U.S. History has not been, as Obama implies, 200 years of sustained mass migration—and it certainly hasn’t been 200 years of lawless open borders, which is his actual goal
The Supreme Court momentarily impeded President Obama’s attempt to “fundamentally transform America” last week with its 4-4 vote on his executive amnesty action plan
reports
Benny Huang.
When the court is deadlocked, previous decisions by lower courts are
allowed to stand. In this case, Obama lost because the lower court found
that his plan exceeded his executive authority, which is actually what
Obama himself said before he decided to do it.
The evenly divided court apparently couldn’t make up its mind as to
whether the president is permitted to act like a dictator and suspend
laws he doesn’t like. That’s a tough question, you see, with half of our
best legal minds leaning toward dictatorship. Scary.
After the ruling, President Obama held a press conference
to assure the public that “comprehensive immigration reform” is still
inevitable, if only delayed. He’s probably right about that. Like water
on a rock, the Left just keeps wearing us down.
He began the press conference with a lot of feel-good pap about the
glories of immigration—while lumping legal migrants together with
illegal aliens, as the Left always does. “…[O]ne of the reasons why
America is such a diverse and inclusive nation is because we’re a nation
of immigrants,” said the president. “Our Founders conceived of this
country as a refuge for the world. And for more than two centuries,
welcoming wave after wave of immigrants has kept us youthful and dynamic
and entrepreneurial.”
That’s the fifth grade version of history that I was taught in school
too. My well-meaning teacher taught us that immigration is part of our
national ethos. We learned about Ellis Island and the Statue of Liberty
and looked at a lot of pictures of young women wearing babushkas,
staring out from the decks of ocean liners. It was all nice and corny.
Obama has seized on that familiar history lesson for his own
advantage, clearly implying that unfettered immigration is
all-American—which renders opposition to it un-American. Make no mistake
about it, the president’s appeal to the Founders (whom he hates, by the
way) and our supposed tradition of immigration is an attack on his
opponents’ patriotism.
Usually when people talk about the Founders’ intentions they are
referring to the ideals expressed in the Declaration of Independence,
the Constitution, or its offspring, the Bill of Rights. Nothing in any
of those documents even hints that the Founders “conceived of this
country as a refuge for the world.”
Thomas Jefferson’s philosophical
brief to King George doesn’t mention it. The Bill of Rights enshrines in
law many freedoms, most of which are under siege in Obama’s America,
but it does not include a “right” to immigrate. The Constitution even
empowers Congress (not the Executive!) to establish a “uniform Rule of
Naturalization.” (Article I, Section 8) Congress did their duty and
established an immigration code, which happens to be very liberal, but
the president has nonetheless sought to nullify it via executive order
because some people still can’t come in the right way.
By empowering Congress to regulate immigration, the Constitution
necessarily implies that we have the prerogative to set limits. We
Americans are the gatekeepers because American immigration policy is supposed to benefit us.
It doesn’t matter a lick if immigrants come here “looking for a better
life.” If their addition to our society doesn’t make our lives better
then we have no obligation to take them.
This idea is exactly the
opposite of the Obama philosophy on immigration which says that anyone
who can get here has a right to come in—except apparently devout
Christians from Germany who want to homeschool their children.
Under Obama’s plan, newcomers don’t even have to go through a screening
process to make sure that they don’t carry contagious diseases or
terrorist sympathies. All they have to do is run across the border and
Obama will be waiting there for them with a welfare check in one hand
and a voter registration card in the other. If you oppose him, your
patriotism is suspect.
Obama compounded his historical error with his reference to “wave
after wave” of immigrants to our shores “for more than two centuries.”
The truth is more complicated. Over the course of our history, Congress
has used its rightful authority to adjust immigration levels as it saw
fit. Sometimes immigration was a mighty river and sometimes a trickle.
It has not been, as Obama implied, two hundred years of sustained mass
migration—and it certainly hasn’t been two hundred years of lawless open
borders, which is his actual goal.
There have really been two great “waves” of immigration to this
country, and we’re living in one of them. The most recent began in 1965
with Ted Kennedy’s Immigration and Nationality Act. The United States
opened its doors very wide indeed, accepting about 59 million immigrants
over the course of fifty years. That’s more people than live in
California, our most populous state, by the way, and it doesn’t include
illegal aliens. Yet despite this very liberal policy, some people still
can’t be bothered to come in the right way. Obama considers these people
to be victims, probably because he views them and their children as
potential voters. They are not victims, you are — the law-abiding, tax-paying citizen.
The other “wave” occurred between the years 1880 and 1921. This is
the much romanticized “Ellis Island” era of immigration. Though not
without its problems, America managed this period of rapid change
reasonably well because it subscribed to the melting pot model. These
days, just saying that America is a melting pot is a “microaggression” on some college campuses.
An argument could be made that America needed the Ellis Island wave
of immigrants because we were in the midst of westward expansion and
rapid industrialization. In 1901, the United States became the world’s largest manufacturer,
which was both the cause and effect of mass migration. There was
certainly work in those days for anyone who wanted it—bridges and
tunnels to be built, coal and ore to be extracted from the earth, and
goods of every imaginable variety to be manufactured. New railroads were
being laid across the continent, often by Irish and Chinese immigrants.
But that was then and this is now. America is becoming one big rust
belt and yet we’re bringing in more immigrants than we did when we were
a budding industrial power. It’s madness.
An alternative argument could also be made that we brought in those immigrants not because we needed them but because employers wanted
them. The elite’s desires are not the same as the country’s needs,
though the two are easily confused when the elite get to tell the story.
Employers have traditionally welcomed immigrants because immigration
makes the workers fight each other for coveted jobs. In times of high
immigration, wages tend to remain stagnant or even decline. Whenever the
workers start getting uppity, employers seek labor in ever more exotic
locales—first Ireland and Germany, then China and Italy, now Laos and
Guatemala. The best way to make workers toil longer for less is to keep
them in constant fear for their livelihood.
This idea that we are a nation of immigrants was advanced in no small
part by exactly those employers. Call it corporate propaganda, if you
will. I would compare it the diamond industry’s not-so-subtle suggestion
to young men that spending two months salary on a diamond ring before
proposing to a lady is some kind of obligatory right of passage. Though
this practice may seem like an age old tradition it was actually
conceived of in a DeBeers boardroom.
It’s the same with the American
immigration ethos. Though we have been led to believe that America has
always been open to absolutely anyone who wants to come here for a
better life, that just isn’t the case. Our immigration policy has
sometimes been liberal and sometimes conservative, but it has never been
boundless. Our current president and his party don’t want any limits,
nor do they want an orderly screening system. They want a
free-for-all—and they’ll probably get it.
Immigration is certainly part of our history, though not because it
had to be that way. The number of immigrants admitted was determined by a
tug-of-war between employers and the working public. When the employers
had their way, the flood gates were thrown open, whether we needed them
or not. When workers had their way, the flood gates were closed.
Congress’s constitutional authority to regulate immigration was
narrowly upheld but the fight is not over. The Left hasn’t given up and
neither should we.