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April Diary (John Derbyshire on immigration - FOOL ME THRICE)
NRO ^
| May 01, 2006
| John Derbyshire
Posted on 05/01/2006 10:41:01 PM PDT by neverdem
You know the thing we tell our kids: Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me. I have never heard this little jingle extended to a third fooling, and I cant come up with any memorably admonitory way to describe the consequences. Perhaps we should give this some thought, because pretty soon the ruling elites in this country—the media, intellectual, and professorial classes, the big party machines and the business/labor/legal interests who fund them, and the liars, mountebanks, and rogues who infest the legislative branch of our national government—are going to fool the American public a third time, just the way they fooled us twice before.
Fool me once: 1965 On October 3, 1965, in a ceremony at the foot of the Statue of Liberty, President Lyndon Johnson signed into law one of the most far-reaching legislative enactments in our nations history, the Immigration Reform Act of 1965. Thus begins Larry Austers account of the relevant events in his landmark 1990 pamphlet The Path to National Suicide. (Still essential reading for anyone who wants to talk intelligently about immigration. You can download a free PDF of it from here.) Lyndon Johnsons floor manager for the bill in the Senate was Edward Kennedy, who had these words to say to critics of the bill (a few Southern Democrats like the great Sam Ervin, and some scattered, ineffectual conservative groups):
What the bill will not do: First, our cities will not be flooded with a million immigrants annually. Under the proposed bill, the present level of immigration remains substantially the same. . . . Secondly, the ethnic mix of this country will not be upset. . . . Contrary to the charges in some quarters, [the bill] will not inundate America with immigrants from any one country or area, or the most populated and economically deprived nations of Africa and Asia. . . . In the final analysis, the ethnic pattern of immigration under the proposed measure is not expected to change as sharply as the critics seem to think.
As Peter Brimelow pointed out (and documented in detail) in his book Alien Nation, every one, every blessed one, of Kennedys assurances has proven false. Fooled us once.
Fool me twice: 1986 The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 was advertised as the first real attempt to cope with illegal immigration, which had not been a major problem for the first 200 years or so of the republics existence. Known as IRCA (pronounced by immigration wonks to rhyme with burkah), the act tackled the issue of illegal immigrants already present by giving amnesty to those whod been here two years or more, and the issue of future immigration by imposing penalties on employers who hired illegals. President Ronald Reagan signed the bill into law on November 6, 1986.
Steve Britt, who was a veteran immigration officer at the time, describes here how enforcement of the act fell apart before Reagans signature on it was dry. The few feeble attempts to apply employer sanctions were quickly scotched by calls from business interests to their congressmen. The amnesty provisions were soon overrun by rampant fraud, people flying in with their families on tourist visas, then claiming to have been residents for years. Administrators of the amnesty program were anyway swamped by the unexpected numbers of applicants, and fell back on a wave-through approach, rubber-stamping counterfeit documents after a couple of seconds scrutiny. Seeing what was happening (there is nobody, nobody, in the U.S. who watches the consequences of U.S. immigration law as keenly as would-be immigrants in foreign lands), foreigners began immigrating illegally—by overstaying visas, or walking over the borders—to be in place for the next amnesty.
Employers who still didnt get the message that Congress didnt really mean for them to guard against hiring illegals (the fact that the fine for doing so was set at a seriously non-staggering 50 dollars ought to have given them a clue) were brought to heel by lawyers from the discrimination rackets. Lets see, which should I be more fearful of: a $50 fine from one of the nations 950 immigration cops—20 per state—for hiring an illegal, or a $10,000,000 judgment against me for having the impertinence to discriminate against a job applicant by asking about his immigration status? Hmmm, gonna have to think about this one—for a femtosecond or two.
Fool me three times: 2006 Well, you see how it goes. Much sound and fury in Congress. Some firm-sounding pronouncements for the president, dressed up in much gassy verbiage about human rights and family values and nation of immigrants. Sonorous declarations from the congresscritters about how this time they really mean it, sanctions really will be enforced—No kidding! Honest injun!—only the deserving will be amnestied, etc. etc.
