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Immigration: A Better Way
Tech Central Station ^ | 12/01/2003 | Arnold Kling

Posted on 12/01/2003 11:28:35 PM PST by farmfriend

Immigration: A Better Way

By Arnold Kling

"I have met wealthy elites, academics and journalists from Mexico City who privately laugh that they are exporting their Indians and Mestizos, their unwanted, into the United States. Their smile disappears when I reply that we instead figure what they suppose to be riffraff are the real cream of Mexican society...who in fact are superior people to those who oppress them at home."
-- Victor Davis Hanson, Mexifornia, p. 31

Hanson's book is passionate, hot-headed, disjointed, and self-contradictory -- much like our immigration policy. In this essay, I do not propose a way to make immigration policy perfect. However, I have some suggestions to make it better.

Minimum Requirements

I have two issues on which I feel strongly. One is that this country must continue to be a haven for the oppressed. The other is that we should not rely on unenforceable laws.

My ancestors were driven from Europe by ethnic violence. Today, there is ethnic violence in Africa and elsewhere. If victims in those countries can escape, and they choose to come to America to make a new life, then I feel that they should have such an opportunity.

People who come to this country to escape oppression should desire assimilation. They should embrace our language, our values, and our democratic principles. We should not go out of the way to make it easy to speak a foreign language in the United States, or to remain in a separate culture within the United States. People should be sufficiently grateful to be living here that they adapt to our ways. In the process, the United States can absorb elements of other cultures, without breaking into separate tribes.

My other big issue is to get rid of what I have called legamorons, meaning any law that could not stand up under widespread enforcement. As it stands, our immigration laws are not going to be enforced. Keeping them on the books is hypocritical and only serves to keep us in a state of denial and evasion over the fact that we need to re-think immigration policy.

Guest Workers

The immigrants that I want in this country are people who would be tortured or killed if they remained in their native lands. Simply wanting to improve your economic opportunities does not entitle you to become a U.S. citizen, in my way of thinking.

However, there is nothing wrong with someone wanting to improve their economic lot in life. I think that we can accommodate guest workers on a win-win basis.

What I propose is that we have a guest worker program with the following characteristics.

1) Anyone who is not a terror suspect or criminal is eligible.

2) All guest workers must register with a private employment agency. That employment agency must provide health care coverage and ensure that all necessary regulations are followed and taxes are paid. Private employment agencies that engage in tax evasion or other regulatory violations will be prosecuted.

3) Taxes will include a payroll tax of about 20 to 25 percent, which will be collected by the employment agency and remitted to the government. This will cover contributions to the Social Security and Medicare trust funds (even though guest workers will not be eligible for benefits under those programs), as well as cost of providing government services at the Federal, State, and Local levels.

4) Families of guest workers will not be eligible for health care or education, unless they purchase insurance coverage for the former or tuition for the latter.

5) Households and businesses must hire workers who are either U.S. citizens or legal guest workers, meaning that they are registered with private employment agencies. Hiring a non-citizen "under the table" will be a violation of the law.

The key to the guest worker proposal is the last point. If the households and businesses that hire illegal immigrants do so in order to save the cost of paying taxes, and they will not pay the taxes even when an employment agency handles all of the paperwork for them, then what we have is more than an immigration problem -- we have a tax rebellion. It may take some education and persuasion to overcome this tax rebellion, but we need to face that issue if we are going to have a sensible immigration policy.

A formal guest worker program would have two effects on the cost of a foreigner working in the United States. Those costs would be increased by the taxes collected and the fees paid to employment agencies. Other costs would go down. These would include the cost of evading border patrols to enter the country, the cost of living underground, and the cost of having only a limited set of employers willing to hire illegal immigrants.

Tariffs vs. Quotas

In economic terms, replacing a law against foreign workers with a guest worker program in which guest workers are taxed is the equivalent of replacing a quota with a tariff. A quota system restricts supply by putting up regulatory barriers. A tariff system restricts supply by raising the price. Tariffs are generally more efficient than quotas.

