To
say that Congress's vote to erect 700 miles of secure
fencing along the southern U.S. border is an empty
gesture is a felonious act of understatement. It is barren
of any meaning save cynical political opportunism: The fence offers
politicians on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border (which is
slated for abolition in 2010 anyway) to strike faux-populist poses
while screwing down the police state lid on their respective helot
populations who are soon to be co-mingled in one polity,
anyway (about which more anon).
Mexico is
threatening to protest the border fence at the UN. Please forgive
me for not being terrified by the news. Outside of the guild of
professional wrestling referees, it is impossible to find a body
with less credibility or power to enforce its decisions than the
United Nations" (nor should it have that power, of
course).
The Bush
regime's media auxiliaries have touted the border fence
as testimony of the comparative seriousness of the Republicans
in matters of border control. This is just one of several themes
that the shills and spokesthings for the Grand Old Pederast Party
have been throwing at the wall in the hopes that something will
stick. This is done in the desperate (and probably forlorn) hope
that the Republicans can change the subject from the perverted
Page-Turners on the Hill the scandal serving as the proverbial
elephant in the living room as mid-term elections approach.
Illegal immigration,
like terrorism and narcotics trafficking (all three of these subjects
are related, naturally), is probably impossible to prevent, but
can be mitigated through intelligent policies, such as ending
birthright citizenship. Milton Friedman's insight
that it is impossible to have a welfare state and open borders
remains valid.
Were the
US serious about dealing with illegal immigration, we would abolish
birthright citizenship, scale back (preferably eradicate) the
federal welfare state, end subsidies and other material support
for Mexico's kleptocracy, and stop undermining the status of English
as our common tongue. But this problem once again, like
drug trafficking and terrorism is simply too profitable,
both to the regime in Washington and its corporatist consorts,
to solve.
The Cold
War begat the behemoth called the Military-Industrial Complex
(MIC), a self-sustaining, incestuous cluster of corporate interests
and government bureaucracies that thrive on perpetual war. The
Homeland Security State (HSS), which incorporates many elements
of the MIC, similarly subsists on the persistent peril of terrorism.
The obvious
selling point of the HSS is its supposed mission of protecting
us from savagely bearded Mohammedans bent on swaddling our women
in burqas, beheading infidels at random, and reducing the rest
of us to Dhimmitude a scenario as grim as it is implausible.
But in order to strengthen itself in exercise, and entangle
[itself] in precedents (to borrow James Madison's useful
expression yet again), the HSS is working to exploit public concerns
over illegal immigration.
A few weeks
ago we learned that several major military contractors, both nominally
American (Raytheon, Northrop) and foreign (Sweden's Ericsson),
were in competition for a $2.1 contract to provide electronic
sensors and other hi-tech hardware for the Border Patrol. The
prize was ultimately awarded
to a consortium led by Boeing (also known as the lead
agency in Beijing's corporate lobby).
Query: With
so much money to be made both by corporate contractors
and the politicians whom they ply with campaign contributions
and other emoluments from illegal immigration, why would
any serious effort be made to end that crisis?
Query the
second: With the United States and Mexico scheduled for consolidation
in 2010 via the Security and Prosperity Partnership (commonly
called the North American Union), why are huge sums going to be
spent on hi-tech surveillance and monitoring devices along a soon-to-be-abolished
border?
Apart from
the corrupt enrichment of the political class, the obvious answer
is that the border crisis is being used as a convenient
way to build the sinews of our domestic surveillance state.
A good example
of how this works in practice was offered by a series of raids
conducted by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), an
appendage of the Heimatsicherheitsdienst ("Department
of Homeland Security" in the original German) in the Northeastern
U.S.
Noted one
press account (and pay careful attention to the highlighted
portions):
"Homeland
Security agents took to Ohio streets the past week, arresting
154 undocumented immigrants. The agents from U.S. Immigration
and Customs Enforcement offices in Boston, Philadelphia, Buffalo
and Detroit came heavily armed and loaded with files and warrants
for deportation. They took in immigrants from 30 countries and
every continent save Antarctica.... The men and women had been
caught entering the country illegally and were ordered to court
but never showed or had been ordered deported but never left,
authorities said.... No recent event spurred the sweep, government
officials said.
'Sept.
11 showed us that, to have security, we have to have an immigration
system with integrity,' said Marc A. Raimondi, national spokesman
for Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Most of the Sept. 11
terrorists had taken advantage of lax enforcement, he said.
'You can't have integrity if there is no consequence for abusing
the laws or ignoring a court order.'
Among those
taken were immigrants who had been in the U.S. for a decade
or more. They must leave homes, jobs and maybe children born
here who are U.S. citizens.
'If they
had complied and left 10 or 15 years ago, that wouldn't be the
case,' said Rob Baker, field office director in charge of detention
and removal for Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Ohio
and Michigan.
He noted
that, by the end of September, seven agents will be based permanently
in Cleveland to cover such operations throughout Ohio."
