Once and for all: virtually no American is in favor of
allowing would-be immigrants to enter America illegally. To suggest that a
political party or group believes otherwise is simply political rhetoric, a
lie, intended to divide the country and build some form of political advantage.
All immigrants seeking entry into the United States should
follow a clearly defined process of rules and standard procedures. Where
Americans do disagree is what measures should be in place to stop illegal
immigration; how such awaiting immigrants should be humanely treated in the
best spirit and traditions of America; how to be responsive to legitimate needs
for granting asylum to people who are truly at risk for their lives; and how to
meet the real demand that immigrants can fulfill as badly needed workers in our
economy.
The solution to illegal immigration ultimately requires a
package of coordinated efforts. There is no 1-shot “silver bullet” to solve
this. Engaging in political stunts accomplishes nothing substantive (e.g.
sending thousands of American troops – at a cost of over $200M – to camp out in
Tucson, AZ – 60 miles north of the Mexican border – to provide “backup support” to Border Patrol agents).
Denigrating the nature and character of the immigrants knocking at our door,
and lying about their supposed affiliations and circumstances, is of no help
either. We will never figure out how to respond to any problem when we do not
fully and accurately know who and what the problem truly is.
Donald Trump’s proposed “beautiful Wall” is an ineffective,
expensive, and ultimately wasteful solution to the problem at the border. The
principal audience that the Wall will benefit is the contractors who will get
the contracts to build it. History is littered with the fallacy of defensive
walls. The Great Wall of China virtually bankrupted sequential Chinese emperors
seeking to build and maintain it, even as it ultimately failed to keep out
invaders as was intended. Similarly, the Maginot Line in France proved to be false
security as it failed to keep the Nazis out at the beginning of World War II.
Russia’s “Iron Curtain” failed to keep Eastern Europeans inside their borders,
and also ultimately failed.
In 2016 Trump promised his voters that he would build a Wall
to protect us from “illegal immigrant invaders,” and all the “murderers,
rapists, and gang members” (and subsequently including “diseased) supposedly (but
not proven) found among them. He also promised Americans that Mexico would pay
for that Wall; it would cost the taxpayer nothing. It was a package deal, an interdependent,
two-part promise. The currently requested $5B is only a down payment towards a
projected $30B cost. When Trump now opts to put it all on our credit card
rather than Mexico’s, we certainly have a right to rethink this deal and consider
better uses for our hard-earned money. Since he has already broken his promise
to taxpayers and made the Wall our expense, we should therefore let him off the
hook for not building the Wall.
If we are to be outraged at Trump’s broken promises, it
should be about his lying to us that Mexico would pay for building the Wall,
rather than about the Wall not being built. Therefore, I refuse to follow the
President into an endless black hole / money pit to fix only one half of his
broken promise. It is not my job to pick up after him and clean up the mess of
his own making.
Today we are mired in the continual political and racial
finger-pointing of blame, falsely portraying the nature of the people sitting
at the border (or in detention camps, with families broken up and scattered
across the country), and shutting down many government operations while we
argue over a fraction of our 2019 national budget – a budget already four months
overdue. Donald Trump stated publicly that he would be “proud to shut down the
government” over his Wall, and would “take full responsibility for [the
shutdown] and not blame the Democrats.” True to form, within days he reversed
course and now incessantly totally blames the Democrats for the shutdown.
Meanwhile, Republican representatives and senators sit on the sidelines,
trusting nothing Trump says, while waiting for him to genuinely commit to
whatever deal he ultimately strikes.
Instead of this wasteful rhetoric, we need to spend our
time, energy, and money on finding and adequately funding real comprehensive
solutions to this continuing issue. Expanding the size of our Border Patrol
force; providing a variety of technology tools to identify and stop illegal
immigrants at the point of entry; hiring sufficient immigration lawyers and
judges to process immigration applications quickly, effectively, while judicially
appropriately; providing adequate humane and sanitary facilities to house those
detained and in process; identifying those immigrants who can successfully
contribute to American society and our economy, and facilitate their entry,
relocation, and assimilation.
In the meantime, we can also still retain our compassion for
why these people are at our doorstep in the first place. Many are seeking to
escape lives whose circumstances we cannot begin to fathom, circumstances that
have driven them to undertake an almost impossible mission of extraordinary
hardship. Their situation does not give them a free pass, but being
compassionate while still applying an orderly process does not have to be an
either/or choice. We are better and more creative than that. Our American
values and immigrant traditions demand that we make the extra effort on our
part. We need not fear the danger of an eight year old child knocking on our
door.
© 2019
Randy Bell www.ThoughtsFromTheMountain.blogspot.com
2 comments:
Again "Nail on the head" RM!!
Randy, once again you have sorted out the pieces of this issue in your usual wise way, Excellent discussion of the issues.
Janet
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