Immigration Insanity
October 29, 2002
By Peyton Knight
Following the killing spree alleged to be the act
of John Muhammed and his
associate, Lee Malvo, Americans learned
that the teenager was an illegal alien, originally from Jamaica. Moreover,
early indications suggest that Muhammed was engaged in the smuggling of
illegal aliens into this nation.
Largely unknown to most Americans is the
large percentage of the nation's incarcerated criminal population
representing the failure of those agencies responsible
to protect this nation against the dangers posed by illegal aliens.
From the time you woke this morning to the time you go to sleep
tonight, 10,000 illegal aliens will have flooded into the United States
from and through Mexico. Tomorrow, the same will happen. In the past 7
years, the estimated number of illegal aliens residing in the U.S. has
grown from 5 million to between 9 and 11 million.
In any given day, roughly one-third of the immigrants penetrating our
borders will be nabbed by authorities, returned, only to try again the
next day or even within the next few hours. It’s like a children’s
game of cops and robbers, only it is played with real guns, real money and
real consequences.
Clearly, if a nation is to exist, it must have borders—definitive
boundaries that separate the government, laws, ideas, traditions, history
and culture of one territory from another. There are issues of millions of
dollars in taxes, social services, and other subsidies involved. It makes
even less sense when those receiving government handouts and services are
not even citizens of the subsidizing nation. That is exactly what is
happening in the United States of America.
Current policy on illegal immigration in America is a bungled,
confusing, mixed message. On the one hand, the mere fact that we label
undocumented citizens who dwell within our borders "illegal
aliens" tells us that these folks are breaking the law simply by
being here. As illegal aliens, they are not entitled to the same
constitutional protections and rights afforded US citizens. Moreover, our
government commits sizable, though still woefully inadequate, resources to
both preventing illegal aliens from penetrating our borders and locating
them for deportation. In addition to the illegal aliens, there are an
estimated 300,000 "absconders", those who have overstayed their
visa time limits are in this nation.
The same government that spends millions annually in a supposed effort
to stamp out illegal immigration is actually luring and enticing illegal
immigrants to come here! Sound crazy? It is. An absurd ruling by the U.S.
Supreme Court in 1982 declared that children of illegal immigrants have a
constitutional right to free public education. It prohibited schools from
denying illegal aliens access to education based on the status of their
citizenship. John Lee Malvo was enrolled in two schools during his illegal
stay.
The court, in reference to ILLEGAL aliens, declared that undocumented,
non-citizens are entitled to the same, free public education to which Joe
Taxpayer is entitled. And for what reason? Because as long as ILLEGAL
aliens are identifiable and present, rather than deport them for ILLEGALLY
residing in the U.S., we should do our best to turn them into upstanding,
working, non-taxpaying ILLEGAL aliens. Such was the logic of the highest
court in the land.
Then, as if the glaring inconsistency of our government’s policy
weren’t evident enough, the court also barred any communication between
public schools and the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS).
It said schools were not to cooperate with the INS in any way that might
"jeopardize immigrant students and their right of access."
The Urban Institute has estimated that 15% of all kindergarten through
high school kids in California are illegal immigrants. This alone costs
taxpayers $1.6 billion a year. Public schools, teachers’ unions and the
department of education are constantly blaming their putrid performances
in the education arena on "lack of funds" or "large class
sizes." Neither makes mention of this massive, unaccountable drain on
taxpayers who finance this undocumented, illegal influx in our nation’s
classrooms.
The total cost of providing federally mandated education and health
care to illegal aliens is estimated at more than $5 billion annually. That’s
$5 billion dollars worth of lost education and lost health care for
American citizens. One in seven inmates in California state prisons is an
illegal alien. The estimated yearly cost of incarcerating illegal
immigrants in the United States is $500 million.
Hospitals, too, are required by law to treat any illegal alien that
shows up for medical care. Of course, the little issue of "who pays
for these unaccountable treatments" is not covered in this law. As a
result, many hospitals along the border between the U.S. and Mexico have
either been forced to close their doors or are facing severe financial
crises as mandatory healthcare treatment to illegal aliens gobbles up
their resources.
At a time when America is under attack by Islamist holy warriors, the
Census Bureau estimates that there are currently as many as 115,000
illegal immigrants from Middle Eastern countries living in the United
States. In addition, there are over 400,000 illegal immigrants who
continue to live in the U.S. despite having received orders from judges to
be deported.
Both the Democrat and Republican parties are busy climbing over one
another in an effort to win over the Hispanic voting bloc at the expense
of sound immigration policy and national security. One congressman has put
forth a bill that will solve many of the problems we currently face with
illegal immigration in this country. Rep. George Gekas (R-PA) has
introduced H.R. 5013, the "Securing America’s Future through
Enforcement Reform Act" (SAFER).
The concern over our nation’s security has reached a zenith not seen
since World War II. The most basic step in bolstering national security,
while preserving the rights of American citizens, is to secure our borders
to insure we don’t give terrorists a free pass to roam the country.