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"Illegal" Immigration Is a Phantom Problem by Marcel VotluckaI
Last
year I attended a sociology lecture which began with the professor
citing attacks upon minorities in the context of their struggle for
equal dignity in our society. He
cited Native Americans, Blacks, women, gays and lesbians, and Arabs and
Muslims as examples. Seizing
the moment, I raised my hand and suggested that immigrants would be the
next group targeted. Oh,
how prophetic my statement was! Not
five minutes before I began writing this essay, I watched a news
vignette about recently thwarted
Congressional proposals to prosecute "illegal aliens" as
felons, as well as the people who provide them with services. The
vignette also looked at activists who aim to embarrass people who hire
undocumented immigrants, going as far as to post their names and photos
on their website. Recent
campaigns and vigilante movements against immigrants, such as the Minuteman
Project, reveal much about Americans' attitudes toward the State and
the theology behind it. Most
people really do want to live in freedom, but at the same time many
people also have a deep need to be taken care of, coupled with a fear of
"outsiders," as it were. Human
nature is a mix of these conflicting individualist and collectivist
tendencies. The latter is
where absurdities such as nationalism, racism, sexism, homophobia,
xenophobia, socialism, and any number of "isms" emerge.
Politicians, being the savvy bastards they are, don't hesitate to
take advantage of this psychological quirk and turn it into yet another
marketing strategy to sucker more people into statism. Indeed,
immigration is only a "problem" for politicians eager to win
votes, not you and I. The
miracle of I
can think of no better example than How
many of them came to this country illegally?
Plenty, I'm sure. That
doesn't lessen their contributions one whit.
We live in an ever-shrinking world thanks to technology; there's
no logical reason why oceans and mountains or even different languages
and cultures need to hinder trade and commerce.
Likewise, there's no logical reason someone from another
geographical region should be prevented from emigrating to another.
What's the difference between a Chinese emigrating to After
all, borders are just lines on a piece of paper called a map, to be
obsessed over by presidents, dictators, and military men eager to
protect what they seem to think to be their own personal property.
In order to maintain their power, they have to stoke the
collectivist fires of racism and xenophobia:
They
invent stories of "outsiders" and "aliens" coming in
to steal our jobs (as if anybody has a natural right to a job). They
come up with tales of how they leech off our tax dollars (even as they
shower corporate welfare queens with handouts, opportunities for war
profiteering, and favorable legislation
that acts much like Robin Hood in reverse). They
spin yarns comparing immigrants crossing the Mexican border to an
invading army of potential terrorists and criminals (even though said
job-seekers are generally not aiming to blow up buildings--nay, that's a sport for, uh, red-blooded
Americans like Tim McVeigh). They
give shrill sermons condemning immigrants who do not give up their
cultural identity, who do not assimilate or at least learn English (as
if the immigrants' linguistic abilities had any bearing on their right
to settle down where they please). Worst
of all, they tell you to "buy American" (lest you hurt the
poor auto manufacturers who lack the cojones to adapt to the global
economy and earn American business, not take it for granted). Yet,
if individual rights mean anything, they include your right to go
wherever you want in order to seek better opportunities.
They include your right to buy or sell stuff with whoever will
trade with you. They include
your right to seek and earn
work. They include your
right to make free choices in the market.
Indeed, we all make such choices, big or small, significant or
trivial, every day. The
market is made up of the aggregate whole of all these choices, all this
bargaining and trading and exchange of ideas, products, services, and
information. This is not a
magical process; it's simply how society operates. This
is in spite of efforts by economically ignorant politicians and interest
groups to set up barriers to commerce and free immigration.
This is in spite of their efforts to control the market so they
can make it work for their own
ends. This is in spite of
their efforts to protecting and enriching themselves by robbing others
of their freedom. This is in
spite of their efforts to lock out foreigners out of paranoia that
American culture will somehow disappear.
That whole "borders,
language, culture" nonsense, for instance. Attacks
on immigration, legal or otherwise, are attacks on individual
rights, not to mention attacks on the market and a free society.
The only "aliens" we should be concerned about are
those unsavory, ignorant, and politically-connected folks to whom
freedom is an alien concept. In short, "illegal aliens" arouse their ire because they represent a force the politicos cannot control--a force that undermines their own ill-gotten power and replaces it with the power of the truly democratic free market. discuss this column in the forum Marcel Votlucka is a writer and freelance journalist from Queens, NY. He is a graduate of Stony Brook University, and is a frequent contributor to the Stony Brook Press and the Stony Brook Independent. He is currently finishing work a novella, Neverland: Voices From the Muslim Holocaust. |