Friday, December 02, 2005

The keyword is Legal

Okay … I’ve been quiet too long but I’ve just been too lazy to put fingers to the keys and actually rant lately. Not that there hasn’t been suitable material to rant about, or that there haven’t been things in the past weeks and months that got my blood boiling. There is always something worth a good rant … rather this was a plethora of excuses to procrastinate, a slew of ‘I’ll rant about that when I get a little more time’ or ‘well my work schedule is changing in a few weeks, it will be more convenient after that.’

True to life, however, things passed by and in the end most of the things I had been waiting on to start writing again ended up not happening … work didn’t lighten up and the schedule change that was supposed to free up more time fell through.

None of that, however, is here nor there in turns of what I set out to write about today….

Immigration … it’s been in the news … the President gave a speech on it a couple of weekends ago. There are as many opinions out there on the issue as there are people to ask … and likely even more than that given most politician’s propensity for double talk.

First, I am pro-immigration. That is to say that I believe it would be a horrible disservice to the founding concepts of this country to adopt a closed boarder policy. I have nothing against people immigrating to this country and working hard to achieve a better life. That is one of the principles on which this country thrives.

What I don’t have any use for are those that come here illegally … yes most come here for the same reasons … to work hard and earn a better lives for themselves. But they do so without any respect for the dream that they are striving toward, because they have disrespected the legal in favor of the easy, much as a thief will break into a house to steal rather than work, save, and purchase the item for themselves.

(And if you just thought to yourself, ‘Oh, he just called all ‘undocumented workers’ thieves!’ take a 2x4 and slam it into your head a couple times and try reading that again …)

The President says that he wants to strengthen the boarders … more fencing … more patrols …. Arrest and deport those found entering the country illegally. And that would be a good start, hopefully ‘we the people’ will keep the feet of the politicians to the fire and actually get some follow-through on this issue, but it’s only half the problem.

What is the Presidents plan to handle the millions of illegals already in the country? A ‘guest worker program’ that he says is not amnesty. Okay … Technically speaking it may not be amnesty, but it’s as close as you can get without becoming it. The plan would allow any illegal holding a job in the US to continue working for up to 3 years, at which point they must leave the country.

Now … let me get this straight … they break our laws and come here illegally … and they get a job (technically breaking another law) … and their punishment is they get keep the job and stay here and we’ll come back to deport you in 3 years.

Raise your hand if you actually believe that they’ll be gone in 3 years …

No … sorry … doesn’t work. Sends the wrong message both to prospective immigrants (legal and illegal) and to employers.

No … what you need to do is be tough on the illegals and on the employers that enable them. If you are found in this country illegally you should be immediately deported back to your country of origin, if you are found guilty of a crime while in this country illegally your sentence should immediately be the maximum sentence and you should be deported once you have served out your sentence. (Of course prisons in this country are a completely different rant) If you are found employing an illegal you should face stiff fines and/or jail time … say $2.5 million per illegal and/or up to 10 years in prison (compounded for each illegal).

The idea is to make hiring an illegal so unattractive, so risky, that an employer is going to do everything possible to make sure that his employees are in this country legally. Now I’m willing to be lenient in a case where the employer is able to show due diligence in their hiring, but was taken by forged documents, but this would have to be determined on a case-by-case basis.

Now, some people will yell and scream that the immigration system is outdated, archaic, and too slow. I would probably agree with all of the above, and I would certainly agree that there needs to be some massive reform to the system, but that is no excuse for willingly and knowingly entering the country illegally or remaining in this country illegally. If I get pulled over for speeding, should I not have to pay the ticket because the county I was pulled over in doesn’t accept electronic payment and requires me to pay in person, in cash, on the appointed court day? No.

We should come down hard on those that have no respect for our country and our laws, and embrace those that show us that they respect us and wish to follow the American dream.

“In the first place we should insist that if the immigrant who comes here in good faith becomes an American and assimilates himself to us, he shall be treated on an exact equality with everyone else, for it is an outrage to discriminate against any such man because of creed, or birthplace, or origin. But this is predicated upon the man's becoming in very fact an American, and nothing but an American...There can be no divided allegiance here. Any man who says he is an American, but something else also, isn't an American at all. We have room for but one flag, the American flag, and this excludes the red flag, which symbolizes all wars against liberty and civilization, just as much as it excludes any foreign flag of a nation to which we are hostile...We have room for but one language here, and that is the English language...and we have room for but one sole loyalty and that is a loyalty to the American people.”

This was sent to me as a quote by Theodore Roosevelt, though I haven’t been able to confirm if Roosevelt actually ever said it. Who said it or didn’t say it, however, does not change the truth in the statement. Sadly the realms of political correctness erode this country and strip from it even its identity … it divides us into groups and subgroups and pits us against one another weakening us from within.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Have you seen the movie Animal? The message it carries is very similar to your conclusion and shown in a very meaningful way. As a whole the country seems to be going the route of "separate but equal" when in my opinion, it seems so much easier to achieve equality by just removing separations.