Posted on 05/14/2003 3:59:29 PM PDT by madfly
May 14, 2003, 9:30 a.m. By Mark Krikorian |
Last Thursday, the House International Relations Committee narrowly passed a resolution introduced by Rep. Cass Ballenger of North Carolina (R.) requiring that any amnesty deal for the five million Mexican illegal aliens in the United States be linked to an opening of Mexico's state-controlled oil industry to investment by U.S. companies.
Then the fun started.The Mexican press exploded in outrage. "Blackmail!" cried the archbishop of Mexico City. "Stupidity!" said a representative of the oil workers' union. A plot to "annex Latin America," intoned Nobel peace-prize winner Adolfo Pérez Esquivel. An example of U.S. lawmakers' "ignorance," "arrogance," and "imperial vision," according to a Mexican senator. The head of the leftist PRD called on President Vicente Fox to "put on his pants" act like a man and oppose the proposal. Fox finally joined the tsunami of criticism on Sunday and categorically rejected any privatization of Pemex, Mexico's state oil monopoly.
None of this should come as a surprise. Mexico's seizure of foreign oil companies' assets in 1938 is central to modern Mexican nationalism; state control of the oil industry is actually written into the constitution. What's more, there are midterm elections for the lower house of Mexico's Congress coming up in July. Embracing privatization of Pemex would not be a vote getter, to say the least. And according to William and Mary political scientist George Grayson, author of Oil and Mexican Foreign Policy, "unless the PAN makes notable strides in these contests, the beleaguered Fox will find himself a lame duck with three years-plus remaining in his term."
But however outraged the Mexicans are, and however different these two issues are, it only seems fair to link them. After all, Mexico is asking us to start down the path of eliminating our southern border and embracing a European Union-style shared sovereignty the least we can expect is for them also to eliminate barriers that are important to their nation.
Nor has this idea come out of the blue. In the July 30, 2001, Weekly Standard, economist Irwin Stelzer suggested just such an approach. Stelzer wrote that "monopoly oil prices" could offset a good part of the economic growth assumed in the president's tax cut and that "the finger of blame points squarely at Mexico." He wrote that we should insist that Mexico cooperate with the United States and other pro-free market countries and stop supporting the OPEC oil cartel and its leaders such as the Marxist Hugo Chavez of Venezuela. Stelzer said that before Bush strikes any deal on amnesty, "he should insist on the free movement of ...oil from Mexico" and the opening of Mexico's oil resources to American investment.
While Mexican opposition may be no surprise, the Democrats' furor over the oil-for-illegals approach is, given the importance of Mexico's oil to the United States and the huge costs that an illegal-alien amnesty would impose on us. After all, they have no chance whatever of getting an amnesty through Congress without some kind of sweetener, and this would seem an obvious candidate.
But it is not to be. Rep. Robert Menendez was so angry that he held a press conference last Friday denouncing the resolution. He was joined by Rep. Ciro Rodriguez and Silvestre Reyes; the latter, a past head of the Hispanic Caucus, said the amendment was an "insult" to Mexico and indicative of an "insane and outofcontrol attitude on the part of a country [the United States] that believes that as a matter of public foreign policy bullying is acceptable." It was Menendez who prompted the whole dust-up in the first place; Ballenger's amendment, to the State Department appropriations bill, was offered as a substitute to a proposal by Menendez calling for the conclusion of a "migration" accord which, among other things, "respect[ed] the human dignity of all migrants, regardless of their status" i.e., an amnesty for illegal aliens.
The partisan nature of the vote suggests the depth of opposition in the president's own party for his preferred immigration policies. The only Republican to vote against Ballenger's oil-for-illegals linkage was Pete King (who has a career grade of F on the reformist Americans for Better Immigration website). Even such flamboyant Republican supporters of high immigration as Ileana Ros Lehtinen (career grade of F), Chris Smith (D-), and Steve Chabot (D+) voted for the linkage.
However bad the immigration positions of these Republicans, they at least understand that a massive illegal-alien amnesty must be met with some gesture from Mexico. But the Democratic-party/Mexican-government position on amnesty for illegals appears to be all quid from the United States and no quo from Mexico.
Stay tuned.
In my dream world we would just seal that border, take Mexico's oil, and use the profits to pay for all of the expenses that have been encountered by US governments (state, local, federal), supporting the Mexican invasion.
It's simple. If either political party finally gets it (about immigrants sapping jobs and services) they will win elections.
Growing a spine means more than just enforcing the law against the illegals themselves, but revamping immigration laws to reflect modern times. They do not need to change the Constitution to end the scam of anchor babies, I don't care what any politician says. There is a clause in the 14th Amendment which gives Congress leeway in how citizenship is applied to foreigners. Only two countries in the world allow the practice of automatic citizenship, and of course the US has to be one of them.
Again, it's a matter of showing backbone and doing what's right for the country.
Politically, it's just not possible to end immigration from Latin America and Asia and keep it all from Eastern Europe, even if they wanted to. The only alternative for the Republicans (and for the country I might add), is to give immigration a rest for a time. That I do believe is politically possible. We need it anyway, and it will stop the Aztlan train which is the biggest threat of all we're facing.
I guess the reaction of these "Americans" answers the question 'who's side are they on'.
When it comes to illegal immigration though, the Republicans have got to show leadership, we're being invaded, there's no other word to call it. The border has to be closed and illegals deported, no matter how messy it appears. And they've got to change the anchor baby rule. It's the greatest incentive illegals have for coming here.
I used to think this but Dubya and the RINOs that effectively control the GOP have convinced me that the party can remain competitive with the Democrats in years to come by doing what they have been doing in the last 20 or so years...continually moving to the left.
There is NOTHING remotely conservative about the Republican Party today. In a few years republicans will be where the democrats are today. Election Year rhetoric aside, the two parties are in reality One Beltway Party that share much in common. It's all about staying in power through growth in government and business/union feather bedding. And their MAIN WEAPON to secure this power is Massive 3rd World Immigration. America no longer has a true representative government. Indeed, we have the Best Government Money Can Buy.
Years ago I remember seeing a skit on the Carol Burnett show with Harvey Korman introducing an Arab to be our next president as a way to solve the oil problem we were having with the Middle East at the time. That's the solution today, let's make Vincent Fox our next president, he'll end illegal immigration by golly.
Watch? Look at it now. LAPD's most wanted
You might be surprised at the ratio of blacks to hispanics.
GOOD. Now it is assured that you will NEVER destroy our nation through a criminal "amnesty" while Conservatives control our organs of power.
Immigration laws definitely need to be changed ---we could probably handle a few more of the worker types if we weren't taking in so many welfare types. The anchor baby scam needs to be ended immediately and all immigrants need to get cut off welfare programs. Mothers of these anchor babies often will tell welfare they don't know who the father is while they're living with him in a common law marriage ----just because they've already figured out how welfare works.
I agree but it is becoming quite clear that the Powers That Be in the Beltway want this immigration crisis to continue ad infinitum. Heck, the RNC has even instructed all their candidates to avoid any mention of illegal immigration. It's hard to get the ball rolling on immigration reform when the only party that can effect change is silent.
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