In the wake of the murder in San Francisco of a father and his two sons, ages 20 and 16 years old, by an illegal alien, Mayor Gavin Newsom blamed his city’s illegal alien sanctuary policy on our “broken immigration system”. If our immigration system weren’t broken, argued the mayor of the city that kicked off the sanctuary movement back in 1989, we wouldn’t have needed to break federal immigration laws in the first place.
Oh, those wacky San Franciscans.
Nevertheless, Washington, stung into action by the rebellious teenagers running San Francisco, did eventually decide to fix the nation’s broken immigration policies. The nation’s capital stepped back and surveyed the mountain of brokenness.
Let’s see. Which broken part of immigration policy should we fix first?
Should we fix the broken refugee part, which has spawned a refugee resettlement industry in this country that’s paid by the head?
Or should we fix the broken labor and employment visa part, the SD2, H-1B, R51, T51, E14, H-1C, SM4, E11, H-2A, E22, SM1, E23, SM2, H-2B, L, O-2, E15, O-1, EW5, E32, P-1, P-3, E35, Q-1, T53, E31, SR3, T52, SJ2, E21, SR2, EW4, SR1, C53, SM3, SJ1, E34, SD3, E13, SD1, C51, P-2, H-3, EW3, E12, SM5, and C52 visas, which generally benefit a rich few at the expense of an insufficiently corrupt many?
Or should we fix the broken ethnic preferences part, which has members of ethnic caucuses in Congress coordinating legislative activity with foreign governments and running citizenship mills out of their district offices?
Or should we fix the broken chain immigration part, which is doubling US population within the lifetimes of today’s children on one hand, while radically remaking the country’s demographics on the other, both with entirely unpredictable consequences, both against the wishes of the majority of Americans, and both in direct contradiction to the promises made by the main architect of the policy, Ted Kennedy, senator from Massachusetts and recipient, it was announced Friday, of the Aguila Azteca, the highest honor Mexico can bestow on a foreigner?
Or should we fix the broken “anchor baby” part of immigration policy? Or the broken visa fraud part? Or the broken “free trade business immigration” part? Or the broken political asylum part? Or the broken welfare abuse part? Or the broken borders part? Or the broken secure ID part? Or the broken “sham marriages” part? Or the broken “birth tourism” part? Or the broken “diversity lottery” part? Or the broken “affidavit of support” part? Or the broken EOIR part? Or the broken AILA part? Or the broken PERM part? Or the broken VAWA part? Or how about even the broken “sanctuary city” part?
Well, with so many choices between what to fix, the Washington politicians, and the Washington influence-peddlers, and the Washington Post, and the Washington headquarters of the US Chamber of Commerce, and various other profiteers, parasites, and trough-squatters all got together in a big meeting (What, you weren’t invited?) to decide where to start.
After some influence-peddling in an amount appropriate to the size of the task, Washington came up with a course of action.
The Washington establishment’s fix for our broken immigration policies, the one significant action on immigration in Congress this year, turns out to be an effort to kill the one part of immigration policy that isn’t broken—the E-Verify program.
The E-Verify program is more than just not broken, in fact. The program is actually in the process of fixing a big chunk of our broken immigration system. But instead of one of the dozens of other broken, harmful, costly, and dysfunctional components of immigration policy Congress might have chosen, it’s the E-Verify program that’s on the congressional chopping block this year.
Meanwhile, the mountain of immigration brokenness that towers over Washington remains blithely ignored, while it grows higher and more immovable every day.
Oh, those wacky Washingtonians.
So we’re probably not going to get much from Washington in the way of fixing immigration policy any time soon. And though we’re probably in for a few more rounds of subversive foot-stamping, and moral grand-standing, and tragedies that could have been avoided, we’re probably not going to get anything helpful from San Francisco, either.
So, it’s up to those Americans in between, the ones clinging to their guns and their religion and fearful of people who don’t look like them, to pull the nation through, again, —to fix the mess Washington and San Francisco created.
It’ll be up to the general contracting company in Fort Collins, Colorado and the furniture maker in Suffolk County, Long Island, and all the other tens of thousands of American businesses that are now voluntarily using the E-Verify system to ensure they are following the law even when doing so puts them at a competitive disadvantage against competitors who hire illegally.
They are special, these employers, and their swelling numbers could save E-Verify, in spite of Congress’ best efforts to fix it.
Imagine how truly bold an affront it would be to these employers (and to the rule of law, if there’s any of that still around) if lawmakers in Washington dared let E-Verify die even as its use soared. Imagine how brazenly corrupt Congress would appear if it pulled the rug out from under employers playing by the rules; if it killed their best hope that, eventually, they’ll be able to compete again on a level and legal playing field in the Unted States.
But the momentum behind the E-Verify program is building, and, it’s to be hoped, will continue to build. If efforts catch on like those of e-VeriFILE.us, a new service that registers and identifies publicly employers who use E-Verify, if employers who play fair begin to be rewarded for it rather than penalized, the use of E-Verify will continue its explosive growth, and Congress won’t dare try to fix it.
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