Just as laws against recreational drugs create business opportunities for criminal enterprises, laws against immigrant workers create business opportunities for criminals who traffic in illegal workers. They also create profit opportunities for households and businesses willing to exploit the foreign workers. Quotas always create such narrow groups of beneficiaries.

For citizens competing against illegal immigrants for jobs, the playing field might be more level with a tariff (guest workers paying taxes) than with a quota (laws that deter some foreign workers but not all). Today, citizens subsidize immigrant workers by paying taxes for government services that benefit the immigrant. With a guest worker program, immigrant workers would pay their fair share.

The tax rate for guest workers would provide a means with which to fine tune the competition between domestic and foreign workers. If we believe that foreign workers are driving domestic wages too low, we can raise the tax on foreign workers. On the other hand, if the economy is at full employment and we want continued expansion without inflationary pressure, we could lower the tax on foreign workers.

The Enemy of the Good

There is a saying that "the best is the enemy of the good." The truth in that saying is that people will let a problem fester while fighting over what is the ideal solution.

A guest worker program with taxes is probably no one's ideal solution to the immigration issue. However, until the ideal solution lands in our laps, my contention is that it would make things better


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: aliens; criminalinvaders; illegals; immigrantlist; immigration; thewelfarestate; welfarestate
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To: traditionalist
I'd rather not have it linked from anywhere on FR.
Jim
81 posted on 12/03/2003 11:27:58 AM PST by Jim Robinson (Conservative by nature... Republican by spirit... Patriot by heart... AND... ANTI-Liberal by GOD!)
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To: hchutch; Poohbah
Aparently, David Horowitz and Frontpagemag.com "tolerate" those evil "racists" at American Renaisance. Are you going to call Horowitz a bigot too? Are you going to tell Jim Robinson to ban articles from Frontpage?

http://www.amren.com/horowitz.htm

FYI, I don't agree with the American Renaisance that whites should start engaging in ethnic identity politics like blacks and latinos do. Like Horowitz, I believe we can fight and defeat multiculturalism. However, I do find that AR people have interesting things to say, and I do not see why the fact that I disagree with them should stop me from linking to a site that links to them. Or from linking to a site that occasionally runs articles by one of their authors.

82 posted on 12/03/2003 11:33:27 AM PST by traditionalist
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To: hchutch
bigotry: intolerance toward people who hold different views, especially on matters of politics, religion, or ethnicity and unwilling to accept different views.

You're even worse than that. You refuse to accept facts, not just different views.

Another poor attempt at changing the subject, Chutch.

You falsely accused me of bigotry in respect to my past factual statements in regards to Puerto Rico.

Puerto Rico has been taking the U.S. Taxpayers to the cleaners for decades.

This year the U.S. Taxpayers will gift the ingrates in Puerto Rico almost $20 billion dollars in cash and services for not a single, solitary thing of equal value in return.

This year we even gifted them the largest naval base in the world. Over 8,600 acres of land and infrastructure worth BILLIONS off dollars on top of that. Including an airport with a 2-mile-long runway, hotel, hospital, jails, world-class port with 9 piers, water filtration and power generation plants, over 1000 buildings, golf course, miles of roads and beaches, communications, electrical and plumbing infrastructure all built at the U.S. Taxpayers expense.

We just gave it all away for free.

This was an absolute crime perpetrated against the U.S. Taxpayers and all you can do is call the person reporting the crime a "bigot".

You're intellectually dishonest and dishonorable.

Race-baiting is all you're about, Chutch.

83 posted on 12/03/2003 11:35:11 AM PST by 4Freedom (America is no longer the 'Land of Opportunity', it's the 'Land of Illegal Alien Opportunists'!!!)
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To: traditionalist
I can think of several examples in sports which would disprove Mr. Francis. Players whose effort more than made up for a lack of talent. Tom Waddle, a wide receiver with the Chicago Bears from 1989-1994, lacked speed, which many considered ESSENTIAL for a wideout in the NFL. Yet from 1991-1994, he ended up being arguably the most reliable wide receiver the Bears had in those years. That came through pure effort.

