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The Problem That Has No Name
Lewrockwell.com ^ | June 4, 2003 | Steven Greenhut

Posted on 06/10/2003 7:03:20 PM PDT by Korth

It’s the problem that has no name. You can’t mention it. You can’t debate it. You can’t say anything negative about it. It’s borderline whether you can even say or write the words:

"Illegal immigration." Oops, I’ve done it. I’ve set myself up for a torrent of criticism. The proper term is undocumented immigrants, as if hundreds of thousands of people from Mexico and beyond just happened to have lost their documents somewhere.

Most media sources these days just dispense with any word before "immigrants." They are just immigrants, the same as my neighbors who are full-fledged United States citizens, or who have green cards and are going through the citizenship process the legal way.

On Monday, a reader called me to complain that his friends and neighbors refuse to talk about the problem of illegal immigration, and the impact on our social-service, educational and health-care systems. He lives in a city in which the problem cannot be avoided, yet he is the only person he knows willing to speak out.

He identified himself as an African-American, which he said explains why he had the latitu de to complain about illegal immigration. He was understanding of why his white neighbors were mum – they don’t want to be called racists – but frustrated by it.

These are the fruits of political correctness. Anglos (the PC term for non-Hispanic whites) have been taught to shut up about any issue regarding race, ethnicity or immigration. It’s just not worth the opprobrium to speak about such matters in public.

Yet think about California’s many problems – exorbitant social spending, enormous budget deficits, a government completely controlled by leftists, increasing taxes at the local level to fund demand for new schools and infrastructure. There is at least an immigration angle to all of them. The state gained population of approximately 600,000 people alone last year, almost all of them immigrants (legal and illegal) and their children.

The new residents are lower income, and tend to rely heavily on publicly subsidized services. No one can be denied health care at any California emergency room, regardless of the lack of insurance, inability to pay or immigration status. Local public schools must "educate" everyone’s children, legal residents or not, and many school districts around here are filled with the children of illegal immigrants.

Meanwhile, many of the state’s more affluent residents, who pay most of the taxes because of California’s progressive income-tax system, are leaving for elsewhere. These people use few services and pay the tab, and are being replaced by those who use many services and don’t pay for them.

Obviously, a system based on property rights would solve most of these problems. Everyone would have to pay their way for their services. There would be few "public" areas, and private property owners could set their own terms for visitors.

But in California’s advanced welfare state, anyone has a claim on Other People’s Money. The system is bad, but can totter along for a while – until one considers the illegal immigration problem. In essence, California’s taxpayers have pledged to provide endless "free" benefits to every resident of every country. Because of the nearby border, we’re usually talking about Mexican immigrants.

The Mexican government – PAN President Vicente Fox is as bad or worse than the formerly dominant PRI officials – refuses to implement the free-market reforms that will enable its people to find work at home. One news article a few months ago reported on the ghost towns of Mexico, places where 90 percent of the adult male population is gone, in America working and sending money home.

That’s not healthy.

Why not discuss this sort of thing? Why not add up the costs and benefits of illegal immigration? Yet we can’t even use the word illegal.

It’s not just the liberal politicians and activists who want us to keep quiet about immigration problems. Some conservatives and fellow libertarians promote de facto open borders. Writers even deny the obvious – that unrestricted immigration has paved the way for socialist politicians. One article I read from the Cato Institute argued that massive Mexican immigration has not harmed Republicans. Look at how well the GOP is doing nationwide.

Well, Republicans are doing pretty well politically, but an agenda promoting freedom is hard to find. And they are doing well politically despite immigration, not because of it. Ironically, the analysis never dealt with the California situation. That’s a rather large omission, given that this is Ground Zero.

State assemblyman Ray Haynes, a Republican from Riverside County (a more conservative, less affluent area inland from Los Angeles), told me about watching district after district change overnight from solid Republican to solid Democratic in the 1990s. There was a 12-point registration shift in two years, he said, in a district around Pasadena. That’s when white conservative voters fled the state en masse, and were replaced mainly by immigrant voters. Although Latino immigrants vote at low levels once they become citizens, they tend to vote overwhelmingly for liberal Democrats. The large illegal population provides the political power for ethnic grievance activists. This is just reality.

Orange County, often vilified inaccurately by San Franciscans and Angelenos as a lily-white John-Birch-loving community, is about to join majority-minority status. The districts that have become increasingly Latino have become increasingly Democratic. Just ask former congressman B-1 Bob Dornan why his old district is run by a left-wing Latina.

Santa Ana, the 80-plus percent Latino county seat, just finished a bruising election battle in which a Spanish First school board member was tossed out of office by residents. That was good news, and proof that Latinos are willing to boot race-baiting scoundrels out of office. And, in fairness, the Latino-majority Santa Ana City Council is remarkably conservative. Still, this is the exception, not the rule. The state’s voters are still predominantly non-Latino, but as the demographics change things are likely to become even more Democratic barring a paradigm shift.

Clearly, mass immigration is having an impact on the state, its economy, the political culture. Illegal immigration is a subset of the broader debate. But when one cannot even use that term, what are the chances we can ever debate the entire issue?

