Tamar
is telling us that because most illegals are
just hard-working folk doing our dirty work
for us, "there's rarely any mistaking them
for the kind of monsters who sneak into the
country to kill Americans." Perhaps she
can offer her services to Tom Ridge; since she
seems to know who the terrorists are, she might
identify them for the authorities.
Of
course, neither Tamar nor anyone else knows
who the terrorists are. Dozens of hardworking,
family-oriented people from overseas have already
tried to kill us, and there's every expectation
that more will try.
More
ludicrous, though, is the contention that immigration
is somehow fixed at one million per year, but
that "our ceilings accommodate only about
three-quarters of that flow." Immigration
creates more immigration, and the development
of industries where immigrants are concentrated
is distorted by the huge and continuous supply
of cheap foreign labor. In California, for instance,
the acreage planted in labor-intensive fruits
and vegetables has been steadily increasing,
precisely because farmers are basing their planning
on the expectation that the illegal flows won't
be cut off. If the inflow of illegal workers
were reduced, and the outflow were increased,
farmers would start making different choices-i.e.,
planting carrots instead of strawberries, since
the harvest of carrots is mechanized.
Mass
immigration actually slows the process of technological
development in industries that have become addicted
to it. Whether it's agriculture, garment manufacturing,
construction, or even services, the incentive
to produce more output with fewer workers is
diluted because of the loose labor market created
by immigration. As the late Julian Simon said:
"It is important to recognize that discoveries
of improved methods and of substitute products
are not just luck. They happen in response to
'scarcity' an increase in cost. Even
after a discovery is made, there is a good chance
that it will not be put into operation until
there is need for it due to rising cost. This
point is important: Scarcity and technological
advance are not two unrelated competitors in
a race; rather, each influences the other."
The
opponents of immigration-law enforcement posit
a false choice: between the mass deportation
of all eight million illegal aliens tomorrow,
or amnesty ("Earning legal status,"
in Tamar's delicate phrasing). Instead, the
realistic approach to this issue one
which acknowledges not only the huge numbers
involved but also the addiction of certain sectors
of the economy is to start enforcing
the law and reduce the illegal population through
attrition and attrition will gradually
increase the cost of labor in some sectors,
and thus spur needed innovation.
Each
year, some 400,000 people leave the illegal
population, some by getting green cards, others
by leaving the country voluntarily, yet others
through deportation. The problem is that they
are more than replaced by the 700,000 new illegal
aliens who settle here each year. The solution
is obvious: Reduce the number of new illegals
coming in and increase the number leaving, so
that instead of increasing each year, the illegal
population will start falling. For starters,
we do this by punishing the knowing employment
of illegals (Tyson Foods, now on trial in Chattanooga
for alien smuggling, will think long and hard
before hiring illegals again); by denying illegals
access to bank accounts, drivers licenses, mortgages,
higher education, etc.; by tracking down and
deporting foreign visitors who overstay visas;
and by prosecuting and imprisoning those who
repeatedly sneak across the border.
I
could go on, but a listing of possible tactics
for controlling immigration isn't the point;
it's the will to control immigration that's
lacking, even at this late date. It seems that
the lives of thousands more of our countrymen
will have to be sacrificed at the altar of libertarian
utopianism before we will muster the will to
act.
Mark
Krikorian is executive director of the Center
for Immigration Studies.