“Confiscatory compassion”, that’s what I think about as I follow the illegal immigration debate.
“I know this is an emotional debate …but we’re talking about human beings, decent human beings. Massive deportation of the people here is unrealistic. It’s not going to work.” President Bush, Irving California business group on illegal workers in USA. (4/24/06)
In the process, the US Constitution, is also being commodified, its principles of governance & citzenship treated on the basis of mere convenience.
Commodity- A thing that is of use or advantage. (American College Dictionary [1963]).
Unfortunately for its’ illegal immigrant community, the same complaint cannot be said where Mexico’s constitution is concerned.
See Mexico’s constitution and the principles of limited dignity it accords the immigrant community there.
http://www.ilstu.edu/class
Pity the human souls that find themselves traversing Mexico’s sovereign soil undocumented. Theirs is a nightmare of rape, pillaging, and sometimes murder at the hands of Mexico’s border authorities. According to the Associated Press:
MEXICO HARSH TO UNDOCUMENTED MIGRANTS
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/04/18/ap/world/mainD8H2M7100.shtml
True compassion, worthy of statesmen would extend to these ones. Otherwise the emperor hath no clothes, up and down the ladder, from the president down through the ranks of both democrats and republicans alike.
And the president’s performance on this issue is profoundly mediocre, and out of line with the strength and character he showed making the decision to go to war in Iraq. That was a moment of statesmanship, going against the currents of short-term political convenience in the interest of the nation.
Today is a moment of squandered opportunity to lead the American people in serious reflection over what our Constitution means to our way of life.
While the blood of our sons and daughters consecrate the soil of dictatorships around the world in the name of government of, for and by the people, we’ve been willing to trust this president, finding comfort and reassurance in the knowledge that ours is a freedom worth dying for.
Is this not a time to require of ourselves, and those who would make claims upon the goodness and character of this nation, a similar spirit of gravity and sacrifice in behalf of America’s founding principles?
Honoring the sacredness of the rule of law in this debate, making sure that it comes through undiminished, we the people of America feeling well-served by the principles of representative democracy--these are the pre-imminent values. In the eyes of everyday Americans the partisanship & special interest politics driving the Congressional and White House response is dismaying.
Therefore making American citizens at this time and in the context of the profoundness of the political discrepancies swirling throughout this crisis will prove to be prodigiously unwise, and destabilizing over the long-term where America’s body politic is concerned.
Deporting 11 million illegals is indeed unworkable, and our choices need not be so stark or hysterical in tone.
But the idea of dealing with 11 million people who are here illegally, in any definitive way in the near future remains fool-hearted & unwise. This problem did not come about over night, and its complexities defy a one-size fits all approach to handling it.
So that the thing to do for now is to come up with measures that will stabilize the situation as it is. Closing down the border on this side with a physical wall and adequate personnel is a start.
This start should emphasize shutting-off illegal immigration at the spigot: Mexico’s walls within, economic and social barriers in their culture and legal system where far too many members of their society exist in a bottomless pit of poverty, where the only way out is via illegal migration to America.
True representative democracy holds the same promise for the poor of Mexico and Latin America as it does in Iraq and over the long-term contributes to America’s national security interest.
Vashti
4/25/06