{"id":13092,"date":"2016-07-22T13:51:06","date_gmt":"2016-07-22T17:51:06","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/live-immigrationreform.pantheonsite.io\/?p=13092"},"modified":"2018-12-28T13:19:04","modified_gmt":"2018-12-28T18:19:04","slug":"the-twisted-logic-of-open-borders-zealots","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.immigrationreform.com\/2016\/07\/22\/the-twisted-logic-of-open-borders-zealots\/","title":{"rendered":"The Twisted Logic of Open Borders Zealots"},"content":{"rendered":"

There are two truisms about the immigration debate: First, just because people suffer horrible conditions in their home countries, wherever they may be, does not give them the right to come to the United States. The world cannot empty out whole countries and relocate their populations to the U. S. and Europe.<\/p>\n

The second truth is that open borders extremists are so blind to the human cost of crimes committed by illegal immigrants that they will manipulate statistics to support their agenda and regard victims with shocking insensitivity. For a party that claims to empathize with \u201cthe people,\u201d especially the marginalized, the Democrats are all too happy to trample on crime victims in their rush to embrace illegal aliens \u2013 even those who rape, kill and pillage.<\/p>\n

In a preposterous article<\/a> by the American Immigration Council about the Republican Party\u2019s immigration stance, Walter Ewing piles one dubious claim atop another. First, he claims that immigration law \u201cdoes not work.\u201d The amnesty statute passed in 1986 failed, but other laws certainly work, and could be effective. The only dysfunction is lack of enforcement, which creates a free-for-all.<\/p>\n

He also decries the lack of a pathway to citizenship for illegal aliens. \u201cFor the\u00a011.4 million<\/a> undocumented immigrants now living in the United States, there is no \u2018line<\/a>\u2019 for most of them to stand in and wait, and the \u2018regular channels\u2019 do not include them.\u201d He also bemoans the poverty and violence in their home countries along with the inability of unskilled workers to get a visa. And, of course, many illegal immigrants merely want to reunite with a loved one here in the United States.<\/p>\n

Just because people want to come to the United States gives them no right to settle here. If our national interest dictates that we find and remove those who overstay their visas or cap legal immigration at around 300,000 a year (which FAIR contends is a proper number), then merely enforcing the many immigration laws on the books will solve a lot of issues. The anti-sovereignty folks will dislike the outcome, but ignoring immigration laws erodes respect for our society.<\/p>\n

The reason why there are few visas for unskilled workers is because there are too many of them and the presence of easily exploitable illegal aliens depresses their wages and contributes to the deterioration of working conditions. And, if someone moves here illegally and leaves a loved one behind, people must take responsibility for doing so. The real problem is that a porous border makes reunification so easy.<\/p>\n

The whole idea that the U. S. immigration system \u201ctears families apart\u201d<\/a> is absurd, since there are \u2013 or should be \u2013 consequences for breaking the law. Blaming the system absolves individuals of making conscious decisions. The open borders apologists harbor no sympathy for the real families that are torn apart \u2013 those who lost loved ones to illegal alien murderers, drunk drivers and sadists \u2013 which is a blot on their cause.<\/p>\n

Then there\u2019s the wall. \u201cNeither the platform nor Trump reveal how they will prevent trafficking organizations from going over, through, under, or around this wall\u2014as they presently do when it comes to the hundreds of miles of fencing already in place along the border,\u201d writes Ewing. \u201cNo amount of (very costly) border enforcement is going to compensate for the fact that U.S. immigration laws are woefully out-of-date and out-of-step with today\u2019s realities.\u201d<\/p>\n

Problem one: the border is two thousand miles and there are hundreds of miles of fencing. Problem two: the technology used to stop and catch illegal immigrants is \u201cwoefully out-of-date and out-of-step with today\u2019s realities,\u201d not the laws. Problem three: the wall slows people down, which gives the Border Patrol time to respond.<\/p>\n

A lot of money is spent to police the border \u2013 a good thing. The main issue is that agents are told to stand down and neglect the laws, which are perfectly suitable for the reality on the ground. Apparently, this is not good enough for the open borders crowd, like AIC, who argue that we shouldn\u2019t even try to interdict the cartels.<\/p>\n

Walsh saved his biggest groaner for an appearance on Democracy Now<\/a>!, where he promotes the notion that illegal immigration reduces crime. \u201cFor decades, study after study has established . . . that higher immigration is associated with lower crime rates,\u201d he claims. \u201cAs an example, from 1990 to 2013, the share of the U.S. population grew from 7.9 percent to 13.1 percent. At the same time, the undocumented population more than tripled, from 3.5 million to 11.2 million. But what happened to crime rates? They went down. FBI data indicate that violent crime dropped by 48 percent, and rates of property crime fell by 41 percent.\u201d<\/p>\n

To assert that Y is caused by Z, there must be a correlation to determine causation. The lack of logic underlying this statement is breathtaking.<\/p>\n

In his article, Ewing writes: \u201cimmigrants in general and undocumented\u00a0immigrants in particular are\u00a0less<\/a>\u00a0likely than the native-born to be in prison or to commit crimes\u201d and that \u201cmost undocumented immigrants somehow manage to stay out of trouble.\u201d<\/p>\n

Actually, 100 percent of illegal aliens have committed a crime, but what is astonishing about this gloss-over is that it ignores the actual impact of the crimes that are committed. In April, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) revealed that they released 19,723 illegal aliens onto the streets who had racked up 64,197 convictions, including 208 murders, almost 900 sex crimes and more than 12,000 drunk driving incidents. Isn\u2019t one too many?<\/p>\n

And since the Obama administration has stopped enforcing the law, ICE made half of the arrests in 2015 than it did in 2013. This affects statistics because crimes may still have been committed but the perpetrators are neither counted nor held accountable. How might Ewing\u2019s stand change if an illegal immigrant who benefited from a sanctuary city policy killed his family?<\/p>\n

AIC\u2019s disdain for our immigration laws stems from the fact that the statutes stand in the way of open borders. \u201c\u2019The law\u2019 needs to be thoroughly revamped before it is enforceable,\u201d he writes. \u201cThe heavy emphasis of the [Republican Party platform] on undocumented immigrants as nothing more than \u2018law breakers\u2019 is misleading and insulting. Large-scale unauthorized immigration is a symptom of an immigration system in need of repair.\u201d<\/p>\n

If all the people who wanted to move to the United States did so, Ewing\u2019s standard of living would plummet. He should be grateful that we have laws that try to protect our national \u2013 and his personal \u2013 interest.<\/p>\n

If not for deadly sanctuary policies, thousands of American citizens would be alive today.<\/p>\n

Ewing is fortunate that his family never had to bury a loved one and see his own family torn apart by a violent crime. The only thing wrong with our immigration laws is that this administration fails to enforce them.