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Immigration: Lock and Load?by James FallowsApril 8 - April 22, 1996
See the responses to this scenario. Read how Executive Decision works.
EXECUTIVE-DECISION MEMORANDUM
Lock and load! The foreigners are coming! Pat Buchanan was not able to convert his warnings about immigration into a victory in the Republican primaries. But the issues he raised clearly concern many Americans. In 1994 voters in California overwhelmingly approved "Proposition 187," the referendum that would deny nearly all public benefits, including schooling and many forms of medical care, to illegal immigrants. In 1995, a bipartisan national commission on immigration reform endorsed much tougher measures to detect and deport illegal immigrants. This year, the House of Representatives has already endorsed a measure that would deport LEGAL immigrants if they become "public charges" by applying for welfare during their first seven years in the country. The same bill would also reduce the quotas for most categories of legal immigration. The United States has been built by immigration--and wracked by debates about each successive wave of it. Very soon you will be called upon to make clear decisions about the nation's immigration policy. You will need to support or oppose a series of Bills moving through the Congress. You will need to make statements to other nations, principally Mexico, affected by our immigration policy. You will face decisions about executive orders governing our handling of refugees and other immigration-related issues. Most of all, as occupant of the presidential "bully pulpit," you will have the opportunity to speak to your fellow citizens about how to view the impact of ongoing immigration on our national life. You will take that opportunity or you will let it pass--and you will have to live with history's judgment about whether your decision was right. Immigration is a complex issue. Before making an Excecutive Decision, you should decide which problems related to immigration you think are most important. Click here to read a memo on the various questions about and consequences of our current immigration policy. Mr./Ms. President, we've outlined five different approaches you could take in formulating America's immigration policy. A. "No Way, Jose!" Really close the borders. (Please read this brief argument in favor of Option A.) B. Breathing Room. Impose a short-term moratorium on immigration. (Please read this brief argument in favor of Option B.) C. Encourage LEGAL immigration while discouraging the ILLEGAL flow. (Please read this brief argument in favor of Option C.) D. Encourage more-selective immigration, so we get the people with the skills this country needs(Please read this brief argument in favor of Option D.) E. Open the Borders. Revolutionize our relationship with Mexico by recognizing that functionally we are becoming one economy. (Please read this brief argument in favor of Option E.) Questions, Problems, and Challenges:Things to Think About Before Making an Executive Decision on ImmigrationARE WE SIMPLY GETTING TOO MANY IMMIGRANTS? When the United States won the Second World War, its population was under 150 million. When George Bush took office the population was under 250 million. Now it is over 260 million--and according to Census Bureau projections the population is on its way to more than 390 million by the middle of the next century. The United States is still uncrowded when compared to Japan, India, the Netherlands. But even we feel environmental pressure--which each new resident increases. Topsoil is disappearing as agriculture grows more intensive. Our fishing, forestry, water, and energy resources are under increasing stress. As birthrates among American citizens fall, immigration is becoming more and more the source of America's population growth. The Census Bureau analyses (summarized by the Federation for American Immigration Reform) suggest that immigration will be responsible for virtually ALL the increase to a projected population of 390 million in the next century. Surely environmental prudence suggests that we slow this process.
Economists have found over the decades that immigrants often outperform native citizens in distinctive ways. They often create their own businesses (largely because language barriers and other obstacles keep them from going the normal corporate route). They have high savings rates. Their children do well in school. Eventually their median income exceeds that of the native-born population. But this is not true of all immigrants. Those who come with high skill levels--for example, the scientists who fled as refugees from Europe before the Second World War--often use those skills well in the American economy. Those who come as peasants--for example, the second and third waves of Indochinese refugees--often do not. Those who come as aged dependants rarely make the full adjustment in either language or economic behavior. And those who come as "sojourners," voyaging back and forth to their home country, are distinctly less successful than those who make a full break with their original homeland. Some of today's immigrants have the traits that build investment, innovation, and assimilation in the American work force. But a significant share, at least half, come from groups that historically are less likely to innovate: peasants (mainly refugees); aged dependents; and sojourners, mainly illegal immigrants from Mexico. If we are going to expose our country to the disruptive effects that immigration historically brings we might as well do so in the most beneficial way.
America is supposed to be a society that offers equal opportunity under the rule of law. Illegal immigration makes a mockery of that goal. The widely tolerated presence of illegal immigrants is an affront to Americans who believe in "playing by the rules." The immigrants themselves are a standing invitation to lawless treatment--as shown recently in California, where illegal immigrants from Thailand were found to be working in conditions resembling slave labor. Economic studies have shown that a reserve army of illegal labor depresses wages and working conditions for the least-skilled American workers. It is these unskilled workers, we need hardly remind you, whose living standards have dropped over the last decade, making America a more polarized and brutal economy. In the city of El Paso alone, an average of 20 Mexican mothers cross the border each day so that their children can be born on U.S. soil and become American citizens. This clearly flouts U.S. law and undermines the sense that rules will be applied evenly. And of course there is the problem of immigrants who are criminals in the normal sense. According to recent reports, as many as one quarter of all inmates in federal prisons are in the country illegally. A nation built on respect for law can ill afford to tolerate such lawlessness.
Immigration law is of course a national policy. But the burden is grossly unfair at the state level. Three states--California, Texas, and Florida--probably absorb as much of the impact of immigration as the other forty-seven states combined. These calculations cannot be precise because they include an uncounted illegal presence. But these three states have since 1980 absorbed nearly half of the nation's total flow of legal immigrants. Resistance to immigration in these states, understandably, is mounting. Soon after California officials estimated that the state was paying more than $1 billion per year for medical care for illegal immigrants, the state's citizens approved Proposition 187, a sweeping ban on service for illegals. California has filed a $10 billion suit against the federal government for costs associated with the federal government's failure to patrol the borders and enforce its immigration policy. School districts in California, Texas, and Florida spend large sums to teach the children of illegal immigrants--most of whom pay no property taxes. The school districts with the greatest burden are usually those whose American taxpayers are the poorest. It is hard to defend a national policy that places the greatest demand on the poorest citizens of these three states.
Through most of its history American culture has been majority white-European and minority African-American. Racial tensions between these groups, originating in slavery, are at the root of America's deepest social problems. The U.S. government began deliberately to change the country's ethnic mix in 1964. For the previous half century, immigration policy was skewed in favor of further European immigration. From 1964 on America's legal immigrants have been 80 percent Asian and Latin American. The illegal immigration flow has also been heavily non-European. Good, bad, or indifferent in its effects, what is happening now because of this shift represents an engineered change in the racial composition of a country--an experiment very few other societies have willingly undertaken. Most Americans are reluctant to discuss this issue in public. Yet Pat Buchanan's success suggests that the concerns remain just beneath the surface. They are compounded by fears of linguistic separatism, mainly driven by the expansion of a Spanish-language culture in Florida, Texas, and California--and driven also by increasing tensions between American blacks and the Hispanic or Asian immigrants with whom they often compete for jobs. America is a more absorptive society than most. But perhaps even we should proceed slowly and resolve existing racial difficulties before inflicting more changes upon ourselves.
Perhaps the people who are worried about too much immigration are seeing things backwards. America's native-born population is aging rapidly. Two generations ago there were eight working-age Americans to support each retiree. A generation from now the ratio will be barely two-to-one. Most immigrants are working-age rather than very young or very old. They have a higher birthrate than the native population, and that keeps the working population growing. America's vigor depends on vigorous Americans, so let's be sure we keep up the supply.
Option A:
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