Illegal Immigration and the many issues involved
I just read an interesting commentary over at OpinionJournal. Its about some legislation being proposed in Arkansas to prevent illegal aliens from getting state services (education, medical care, etc), which is modeled after Arizona's Proposition 200. The piece was written by an editorial page editor of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. Here is a part out of that article:
"Well, yes, what kind of message does that send? That we're foresighted enough to want these future Americans to be healthy and well-educated? That we don't punish the children for the sins of the fathers? Do we really want to make these little suckers second-class citizens while they're still in the womb? There may be some differences of opinion in this state, and country, about when life begins, but these two state senators seem agreed: Discrimination should begin at conception.
In real life, as opposed to politics, would Jim Holt really deny some poor Mexican who's just been mangled in a car wreck the emergency treatment he needs? Jim Holt ran for the U.S. Senate last year as a practicing Christian; his campaign signs bore the fish symbol. Would he just pass by people who are hurting and in need of help--like some kind of Bad Samaritan?"
What the gentleman wrote is thought-provoking and in it, he seems to be appealing to the reader's concience, but I think he misses the mark, in that he seems to infer that if you are against illegal immigrants you are a racist. (He describes the bill as ""inflammatory, race-baiting demagoguery.")
There may be some who are against it for racist reasons, but not all. Some are against it because of the drain on the economy, some because of issues of national security, etc. The list is long.
But what I found to be most interesting were some of the "Reader responses". Here are some examples:
-From a reader in So. Cal.:
"A malicious, misleading hit piece. Come and visit Southern California and take a serious look at the costs both in dollars and lifestyle of illegal immigration. That some in Arkansas don't want to find themselves in the same situation in a few years is smart. Immigration is good for this country. Illegal immigration and the dual standards of justice that are promoted by the open borders crowd is a cancer that will kill."
-From a reader in Maine:
"Well, I must be racist and bigoted by Mr. Greenberg's standards as I am one of those Wal-Mart shoppin' rednecks who just cannot understand the sense of allowing illegal aliens the same rights and access to services as citizens. If we assume the term illegal still applies, then its an obligation to uphold the law. It's also a slap in the face to every honest citizen who works hard and sees his medical insurance premiums and taxes increase. This isn't about race, it's about fairness. It's about my family and it's welfare."
Not all the responses were negative, there were some who agreed with the sentiments expressed by the author.
-From a reader in Texas:
"Resentment at illegals generally revolves around fear of cultural change, an irrational fear, but is justified by observing that illegals are, well, illegal. They broke immigration laws, by definition. But, as a Christian, people like Mr. Holt should recognize that immigration laws are amoral; they are not there to prevent socially unacceptable behavior (such as laws against theft or murder or assault), but are there to protect the economic and social order of the country, to slow change, and to permit vetting of potentially dangerous immigrants."
The issue of illegal immigration involves many different issues - the moral issue of denying medical care to poor immigrants, the issue of American citizens having to pay for that care thru their taxes, the issue of the effect on the economy of the need for the cheap labor; the issue of national security, etc. But racism? I disagree.
"Well, yes, what kind of message does that send? That we're foresighted enough to want these future Americans to be healthy and well-educated? That we don't punish the children for the sins of the fathers? Do we really want to make these little suckers second-class citizens while they're still in the womb? There may be some differences of opinion in this state, and country, about when life begins, but these two state senators seem agreed: Discrimination should begin at conception.
In real life, as opposed to politics, would Jim Holt really deny some poor Mexican who's just been mangled in a car wreck the emergency treatment he needs? Jim Holt ran for the U.S. Senate last year as a practicing Christian; his campaign signs bore the fish symbol. Would he just pass by people who are hurting and in need of help--like some kind of Bad Samaritan?"
What the gentleman wrote is thought-provoking and in it, he seems to be appealing to the reader's concience, but I think he misses the mark, in that he seems to infer that if you are against illegal immigrants you are a racist. (He describes the bill as ""inflammatory, race-baiting demagoguery.")
There may be some who are against it for racist reasons, but not all. Some are against it because of the drain on the economy, some because of issues of national security, etc. The list is long.
But what I found to be most interesting were some of the "Reader responses". Here are some examples:
-From a reader in So. Cal.:
"A malicious, misleading hit piece. Come and visit Southern California and take a serious look at the costs both in dollars and lifestyle of illegal immigration. That some in Arkansas don't want to find themselves in the same situation in a few years is smart. Immigration is good for this country. Illegal immigration and the dual standards of justice that are promoted by the open borders crowd is a cancer that will kill."
-From a reader in Maine:
"Well, I must be racist and bigoted by Mr. Greenberg's standards as I am one of those Wal-Mart shoppin' rednecks who just cannot understand the sense of allowing illegal aliens the same rights and access to services as citizens. If we assume the term illegal still applies, then its an obligation to uphold the law. It's also a slap in the face to every honest citizen who works hard and sees his medical insurance premiums and taxes increase. This isn't about race, it's about fairness. It's about my family and it's welfare."
Not all the responses were negative, there were some who agreed with the sentiments expressed by the author.
-From a reader in Texas:
"Resentment at illegals generally revolves around fear of cultural change, an irrational fear, but is justified by observing that illegals are, well, illegal. They broke immigration laws, by definition. But, as a Christian, people like Mr. Holt should recognize that immigration laws are amoral; they are not there to prevent socially unacceptable behavior (such as laws against theft or murder or assault), but are there to protect the economic and social order of the country, to slow change, and to permit vetting of potentially dangerous immigrants."
The issue of illegal immigration involves many different issues - the moral issue of denying medical care to poor immigrants, the issue of American citizens having to pay for that care thru their taxes, the issue of the effect on the economy of the need for the cheap labor; the issue of national security, etc. But racism? I disagree.
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