|Norm's
Main Page|

Click on above picture and sign
up for Ron
Paul's
FREEDOM Watch e-mails
Ron Paul is now running for
President in 2008
Amnesty
Opponents Are Not Un-American
June
11, 2007
Although
action in the United States Senate this week has slowed
passage of the amnesty bill, it is not yet dead as President Bush
remains committed to this approach. That is why the President
recently suggested that those of us who oppose amnesty for illegal
immigrants are unpatriotic. Those of us who strongly oppose the
new
immigration reform bill before the Senate “don't want to do what's
right for America ,” the president said. I reject that assessment
as unfair and inaccurate.
Supporters of the amnesty bill like to claim that border protection is
their first priority. But if enforcement of our borders is the
highest priority, certainly a much shorter bill could have been
written. Even better, why not enforce existing laws?
According to
our Constitution, Congress makes the laws that the executive branch is
to enforce. The rush to pass this new law seems to obfuscate this
simple fact. There are plenty of laws already in place, so it
seems
sensible to largely solve this problem without new laws.
To make matters worse, as I wrote in a recent column, some 120 of our
best trained border guards are going to be sent to Iraq to help them
with border enforcement! In addition, National Guard troops
participating in Operation Jump Start on the Mexican border are
scheduled to also be sent to Iraq and Afghanistan .
This legislation purports to crack down hard at our borders, but as we
have learned time and time again, you cannot address enforcement until
you address incentives. That is why you cannot have border
security
with an amnesty program in place: the incentive of amnesty undermines
any crack-down on border protection and in fact just makes work for
our Border Patrol all the more difficult. Incentives in place to
those who would come to the United States illegally will remain in
place if this legislation is passed. Illegal immigrants will
still
receive federal assistance and free medical care and their children
will still gain automatic citizenship after this bill is passed.
We
need to face the fact that securing our borders means more than
legislation, or fences, or even more Border Patrol. It means
removing
incentives for people to come to the US illegally in the first
place. That is why I will once again introduce an amendment
to the
Constitution to end birthright citizenship this coming week.
Although the “reform” of immigration in the amnesty bill is enough to
cause alarm, other highly troubling provisions are tucked away that
will serve to undermine our sovereignty and weaken our civil
liberties. According to the most recent version of the Senate
bill,
the misnamed Security and Prosperity Partnership for North America is
to be “accelerated.” It seems ironic that a project aiming to
actually weaken US borders with Mexico and Canada would be added
into a bill that purports to toughen border controls.
Also, this bill will bring us closer to a national ID card, which
without a doubt runs counter to American values and history and will
punish American citizens without doing much to counter those who would
come here illegally.
I strongly disagree with the president that opposing this legislation
is unpatriotic. I believe we have an obligation to reject any
legislation that promises amnesty to those here illegally, and that
undermines the sovereignty and privacy of American citizens