Its going to happen. The stage is being set up for another performance of the immigration-reform opera buffa as I write, in fact: The old backdrops are being repainted, the props are being dusted off, the orchestra is tuning up, and the dimwitted old gent—read American public—who is going to be made a fool of by the clever young tenor and soprano—thats the immigration lobbies and their enablers in the press and foreign chancelleries—is gluing on his false whiskers.
Gentle reader, dont be fooled a third time. Consult the historic evidence. (Auster and Brimelow are good starting points. George Borjas wrote the bible on the economics of the issue. And our own Mark Krikorians Center for Immigration Studies has a terrific database of research articles on all aspects of immigration.) Then disagree, if you dare, with the following statement:
In the matter of immigration, every word, every single damn wretched word, from the mouths of the legislative and executive branches should, in the absence of overwhelming and irrefutable evidence to the contrary, be assumed to be a lie—including and and the.
GODOT IS THE NEW BEOWULF
After I posted some ruminations on the writer Samuel Beckett, whose centenary fell in April, I got one of the most literate and thoughtful email-bags ever. There are half a dozen of those e-mails Id like to post, but this one, my favorite, will have to stand for them all. Its from a frequent correspondent, an academic Eng. Lit. professional. She told me that my attitude to Beckett was very, very Anglo-Saxon, and elaborated thus: I mean Beowulf-style Anglo-Saxon, the land without happy endings:
1. Wealtheow doesn't want Beowulf to be her sons' guardian in case he turns out to be a usurper. So they appoint someone else, who kills them both in a blood feud.
2. Beowulf is appointed ward of Hygelac's heir. He does a good job, but the young prince gets killed by somebody else in a blood feud.
3. Beowulf fights the dragon to save his people. He is mortally wounded in the fight, so he wants his burial mound to be a lighthouse so their sailors won't get shipwrecked and he can still protect his people after he dies. The Vikings invade and kill almost everybody and turn the rest into slaves. There is no one to keep the burial mound light lit and no local sailors to benefit from it.
4. Beowulf seems to be a higher sort of pagan (he's a monotheist who refers to 'God' as opposed to 'the gods'). But he's from a pre-Christian society, and at his funeral pyre, 'the smoke rose up to heaven.' There is no mention of his soul going with it. This is before either purgatory or limbo, and according to the theology of the scribes on the Beowulf story (probably 8th-9th-century monks), no pre-Christian, even a virtuous one, can go to heaven.
The moral: life's a bitch, and then you die, and your virtuous acts not only won't get you to heaven, they don't do your people any good. Enjoy your weekend.
I suppose there might be something to it. My ancestors for as far back as I know are all English, and I grew up quite close to the geometric center of England. And yes, the old pagan strain is still strong in the English character, centuries of Christianity notwithstanding. Oddly for a Christian country, the name of Christ hardly appears in English poetry. If you subtract Chesterton, Hopkins, and perhaps Christina Rossetti, I dont think it appears at all after Milton. The humanistic and worldly Pelagian heresy had a strong appeal to the early-medieval English (though Pelagius himself was a Welshman named Morgan). George Orwells remark that he liked the Church of England better than Our Lord is very English. English people dont much care for Christ—I have never been able to feel the slightest warmth towards Him myself, though Ive tried my best—and the English in general much prefer the Old Testament to the New. Perhaps we really are one of the Lost Tribes, as Kipling seems to have believed. For more on this, read Anthony Burgesss novel The Wanting Seed.
OREILLY IMPLODES
Is Bill OReilly finally imploding? I am still a regular viewer of the Factor, but I find that more and more often I turn it off after ten minutes or so to do something more rewarding.
For one thing, theres his bullying and grandstanding about child molesters. Now, I am not a fan of child molesters, having two kids of my own. The real monsters, though, are only a minuscule minority of those who would be swept up by the kinds of laws OReilly is agitating for. The majority would be harmless, clueless, sad types who had yielded to, or been led on to, the momentary temptation of some petty fumbling, then been ready to commit suicide when they realized what they had done. People like that need to be chastised and set straight, but they dont need the magnum jail sentences theyd get under Sandras Law, or whatever the hell thing it is OReillys bellowing for.
