Immigration and Liberty
By Walter E. Williams
PatriotPost.us
My sentiments on immigration are expressed by the welcoming words of poet
Emma Lazarus' that grace the base of our Statue of Liberty: "Give me your
tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free." Those
sentiments are probably shared by most Americans and for sure by my
libertarian fellow travelers, but their vision of immigration has some blind
spots. This has become painfully obvious in the wake Arizona's law that
cracks down on illegal immigration. Let's look at the immigration issue step
by step.
There are close to 7 billion people on our planet. I'd like to know how
the libertarians answer this question: Does each individual on the planet
have a natural or God-given right to live in the U.S.? Unless one wishes to
obfuscate, I believe that a yes or no can be given to that question just as
a yes or no answer can be given to the question whether Williams has a right
to live in the U.S.
I believe most people, even my open-borders libertarian friends, would
not say that everyone on the planet had a right to live in the U.S. That
being the case suggests there will be conditions that a person must meet to
live in the U.S. Then the question emerges: Who gets to set those
conditions? Should it be the United Nations, the European Union, the
Japanese Diet or the Moscow City Duma? I can't be absolutely sure, but I
believe that most Americans would recoil at the suggestion that somebody
other than Americans should be allowed to set the conditions for people to
live in the U.S.
What those conditions should be is one thing and whether a person has a
right to ignore them is another. People become illegal immigrants in one of
three ways: entering without authorization or inspection, staying beyond the
authorized period after legal entry or by violating the terms of legal
entry. Most of those who risk prosecution under Arizona's new law fit the
first category -- entering without authorization or inspection.
Probably, the overwhelming majority of Mexican illegal immigrants are
hardworking, honest and otherwise law-abiding members of the communities in
which they reside. It would surely be a heart-wrenching scenario for such a
person to be stopped for a driving infraction, have his illegal immigrant
status discovered and face deportation proceedings. Regardless of the
hardship suffered, being in the U.S. without authorization is a crime.
When crimes are committed, what should be done? Some people recommend
amnesia, which turns out to be the root word for amnesty. But surely they
don't propose it as a general response to crime where criminals confess
their crime, pay some fine and apply to have their crimes overlooked.
Amnesty supporters probably wish amnesty to apply to only illegal
immigrants. That being the case, one wonders whether they wish it to apply
to illegals past, present and future, regardless of race, ethnicity or
country of origin.
Various estimates put the illegal immigrant population in the U.S.
between 10 and 20 million. One argument says we can't round up and deport
all those people. That argument differs little from one that says since we
can't catch every burglar, we should grant burglars amnesty. Catching and
imprisoning some burglars sends a message to would-be burglars that there
might be a price to pay. Similarly, imprisoning some illegal immigrants and
then deporting them after their sentences were served would send a signal to
others who are here illegally or who are contemplating illegal entry that
there's a price to pay.
Here's Williams' suggestion in a nutshell. Start strict enforcement of
immigration law, as Arizona has begun. Strictly enforce border security.
Most importantly, modernize and streamline our cumbersome immigration laws
so that people can more easily migrate to our country.
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