Take someone with a good work ethic from anywhere on this globe, be he/she Mexican, Chinese, African, Arab, or European, and they and/or their children will do just fine here in the United States - no matter what their genetic makeup is.

Genetics do not define destiny. They have less influence in it than the effort and character of an individual.
84 posted on 12/03/2003 11:37:18 AM PST by hchutch ("I don't see what the big deal is, I really don't." - Major Vic Deakins, USAF (ret.))
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To: Poohbah; hchutch
In other words, he's saying DNA equals destiny.

Where does he say it? I don't see it written anywhere. Are you illiterate, or am I?

All he says is that DNA AFFECTS destiny. Are you unable to grasp the difference between equalling and affecting?

For the fifth time, please tell me exactly where Mr. Francis' statement is wrong. Otherwise, cease your slanderous attacks.

85 posted on 12/03/2003 11:38:33 AM PST by traditionalist
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To: hchutch
Genetics do not define destiny. They have less influence in it than the effort and character of an individual.

Yes, and the sun orbits the Earth.

86 posted on 12/03/2003 11:39:49 AM PST by traditionalist
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To: traditionalist
Slander? That requires the statement to be false.

I'm not going to stop calling a bigot by his proper name. I have outlined WHY I consider him to be a bigot. The company he keeps can lead any reasonable person to conclude he is a bigot.

I agree with David Frum that it is "time to be frank" about folks like Mr. Francis. As I said earlier, if the truth about Mr. Francis and VDARE is that painful, take some Aleve.
87 posted on 12/03/2003 11:47:08 AM PST by hchutch ("I don't see what the big deal is, I really don't." - Major Vic Deakins, USAF (ret.))
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To: hchutch
You caught people saying that somehow people are inferior based on genetics. Saying that I suppose gives some stupid white people some self esteem.
88 posted on 12/03/2003 11:47:45 AM PST by cyborg (mutt-american)
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To: 4Freedom
And you have yet to convince me that you are about anything more than bigotry and accusations of race-baiting.
89 posted on 12/03/2003 11:51:18 AM PST by hchutch ("I don't see what the big deal is, I really don't." - Major Vic Deakins, USAF (ret.))
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To: hchutch
Slander? That requires the statement to be false.

Yes, and your statement that he's a bigot is false. You have yet to provide one piece of evidence to support your accusation.

90 posted on 12/03/2003 11:52:07 AM PST by traditionalist
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To: hchutch
Compared to the racist crap I can get from VDARE and Sam Francis, Mr. Kling makes much more sense.

What do Vdare and Sam Francis have to do with the discussion we were having? Why do you keep changing the subject?

91 posted on 12/03/2003 11:53:10 AM PST by traditionalist
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To: hchutch
Have you ever taken a course in Genetics, or do you just play a Geneticist here on FR? :^)
92 posted on 12/03/2003 11:55:51 AM PST by 4Freedom (America is no longer the 'Land of Opportunity', it's the 'Land of Illegal Alien Opportunists'!!!)
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To: farmfriend

I have two issues on which I feel strongly. One is that this country must continue to be a haven for the oppressed. The other is that we should not rely on unenforceable laws.

My ancestors were driven from Europe by ethnic violence. Today, there is ethnic violence in Africa and elsewhere. If victims in those countries can escape, and they choose to come to America to make a new life, then I feel that they should have such an opportunity.

< -snip- >

My other big issue is to get rid of what I have called legamorons, meaning any law that could not stand up under widespread enforcement. As it stands, our immigration laws are not going to be enforced. Keeping them on the books is hypocritical and only serves to keep us in a state of denial and evasion over the fact that we need to re-think immigration policy.

