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Although open-border libertarians shelve
both their tolerance and their free-market economics when it comes to
immigration, it is well worth reminding these tinny ideologues that
individuals attach different value to things in the marketplace. Over
and above the joys of “cheap Tyson chicken and colorful cuisine,” most
Americans prize the ability to send their kids to English-only schools
and into streets and parks that aren’t drug and gang infested. They’d
also like to stop the tax base from collapsing.
Consequently, across America, from San Bernardino, Calif., to Hazleton,
Pa., small-town Americans and their representatives are struggling to
salvage communities ravaged by unchecked immigration.
Unwilling to wait for Washington, Mayor Louis Barletta of Hazleton
attempted to reclaim his town by passing local ordinances to crack down
on those who employ or rent to illegals. When he failed, The New York
Times celebrated the seismic setback. The editors—following the
presiding U.S. district judge, James Munley—accused the mayor of
usurping federal authority, as immigration is a federal responsibility.
In the impaired minds of the editorialists and the jurist reducing the
effects of the unstoppable influx amounted to undermining a duty the
federal government has refused to assume. Go figure!
In legalese, Barletta’s Illegal Immigration Relief Act was found to
conflict with the unenforced Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA)
of 1986, and, therefore, to be in violation of the Supremacy Clause of
the Constitution. Mind you, the Supreme Court itself has conceded that
not every “state enactment …which deals with aliens is a regulation of
immigration.” Still, Judge Munley went as far as to accuse Mayor
Barletta of not considering the “implication of his ordinances on
foreign policy.” On the one hand the mayor is charged with interfering
in federal affairs, on the other, with focusing too narrowly on local
matters. A manifest absurdity.
Reasonable people can debate the constitutionality of Barletta’s Illegal
Immigration Relief Act and other Ordinances; only sophists would depict
these as a usurpation of federal authority. What next? Banning the
neighborhood watch for busying itself with crime? Doesn’t that overlap
with state police activities?
In his objection to Barletta’s Act and Ordinances, the judge appealed to
the due process and equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment. But
here’s the rub. Originally, American federalism aimed to secure the
rights of the individual by imposing strict limits on the power of the
central government via a Bill of Rights and a scheme that divided
authority between autonomous states and a federal government. But the
doctrine of limitation of powers was badly damaged when the federal
government became the arbiter of individual rights.
This occurred when the 14th Amendment was ratified. Prior to the
(illegal) ratification of the 14th Amendment, the federal government had
no authority to enforce the Bill of Rights in the states. The Bill of
Rights, very plainly, did not grant the federal government any
powers, but placed limits on the federal government's actions.
The 14th reversed this scheme by placing the power to enforce the Bill
of Rights in federal hands, where it was never meant to be. As Felix
Morley observed in Freedom and Federalism, the 14th nullified
“the original purpose of the Bill of Rights, by vesting its enforcement
in the national rather than in the state governments.” Consequently, the
Ninth and 10th Amendments were sundered. As Barletta’s quixotic battle
makes plain, the federal government has subsumed all powers previously
retained by the people or the states.
Am I thrilled that to defend his town a mayor has been forced to
circumscribe renting and hiring? Not at all. Still less am I enamored of
the ACLU and the Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund usurping
a much-loved local leader, who is legitimately and faithfully
representing his constituents—Barletta has won both the Republican and
Democratic nominations and is a shoo-in for the November elections.
“The art of economics,” wrote Henry Hazlitt, “consists in looking not
merely at the immediate but at the longer effects of any act or policy;
it consists in tracing the consequences of that policy not merely for
one group but for all groups.” Hazlitt was encapsulating Bastiat’s
What-Is-Seen-and-What-Is-Not-Seen principle. While open-border
libertines love Bastiat’s elegant argument, they seldom apply it to mass
immigration, where these implacable enemies of America choose to see
only benefits. Thus, for every mound of cheap strawberries, there are
crops of criminals, failing schools, and folding hospitals. Having become
aliens in their hometown, Hazleton residents imagined that the
Constitution allowed them a measure of autonomy over how they lived
their lives. How wrong they were.
Next on the “Treason Lobby’s” path of “Abuses and Usurpations” is your
small town. Unless, like Louis Barletta, you heed the greatest Americans
ever to have risen in response to a “Government … having in direct
Object the Establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these
States…suspending our own Legislatures, and declaring themselves
invested with Power to legislate for us in all Cases whatsoever.”
©2007 By Ilana Mercer
WorldNetDaily.com
August 3
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