
individual countries."
Yawn again. All this means is that
the phrase "Catch And Release" has been so loudly
shouted from the rooftops by heroic media patriots like
Lou Dobbs (with a little help, we like to think,
from
VDARE.COM) that it has become
radioactive.
So, in order to sell its guest
worker program, the Bush Administration has realized
that it has to pretend to be against its own "Catch
And Release" policy.
Accordingly, in a sleight of hand
worthy of its notorious redefinition of "amnesty,"
the Bush Administration has reinterpreted "Catch And
Release" as purely a "border enforcement"
problem.
Here’s a Juan Mann reality check:
There’s far more catching-and-releasing of
illegal aliens and removable criminal alien
residents going in the interior of the United States
than at the borders.
It’s clear from Secretary
Chertoff’s statement that this business about "return[ing]
every single illegal entrant" certainly does NOT
apply at all to the thousands of illegal aliens already
given a de facto non-deportation amnesty by being
allowed to adjust their status to permanent residence
under the shameful
Section 245(i) give-aways.
This Section 245(i) crowd of
illegal aliens and visa-overstayers aren’t being
returned ANYWHERE!
As I
wrote in 2002, the DHS does not "Catch And
Release" aliens simply for sport, like some sort of
fishing tournament. It does it to serve the EOIR system.
If the EOIR Immigration Court
process (complete with its smorgasbord of
relief from removal and automatic appellate rights)
did not exist, then there would be absolutely no excuse
for the federal government to release captured
deportable aliens back to the streets.
With this type of unwieldy system,
the INS cannot possibly detain so many aliens for so
long during the process. The EOIR is the reason for
what appears on the surface as mere INS folly.
"Catch And Release" isn’t
simply about "border enforcement." It never was!
Here’s the proof:
That’s a lot of catching and
releasing.
Secretary Chertoff’s co-opting of
the term "Catch And Release" is more evidence
that the Bush Administration has no interest in
enforcing immigration laws away from the borderlands.
It’s really only interested in its
"Temporary Worker Program" a.k.a "amnesty." Thus Chertoff
also said:
"The
comprehensive approach we have taken to removal can be
applied more broadly to other aspects of border and
interior enforcement. In that sense, what we are
doing in our removal efforts is simply a down payment on
our overall border enforcement initiative, which we are
designing as a complement to the President’s
Temporary Worker Program." [My emphasis]
And here’s what I think is the underlying reason why
America’s deportation system remains inexplicably
paralyzed by federal litigation and rigged in favor of
relief from removal.
Internationalists in the Bush and Clinton
Administrations have decided to confine immigration
enforcement only to the U.S. borderlands…until there’s
no enforcement at all, because the U.S., Mexico
and Canada will have been merged into one unit behind a
new "North American security perimeter."
This shared Canada-U.S-Mexico "security
perimeter" is exactly
what the
Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America
has in mind for America someday.
And wouldn’t you know . . . DHS Secretary Chertoff
himself is a signer of the SPP’s
report to leaders [PDF
report] on the New "North American"
Order for
Security and Prosperity Partnership.
And the SPP just so happens to be a
dead ringer for step numero uno toward goals
outlined in the
Building a North American Community report [PDF]
by the ubiquitous Council on Foreign Relations (CFR).
The
Building a North American Community report was
signed without dissent by the former chief immigration
law enforcement officer of the U.S.—the Clinton
Administration’s Immigration and Naturalization Service
Commissioner—Doris M. Meissner.
Read the reports side by side for
yourself [SPP
report] [CFR
report] and find out what the internationalist cabal
has planned for America.
So who cares if there’s no
interior immigration law enforcement in the United
States, as long as there’s a
"North American security perimeter" in the works for what former California
Governor Gray Davis called the "magnificent
region" that a merged U.S. and Mexico would
comprise?
This may sound shocking—but
remember, the same sort of elite consensus hornswoggled
the historic nations of Europe into the
"European Union."
And after all, under the
Chertoff-Meissner plan, aren’t we all North Americans
now?
Juan Mann [send him
email] is a lawyer and the proprietor of
DeportAliens.com.