Even weirder is OReillys conviction that the seduction of 14-year-old boys by pretty 25-year-old teachers is just as bad—precisely the same! deserves the identical sentence!—as the contrary thing with a 14-year-old girl and a 25-year-old male teacher. This is sex-equality dogma taken to lunatic extremes, as Ive argued in a previous diary. Id expect this kind of junk jurisprudence from some glaring feminist, but why am I getting it from OReilly?
On immigration, Bills line is: Put the National Guard on the southern border** and establish a guest worker program. Both ideas are dumb. Manpower is expensive, Bill. A 20-foot wall is expensive only as a one-time capital outlay. Compared with the presence of the National Guard presumably for ever, its expense is
lets see: Some number divided by infinity is
zero! As for the guest worker turkey poop, I refer you to the aforementioned Center for Immigration Studies devastating documentation on those programs. The starter link is here. Dont you have researchers, Bill?
Now there is the Big Micks jihad (am I allowed to say jihad? am I allowed to say Big Mick?) against the oil companies. I cant see much going on with the price of gas but good old supply and demand, and in any case am inclined to the view that high gas prices will be a jolly good thing for America, where, as President Bush has rightly said, the love of gas-powered appliances rises to the level of addiction. The right to cheap gasoline is a bogus right—there arent any rights like that, whatever OReilly tells you. For sure we never had any such right back in the Mother Country, where gas prices went through the $3-per-gallon mark around 20 years ago, and is currently around $6.60 per gallon.
If you want to bring down your gas expenses, get a more efficient car, and junk your gas-powered leaf blower, gas-powered hedge trimmer, gas-powered toothbrush, and the rest of your gas-powered gadgets. And if you object to high profits for oil companies, weed through your 401K and IRA funds to make sure you yourself arent benefiting from those profits. When youve done all that, come to me and moan about high gas prices and gouging.
I still like OReilly, and he still has his moments, but hes losing me on too many issues. Yo, Bill, cant we get back to the craziness of liberals, the stupidity of the IRS, the incompetence of all federal government departments, and the wickedness of race hustlers? I was totally with you when you used to do that stuff.
——————————
** Why not the northern border, too? whine the anti-racist nitwits. Because, my friends, one-fifth of the population of Mexico is currently in the U.S.A., and one-fifth of the population of Canada
isnt. Any other questions?
MATH CORNER
I have a dim memory along the following lines, and after some fruitless Googling am hoping that some reader can supply the missing number.
Sigmund Freud, in one of his writings, needed to come up with an arbitrary number in order to express some idea. (As when readers email in diffidently to say: I know Im probably the 179th person to bring this to your attention, but... Such readers are, by the way, usually the first to bring the thing to my attention.) Well, old Siggy wrote down some number at random. Later, looking at the number, and reflecting that, according to his own theories, nothing comes out of the brain that is truly random, he concocted a long and (as I recall) implausible explanation for why he had chosen that particular number. The thing I cant remember is: What was the number?
I do the same thing myself all the time, of course. Kidding around on The Corner the other day, I posted this: Emails to which I am utterly unable to think of an intelligent response (Series #19,766):... [Followed by a more than ordinarily weird reader email]
Would anyone like to attempt a Freudian-style explanation as to why the number 19,766 floated into my mind?
National Review Online - http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=MDhjNTJmMTkzOGEwMTJiZTBmMzc5ZDZhYjc5NTI3YWQ=
TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; Mexico; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: District of Columbia; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: aliens; illegal; illegalimmigration; illegals; immigrantlist; immigration
The Hispanic Challenge (To America) A MUST READ Samuel Huntington (Long But Good) The Mexicans are unlike previous immigrants. This Huntington article definitely needs to be read by everyone at least once! It should be linked on pertinent immigration threads. Here's an interesting link about Samuel Huntington:
"Strangely enough, despite the fact that he was buddies with Henry Kissinger at Harvard, he is registered as a member of the Democratic Party, and has written foreign policy speeches for Adlai Stevenson, Hubert Humphrey, and Jimmy Carter."

THREATS AND RESPONSES: LEGISLATION; SENATE VOTES, 90-9, TO SET UP A HOMELAND SECURITY DEPT. GEARED TO FIGHT TERRORISM
Senator Phil Gramm of Texas, the president's chief Senate supporter in changing the Civil Service protections in the bill, acknowledged that Democrats had written 95 percent of the bill and acknowledged the paradoxical role of small-government Republicans like him in advocating for such a large department.