In addition
to serving as a pretext for the quartering of Homeland Security
goons in local communities, the issue has inspired at least some
local officials to petition the Feds to intervene in that fashion.
"A
state Superior Court judge based in Hazleton has written to Homeland
Security Director Michael Chertoff seeking more manpower in the
fight against illegal immigration. Judge Correale F. Stevens,
elected in 1997, has been hearing from county judges and local
elected officials about the growing problem of illegal immigrants
settling in Northeastern Pennsylvania."
Another example
is provided by a
Hazleton, Pennsylvania ordinance punishing people who transact
business, hire, or, rent housing to illegal immigrants. That example
illustrates how the immigration crisis can be used
to compel common citizens to act as informants and enforcers.
After signing
the measure, Hazleton Mayor Lou Barletta said his office would
train city workers in how to check people's immigration
or citizenship status.... He also asked the City Council
to approve a measure requiring all tenants to register with
the city and prove their legal residency.
Here's where
the issue gets really interesting:
"'We're
also going to be talking with Immigration and Customs (Enforcement)
to see if possibly we could receive some assistance,' said Barletta,
who said he wore a bulletproof vest to the vote as a precaution
because the issue was emotionally charged.... Other municipalities
across the country also have considered acting to address illegal
immigration. Ordinances similar to the Hazleton measure have been
proposed in the Florida communities of Palm Bay and Avon Park
and the California towns of Escondido and San Bernardino."
The bulletproof
vest was most likely a gratuitous piece of political stagecraft.
The intended message, most likely, was that radical elements among
the illegal immigrant population (and their advocates) would take
a pot-shot at the stalwart mayor.
While not
minimizing the dangers posed by some elements on that side of
the conflict such as the toilet bowl crust in human form
called coyotes who exploit, abuse, and sometimes kill illegal
immigrants it's possible that Mayor Barletta had more cause
for concern about falling prey to an angry landlord or business
owner: The Hazleton ordinance suspends the operating licenses
of businesses caught hiring illegals, and authorizes fines of
$1,000 a day on landlords who have illegals as tenants.
One need
not be an advocate of open borders (I
certainly am not) to experience a momentary twinge of misgiving
over the idea of forcibly deputizing businessmen and landlords
to inspect citizenship papers.
The
most unsettling aspects of this ordinance (which was, predictably,
immediately challenged in court by the ACLU), are first of all
the fact that Hazleton is clearly a pilot project, and secondly,
that this draconian experiment creation of a Your
Papers, Please Regime In One City is being quietly
supported and keenly observed by the DHS.
It is true,
of course, that some communities along the U.S.-Mexican border
have literally come under siege by illegal immigrants, as well
as paramilitaries (from both the Mexican military and militias
in the pay of that country's narcotics cartels or
do I repeat myself). But in keeping with Grigg's First Law
of Federal Action (Those problems Washington does not create,
it exacerbates by intervening to impose a 'solution'), some
people in those besieged communities have discovered that they
may have more to worry about from the federal agents supposedly
there to protect their communities from the invaders.
The Tucson
Citizen recently reported that the Border Partol
which, remember, is going to benefit from the billions of dollars'
worth of surveillance gear has been seizing automobiles
based simply on the presence of a passenger who is an illegal
immigrant.... The vehicle's owners then face steep impound fees
and long waits to retrieve their cars....
This practice
was successfully challenged in court in the 1999 case Gete vs.
Immigration and Naturalization Service yet it persists
to this day.
It doesn't make any difference whether you're taking [illegal
immigrants] to the grocery store or taking them from the desert
to the hospital, insisted Border Patrol spokesman Jesus
Rodriguez. There is no free pass.
The same
applies, of course, to people who car-pool with fellow workers
who are here illegally.
Are
they saying we're supposed to check somebody's immigration status?
asks real estate agent Cecilia Gutierrez-Arce, a legal permanent
resident of the US whose family includes US citizens, illegal
immigrants and a Border Patrol Agent. Are we supposed
to be spying on our neighbors? Our relatives?
Chris Simcox
of the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps answers that question in
the affirmative: All Americans have the civic duty to issue the
demand Your Papers, Please, and report illegal immigrants
to the Feds.
It
would certainly have a chilling effect on employers, Simcox
points out.
It certainly
would. And it would also certainly habituate Americans in the
practice of acting as spitzel, chivatos, stukachi each
of those terms is the epithet informants rendered
in German, Spanish, and Russian.
Obviously,
the federal government has the constitutional responsibility to
secure our borders and normalizing our immigration situation.
And just as obviously the political class has abetted the problem,
thereby cultivating a politically useful crisis. Now we're told
that our choices are between open borders and bloody chaos, or
the creation of a garrison state (the latter being the regime's
preferred solution to every conceivable problem).
Many conservatives
are convinced that a surveillance state within secure borders
would be an acceptable arrangement. Apparently I'm not a genuine
conservative, because that's not a description of any America
I would want to live in.
North Korea
has exceptionally secure borders. So did Soviet Russia under Josef
Stalin. I'd like to think we could do just a bit better than that.