Immigration reform that won't reform
By Wes Pruden
PrudenPolitics.com
The
righteous cheers and applause for the latest amnesty
schemes from the U.S. Senate and the White House
recall the famous gathering of mice convened to deal
with the cat. The cat was devouring the mice in
alarming numbers.
“What
we need,” said a wizened little gray fellow who
looked a lot like an overstuffed senator, “is a bell
for the cat. We can put it on his collar along with
his identification tag, though it beats me why
anyone would want to help a cat find his way home.
Then we can hear the tinkling of the bell when the
cat’s around. Then we can hide.”
All
the mice cheered and squeaked. “What a great idea,”
said one lean little mouse whose fur had gone gray
around his ears. He looked something like John
McCain. “Yes, yes,” echoed a mouse with a certain
Carolina accent. “Let’s do it now.”
The
chairman, a fair-minded fellow, asked for further
comment.
“No,
no, no” a mouse shouted from the back row. “No more
talk. No more delay.” Another mouse, an editor from
the Mall Street Journal just arrived from a two-hour
business lunch at Chez Dumpster, with tiny crumbs
still lodged in his whiskers, cried out: “Vote!
Vote!”
And
so they did, with only one dissenting vote. All the
little mice screamed and cheered, mightily pleased
with themselves. All but one, a plump, noisy mouse,
a curmudgeon who looked like he might be a famous
radio talker. He shook his head sadly. “You’ve got
an interesting idea,” he said, “but who will bell
the cat?”
No
one spoke up. Silence fell across the room. Finally,
one by one, the mice drifted away, back to their
holes in the wall under the kitchen sink. The cat,
from his perch on the sofa, licked his lips, and
smiled true to the instincts of his Cheshire
grandfathers. Lunch would soon be served.
The
trouble with the grand schemes of mice and men,
meant to solve difficult problems in one great
sweep, is that they almost never work. The political
way to deal with the problem, much employed in
certain Washington precincts, is to smother it with
platitude, cliché, argle-bargle and caving in,
disguised as artful compromise.
Eight
senators, four Democrats and four Republicans,
produced what was hailed as the path to
comprehensive immigration reform, reform so
“bipartisan” and full of compromise that President
Obama, who has promised the cult a second term free
of all compromise, flew off to Las Vegas to make a
speech introducing his own reform that looked a lot
like Senate reform.
“The
agreement is a breakthrough,” observed the Wall
Street Journal, “because it includes compromises
from both Republicans and Democrats that, at least
in principle, address the main obstacles that have
killed reform in the past. The most politically
potent of those issues is what to do about the 11
million illegals currently in the United States.”
“Politically potent,” in fact, are the operative
words in the “debate,” such as it is. On one side of
the debate are the reformers, compassionate and
kind-hearted, and on the other are churls, bigots
and nativists. The compassionate and kind-hearted
want to keep the “cracking down” to a minimum, to
preserve an abundance of cheap and easily abused
labor. Mr. Obama and most of the Democrats are eager
to preserve an abundance of voters drawn to
welfare-state schemes. Some Republicans dream of
tapping into that abundance of welfare-state voters.
The
cruelest con in the schemes of Mr. Obama and the
senators is the so-called “earned citizenship.” This
would give “undocumented immigrants” a way to “come
out of the shadows” and “play by the rules” by
passing a background check, learning English and
“civics,” paying their back taxes and penalties, and
going to the back of the line to apply for
citizenship. These are requirements almost no one
could meet. The pointy-headed intellectuals (to use
an apt phrase from the past) who dreamed up this
scheme apparently never met anyone without tidy
savings on which to draw “back taxes” and
“penalties.”
Sen. Lindsey Graham. Photo by Frank Plitt.
Most
of the 11 million “undocumented immigrants,” as
we’re supposed to call illegal aliens, are unlikely
to have the thousands of dollars in back taxes and
penalties. Offering such an amnesty only mocks their
misery. The nation could use workable immigration
reform, but this ain’t it. Even a mouse can see
that.
Wesley Pruden is editor emeritus of The Washington
Times.