And which party is now making it useless.
Bush: Democrat killed immigration bill
In private as well as public, Reid and Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., who heads the party's campaign effort, said they did not want to expose rank-and-file Democrats to votes that would force them to choose between border security and immigrant rights, only to wind up with legislation that would be eviscerated in future negotiations with the House, which has passed a bill limited to boosting border security.
Harry Reid: now and then
Path to Deportation Can Start With a Traffic Stop
1
posted on
05/01/2006 10:41:06 PM PDT
by
neverdem
To: jan in Colorado
2
posted on
05/01/2006 10:49:21 PM PDT
by
neverdem
(May you be in heaven a half hour before the devil knows that you're dead.)
To: neverdem
In the matter of immigration, every word, every single damn wretched word, from the mouths of the legislative and executive branches should, in the absence of overwhelming and irrefutable evidence to the contrary, be assumed to be a lieincluding and and the. Worth repeating.
To: neverdem
4
posted on
05/02/2006 2:53:51 AM PDT
by
PogySailor
(Unleash Jack Bauer on the CIA leakers!)
To: Ranald S. MacKenzie
Bingo. And 'dim-witted Uncle Sam', too. I met a European the other day, Dutch, been here two years and was being transferred to Belgium. His solution to terrorism/mass migration/invasion was to ignore the news. Since we couldn't hope to do anything effective, it was the only way to avoid an ulcer. The discussion morphed into the Mayday demonstrations since I couldn't bring myself to ask if he thought Holland/Europe was already lost and wasn't he worried about returning to the EU. Dimwitted Madame EU.
5
posted on
05/02/2006 3:39:48 AM PDT
by
hershey
To: neverdem
His teacher commented:
"4. Beowulf seems to be a higher sort of pagan (he's a monotheist who refers to 'God' as opposed to 'the gods'). But he's from a pre-Christian society, and at his funeral pyre, 'the smoke rose up to heaven.' There is no mention of his soul going with it. This is before either purgatory or limbo, and according to the theology of the scribes on the Beowulf story (probably 8th-9th-century monks), no pre-Christian, even a virtuous one, can go to heaven. "
I think this teacher had an agenda or was just ignorant. Many Anglo-Saxons were real Christians. It's not impossible that Beowulf would have been. Each time Christianity took hold of the new inhabitants of England it flared up hot and cooled down beyond luke-warmness and then they were invaded, killed and their scriptures destroyed. That was the Vikings' job in the next-to-last cycle.
Purgatory? Come on!
6
posted on
05/02/2006 5:56:47 AM PDT
by
RoadTest
(The wicked love darkness; but God's people love the Light!)
To: RoadTest
I believe Beowulf was supposed to have predated the introduction of Christianity to that part of the world. Of course, one never knows where a missionary might have been drawn to.
On the subject of Beowulf, I strongly recommend a recent translation by Seamus Haney. It absolutely rocks. My wife and I read it aloud on a long trip across country a couple of years ago. Haney's translation loses little, if any of the poetic beauty of the original.
7
posted on
05/02/2006 8:44:02 AM PDT
by
zeugma
(Wear patriotic pins and apparel on May 1!)
To: zeugma
"I believe Beowulf was supposed to have predated the introduction of Christianity to that part of the world. "
It is likely that Roman soldiers brought the Gospel to Briton, for Patrick was born into a Briton that had gone cold to Christ.
The Saxons destroyed the scriptures, but were later converted by the Scots who came from Ireland via Scotia. Some Saxon kings memorized sections of the Bible and preached or imported preachers for their people.
Then revival in the form of the reformation brought back Christianity once more to the island, to be rekindled every century until the twentieth. Now it's ice cold.
The Normans wiped all that out and introduced catholicism instead.
8
posted on
05/02/2006 11:16:51 AM PDT
by
RoadTest
(The wicked love darkness; but God's people love the Light!)
To: RoadTest
9
posted on
05/02/2006 12:00:48 PM PDT
by
zeugma
(Wear patriotic pins and apparel on May 1!)
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