Guest Workers

The immigrants that I want in this country are people who would be tortured or killed if they remained in their native lands. Simply wanting to improve your economic opportunities does not entitle you to become a U.S. citizen, in my way of thinking.

However, there is nothing wrong with someone wanting to improve their economic lot in life. I think that we can accommodate guest workers on a win-win basis.

What I propose is that we have a guest worker program with the following characteristics.

1) Anyone who is not a terror suspect or criminal is eligible.

Our laws are unenforceable only to the degrees of cowardice posessed by politicians on both sides of the aisle, which constrain them from fulfilling their oaths of office.

Then those very cowards recommend endless volleys of their trifling malfeasances to solve the problems created by their own lacks of courage.

What Arnold Kling and anyone who agrees with him are advocating are all-but-open borders, and the dissolution of American sovereignty.

In return, they hope to parlay their lack of ethical fortitude into a brief command of a ship of state sinking by their own cannon shot.


93 posted on 12/03/2003 11:56:49 AM PST by Sabertooth (Credit where it's due: saveourlicense.com prevented SB60, and the Illegal Alien CDLs... for now.)
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To: hchutch
Tom Waddle was an outlier. Sure, you will find exceptions in which someone without much talent excels. But these cases are extremely rare. 99.9% of the time, you need talent to excel. I'm sorry if you're in denial about this fact.

Take someone with a good work ethic from anywhere on this globe, be he/she Mexican, Chinese, African, Arab, or European, and they and/or their children will do just fine here in the United States - no matter what their genetic makeup is.

Which is why, of course, IQ is the best predictor of future income than any other variable.

If you have an IQ under 100, I don't care how hard you work. You're just not going to become a brilliant scientist. Of course, there people with IQ's over 150 who don't amount to anything. That just means IQ is a necessary but not sufficient condition for intellectual success.

94 posted on 12/03/2003 11:59:24 AM PST by traditionalist
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To: traditionalist
So now you go from genetics to IQ?
95 posted on 12/03/2003 12:02:39 PM PST by hchutch ("I don't see what the big deal is, I really don't." - Major Vic Deakins, USAF (ret.))
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To: traditionalist
The only people who would not tolerate requiring passports for employment are libertarian nutjobs who make up 0.001% of the population.

Count me among them, I guess.

I'm of the opinion that it's perfectly possible to get Illegals to deport themselves without imposing burdens on law-abiding Americans.

If that makes me a libertarian nut-job, so be it. I want to inconvenience Illegals, not citizens and legal residents.


96 posted on 12/03/2003 12:04:05 PM PST by Sabertooth (Credit where it's due: saveourlicense.com prevented SB60, and the Illegal Alien CDLs... for now.)
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To: hchutch
So now you go from genetics to IQ?

Uh, yeah. It is a scientific fact that genetics, IN PART, determine IQ. There are obviously many other factors, but genetics is one of them.

Don't blame me. You started down this road, not me.

97 posted on 12/03/2003 12:05:14 PM PST by traditionalist
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To: Sabertooth
I'm of the opinion that it's perfectly possible to get Illegals to deport themselves without imposing burdens on law-abiding Americans.

I agree.

If that makes me a libertarian nut-job, so be it. I want to inconvenience Illegals, not citizens and legal residents.

Getting a passport is hardly an inconvenience.

98 posted on 12/03/2003 12:06:55 PM PST by traditionalist
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To: traditionalist
All he says is that DNA AFFECTS destiny. Are you unable to grasp the difference between equalling and affecting?

Are you unable to grasp the fact that he said WITHOUT the genetic heritage--as in, ANY difference in genetic heritage would have prevented western civilization from coming about?

I.e., DNA = destiny.

99 posted on 12/03/2003 12:07:16 PM PST by Poohbah ("Beware the fury of a patient man" -- John Dryden)
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To: traditionalist
Most "free" countries require passports as a standard form of ID.

Bill Clinton called. He wants you to return his dictionary.

100 posted on 12/03/2003 12:08:31 PM PST by steve-b
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