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If passed, the Bush-backed immigration
bill, penned by the unholy McCain-Kennedy-Specter trinity, will simply
turn a de facto immigration free-for-all into a de jure
windfall.
The plan to abracadabra 11 million (going on 20, actually) aliens
currently in the country illegally into “guest workers,” and then into
citizens, won’t change matters much. They’ll continue to enjoy the kind
of political clout the silent majority of middle-class Americans can
only dream of. The ban on hiring them was never enforced, so nothing
will alter on that front. Ditto the threat of deportation.
The American people’s elected representatives will persist in dreaming
up wealth transfers to these instant Americans, as they’ve diligently
done so far. As it stands, illegals are eligible for every benefit in
the book—and more. (As examples, consider the free tuition DREAM Act,
dreamed up by Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch. Or the taxpayer-subsidized
home loans, courtesy of FHA-HUD.)
Because these are unskilled, low-wage workers, taxpayers will keep on
supplementing and subsidizing every aspect of their existence (education
and health care), making
their cost far in excess of their contribution to the economy. The
"Parrot Press," led beak first by the Wall Street Journal editorialists,
Left-wing La Raza identity activists, churches, crasser corporate
interests, and the doyens of the Demopublican establishment—they’ll step
up efforts to stigmatize anyone who questions the contribution of the
minute-made Americans to economic and cultural life.
The president is unlikely to stop gushing about the vitality of
unskilled, non-English-speaking illegal immigrants, who also happen to
be
well-represented in the prison population. Nor should you expect him
to quit maligning Americans for those “Jobs they won’t do.” This is one
slur he is fond of repeating.
Contra Bush, various commentators have pointed out correctly that
Americans won’t do the jobs at the price illegals will. Their
argument is still woefully incomplete. For one, the vicious slander of
America's poor by open-border devotees is rendered more disingenuous
considering the minimum-wage laws. How can anyone say with certainty
that Americans are not willing to work for lower wages if the law bars
employers from hiring them at a market price?
By fixing the price of labor above the market rate or the employee's
productivity, minimum-wage laws always increase unemployment among the
poor and the unskilled. The jobs exist, but, government won’t let
employers hire American workers below an artificially set wage.
At the same time, lawmakers turn blind when the employer enters labor
agreements with illegal aliens, who also happen to be heavily subsidized
by the American worker. The "Camouflaged Amnesty" bill won’t change this
double standard, but will celebrate it.
It’s just another day, so if business isn’t quite as brisk with American
roofers, framers, drywallers, gardeners, truck drivers, burger flippers,
table bussers, and dish washers, employers will bid them “adios.”
Instead, they will petition the pimps in parliament to rig things by
guaranteeing an uninterrupted influx of potential workers. The former
will still be forced to abdicate one of their only real
constitutional duties: the prevention of a foreign invasion. But whoever
said it was not “Hard out there for a Pimp”?
Thus the supply of cheap labor is artificially inflated in perpetuity,
resulting in a phony market price, lowered further by the generous
subsidies taxpayers provide to illegals for the benefit of business.
Illegal immigration, in effect, constitutes a wealth transfer from
taxpayers to companies, by government fiat.
Incidentally, the free flow of people across borders is not to be
confused with the free flow of goods across borders. Free trade is a
positive-sum game. Contrary to illegal immigration, it is always
invited, consensual and hence mutually beneficial to the parties
involved.
Bush and his successors will carry on crying croc over the exploitation
of illegals. That too is familiar bunk. By working illegally in the U.S.
and reaping the attendant benefits of the American welfare state,
illegals improve their lot immeasurably. If they weren’t infinitely
better off than they were before, they wouldn’t take these jobs.
Such labor is cheap only to business and government, not to Americans
who must absorb the impact of immigration on their hospitals and
schools; on the environment and in the form of crime, rife in the
illegal community.
Whether the economy is better off for their labor is a debate nobody
will have. An interminable supply of such workers creates its own
economic realities, chief of which is a shift to labor-intense, rather
than innovation-oriented, forms of production. A never-ending supply of
cheap and unskilled workers actually retards the productivity and
progress of a modern economy by preventing mechanization and delaying
important breakthroughs, thus reducing competitiveness.
More importantly, the purely economic argument about the price at which
American workers will perform menial work is meaningless without a
reference to borders and to the thing they bound—a nation. Render
asunder the idea of a nation, make borders obsolete—and the world is
your labor market.
Bush has zero understanding of things metaphysical—and has no
appreciation for the bonds that unite members of a civil society in
common purpose. He brazenly contends that Americans won’t do certain
work. But he leaves out that they can’t afford to toil at a price that
is a function of an artificially created, ceaseless supply of
immigrants.
Bush’s Brave New Borderless World is at work here, not the invisible
hand.
© 2006 By Ilana Mercer
WorldNetDaily.com
March 31
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