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Environmental lobbies abhor all by-products
of human existence, unless generated by illegal aliens. In that case,
the vast latrine and land fill created along the border with Mexico, as
millions of illegals defecate and despoil their way to their
destinations in the US, are just dandy.
To interfere with the natural formation of this outsized outhouse is to
“jeopardize the quality of life and beauty of South Texas.” Or so
implied the president of the National Audubon Society. He was protesting
the decision, late in the day, of Homeland Security Secretary Michael
Chertoff to “expeditiously install additional physical barriers and
roads at the border to deter illegal activity.”
Chertoff, a Bush boy—and therefore a Johnny-come-lately to the idea of a
border—has been under pressure from a few of the barrier’s congressional
backers. They worry that environmental restrictions would postpone
construction indefinitely. Quick on the trigger, the Sierra Club bleated
that the Bush administration was threatening “endangered species and
fragile ecosystems along the Rio Grande.”
That the human inhabitants along the border are
the worse for wear has never mattered much. Drug-trade related turf
wars between gangs, brazen assaults on border patrolmen by invaders
(often aided by American officials), and kidnappings—these are
considered eco-friendly.
Like environmentalists, politicians generally privilege flora and fauna
over folks. (NIMBYs excepted. Senator Edward Kennedy is a
not-in-my-backyard environmentalist: he opposes wind farms in Nantucket
Sound, offshore from his Hyannis Port compound.)
Thankfully, a handful of Congress members concluded that the tsunami of
trespassers is worse for the environment than the fence itself.
So they pressed on. On second thought, scrap that. This is an election
year. Republicans have probably figured out that if they fail to secure
the border, conservatives will stay home.
To that end, the Department of Homeland Security proceeded to waive
certain environmental laws for various project areas in California,
Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas, so as to begin completing, this time
apparently in earnest, the 700 miles of fencing mandated by the Secure
Fence Act.
The Act was forced on the ruling class in 2006 by a passionately
non-partisan American public, sick and tired of the farce on the
southwest front. Naturally, after the primping and preening that
accompanies the signing of a bill into law just prior to midterm
elections, the politicians promptly side-stepped the popular will.
Deadlines came and went. Two-tiered fencing morphed into a single tier,
and 700 miles were whittled down to 370, of which only between five and
70 were initially erected, as a token. Legal challenges from
environmental lobbies were indulged; and legal aid to the attorneys of
illegal aliens authorized. Brave border patrolmen were incarcerated for
refusing to fold like the fence.
If ever asked by the pulp-press (fat chance), Clinton and Obama will
respond as though the Bill of Rights has been suspended. It hasn’t. In a
free society, rooted in private property rights, land owners along the
border would have likely formed militias to repel trespassers from their
land. In an unfree society, it falls to the state to simulate that
protection, while compensating the few who reject it. Indeed, as the
Chicago Tribune has reported, “the waivers will not affect the legal
battles between the Homeland Security Department and private
landowners.”
Who knows how McCain—a recent convert to conservatism—might respond? I
have a vague idea how he should not respond: McCain might consider
modifying his mantra about illegal aliens being God's children to whom
he owes a path to citizenship. This is not about the Arizonan’s
relationship with God and His creatures; it’s about McCain’s
relationship with the Constitution.
The Constitution binds a president to uphold the law; it doesn’t
authorize him to legislate compassion. In the event he is elected,
McCain could very well choose to exercise the plenary power of pardon
granted to the president. But conferring political rights on millions of
scofflaws—that would be an enormous abuse of presidential power.
Crunchy cons and assorted Republicans for unfettered immigration will
concur with Hillary and Hussein in protesting even a temporary
suspension of the Environmental Protection Agency’s many fettering laws.
They should not be given the time of day. The EPA is an incontinent
legislator, as are most government departments.
That the government has used its discretionary waiver authority to
temporarily suspend a few of its countless “land management” laws, never
vetted by voters, is no tragedy. In fact, government should waive more
superfluous regulations if this means fulfilling its one
constitutionally mandated function: defending the nation’s borders.
The Constitution trumps the “rights” of critters.
©2008 By Ilana Mercer
WorldNetDaily.com
April 4
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