I am not against immigration, but problems arise when the numbers of new arrivals go far beyond the ability of the broader society to assimilate them. I still am a softie about rags-to-riches immigration stories. My predominantly Asian neighborhood remains a conservative Republican bastion. Whereas my friends who send their kids to schools in affluent, white beach communities complain about the poor values rampant among the students, I’m always pleased by the natural conservatism and work ethic of my kids’ immigrant friends. The church I attend is filled with immigrants from Lebanon, Syria, Russia, Romania and Bulgaria. These people embody the freedom-loving American spirit better than most others I’ve ever known.

Clearly, I cannot share the views of those who want to shut down the borders.

Nevertheless, the nation, and California especially, deserves an honest, free-wheeling debate about the proper number of immigrants who should be allowed to move here legally each year, and the financial and other impacts citizens must pay to absorb the huge numbers of immigrants who continue to pour across the border in violation of the nation’s immigration laws.

There’s nothing racist about saying so. But unless more of us are willing to speak out, the problems will never be addressed.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: california; elections; freedom; hispanics; illegalimmigration; immigration; liberty; politics; republicanparty

1 posted on 06/10/2003 7:03:20 PM PDT by Korth
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To: Korth
There’s nothing racist about saying so. But unless more of us are willing to speak out, the problems will never be addressed

Of course unless your A White Christian American male then your a racist hate mongering anti illegal basher homophobe !

2 posted on 06/10/2003 7:11:12 PM PDT by ATOMIC_PUNK (Just because your paranoid .....dont mean they're not after you !)
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To: Korth
There's no more important issue facing this country than massive illegal immigration. It has to be dealt with, both at the border and internally. We did it in the fifties, we can do it again.
3 posted on 06/10/2003 7:17:48 PM PDT by Reaganwuzthebest
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To: Korth
Correction!

Orange County is NOT run by a left wing latina:

The latina part came only as a convenience when running for office.

4 posted on 06/10/2003 7:20:23 PM PDT by norton
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To: Korth
Time for another war with Mexico... this time we make them take California back.
5 posted on 06/10/2003 7:28:45 PM PDT by thoughtomator (Road Map = Road Kill)
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To: Korth
Anglos (the PC term for non-Hispanic whites)

I have never thought of "Anglo" or any form of "Anglo-Saxon" as being PC. In fact, pretty much the entire culture that the Anglo-Saxons created throughout the world is pretty anti-PC.

6 posted on 06/10/2003 7:31:57 PM PDT by afuturegovernor
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To: Korth
Just ask former congressman B-1 Bob Dornan why his old district is run by a left-wing Latina.

It couldn't be that B-1 Bob is just a little bit of a wingnut, could it?
7 posted on 06/10/2003 7:33:10 PM PDT by Xenalyte (I may not agree with your bumper sticker, but I'll defend to the death your right to stick it)
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To: Korth
But when one cannot even use that term, what are the chances we can ever debate the entire issue?

Illegal immigrant.

There, I said it. Not too hard.
8 posted on 06/10/2003 7:35:09 PM PDT by Xenalyte (I may not agree with your bumper sticker, but I'll defend to the death your right to stick it)
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To: Korth
" "Illegal immigration.""

Illegal immigration is NOT immigration. Immigration is a LEGAL act. How can you have an illegal legal act? It is illegal ENTRY TO OUR COUNTRY. PERIOD.

Hell, E. Germany and USSR put a bounty on people trying to leave. Maybe we should put a bounty on illegal entrants? Not to advocate killing but capture and instant return from whence they came???
9 posted on 06/10/2003 7:38:34 PM PDT by lawdude (Liberalism: A failure every time it is tried.)
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Comment #10 Removed by Moderator

To: Korth
Look, if the Republicans from GWB and almost all the way down, except Tancredo, are unwilling to address the issue, there is no way anything will be done about the illegals.

The saddest part is that the routes taken by illegals is a dandy path for terrorists to enter the country.

It is the hook of fighting terrorism that could give the administration a 'legitimate' (read that politically correct) way to close the borders (which must be done to stem the tidal wave of illegals).

But will GWB et al do it, no, that would take real political courage.
11 posted on 06/10/2003 8:33:48 PM PDT by auntdot
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To: Korth
No one can be denied health care at any California emergency room, regardless of the lack of insurance, inability to pay or immigration status.

Not only that, but you don't even need to have an emergency health condition to be treated at a hospital's emergency room, because they can't turn anybody away. This is why so many illegal aliens use emergency rooms as their primary care physician.

12 posted on 06/10/2003 8:56:54 PM PDT by judgeandjury (The more numerous the laws, the more corrupt the state.)
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To: thoughtomator
Time for another war with Mexico...

It's time for a revolution in Mexico. The Mexican people need to march on the Mexican Congress, round-up all of the good-for-nothing elitist members of that Congress, and then have a hanging party.

13 posted on 06/10/2003 9:05:59 PM PDT by judgeandjury (The more numerous the laws, the more corrupt the state.)
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