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Bush More Right Than Wrong on Immigration

By Robert Scheer, Truthdig. Posted May 17, 2006.


What's different is that the president is, at long last, dealing with a subject he actually knows something about.

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These days, even when George W. Bush is right, he's wrong. Six years of deceitful defenses of disastrous policy decisions will have that effect on a president's credibility. It is good news that the public is finally hip to his con, yet it is worrisome when surprisingly sensible proposals by the president on immigration are automatically rejected because of the source.

What is different about Bush's stance on immigration is that the president is, at long last, dealing with a subject he actually knows something about -- as opposed to his failed war of words against terrorism, Iraq, nuclear weapons proliferation and even Social Security. On this subject, the former governor of a state with a 1,200-mile border with Mexico grasps that the problem is complex and the solution elusive and that fact and logic do matter.

Unfortunately, complexity doesn't sell. Not to the media, at least, which have largely lost the ability to parse serious issues. Nor are Bush's rabid Republican cohorts in the House and even some shameless Democrats willing to let common sense interfere with their exploitation of this emotional, explosive issue, which gets hyped up to crisis level every decade or so. It is to Bush's credit that he refused to join the stampede of the immigration hysterics and dared to suggest a reasonable compromise.

What Bush got right about serious immigration reform is the need to join two apparently irreconcilable but inevitably co-dependent goals: control of the border and amnesty for most of those already here illegally. While shunning the explosive A-word, he does propose legalizing the status of millions of illegal immigrants if they pay back taxes and fines.

"What I've just described is not amnesty, it is a way for those who have broken the law to pay their debt to society, and demonstrate the character that makes a good citizen," Bush said, in what is certainly one of his milder stretches of the truth.

This de facto amnesty would allow those already here without papers to go about their work and lives without fear of deportation. This is crucial, because the alternative is social chaos of a dimension not experienced in this country since the Civil War and Reconstruction. As Bush put it with uncharacteristic clarity: "It is neither wise nor realistic to round up millions of people, many with deep roots in the United States, and send them across the border."

Bush also knows from his days as Texas governor that simply sealing the border through military means would be neither wise nor realistic. Ever since it was -- let's be honest -- stolen from Mexico, Texas, like California, has prospered from a fluid border that serves as an economic safety valve. This is most glaringly obvious in the agricultural sector, where the current shortage of workers to perform the delicate work of picking and close-in hoeing is alarming the lords of agribusiness. The situation in manufacturing, construction, food processing, the service sector and the garment industry is similar.

The jobs that draw the immigrants will continue to exist, and it is in his failure to deal forthrightly with that magnet that Bush's immigration proposal dramatically fails. In fact, the best way to stem the flow of cheap immigrant labor is to substantially increase the minimum wage requirement to a living wage, and to deploy sufficient U.S. Labor Department inspectors to enforce it. At the very least, existing laws protecting workers must not continue to be ignored -- but Bush's speech contained no reference to enforcing the wage, working conditions and occupational safety laws on the books that might make those jobs more attractive to workers here legally.

Bush's two specific proposals in this regard, a guest-worker program and tamper-proof identity card for those workers, represent Band-Aids rather than the harsh medicine that exploitive employers should be compelled to swallow. Guest workers are by definition indentured servants, prevented by law from using the power of free labor, including the power to strike for higher wages. And ID cards, if not universal to employees in the United States, will become a discrimination nightmare.

What is needed is a free market for labor in which workers with clearly defined and protected rights bargain for full payment for their worth. If the working conditions and pay rise to the level that they become attractive to workers here legally, then the market for undocumented workers will dry up and border controls can function relatively efficiently. If not, the border will simply remain porous, and employers like Wal-Mart will continue to exploit cheap labor, as is their custom.

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Robert Scheer is the co-author of The Five Biggest Lies Bush Told Us About Iraq. See more of Robert Scheer at TruthDig.

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6 years, and Bush finally hits a moderate tone.
Posted by: lamar on May 17, 2006 2:57 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thanks for the good analysis. I have been surprised that more moderates haven't said they finally, after 6 years, agree with the president on something. Of course, his plan isn't perfect, but to hear him propose a compromise solution to any issue is a step forward. You highlight an important issue when you say that folks on the left have been cool to the prez's proposals because of the source. In the end, all this accomplishes is that the radical right gets its way (a la Alito, perhaps?)

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Bush is a Know Nothing.
Posted by: douglashoyt on May 17, 2006 5:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Deploying troops to the border is another dumb idea coming from this administration. It will only inflame the Mexican government who are kind enough to be our biggest supplier of oil.

Not only does the minimum wage, and other benefits need to be mandated to business, but employers should be prosecuted if they hire, knowingly or not, undocumented workes.

Indeed, it would be smart for the USA government to start issuing a "national ID." The third world is on the way, and the people of this nation should prepare for the onslaught.

(Yes, and I am aware that there are many other things we should have done years ago.)

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» RE: Bush is a Know Nothing. Posted by: saywhat?
FTR
Posted by: doremi on May 17, 2006 7:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The southwest never 'belonged' to Mexico. It was invaded, conquered, stolen from the Native Americans and divvied up via Spanish land grants by the Spanish government (ie, the other European white folks) who also took control of Mexico via the same tactics. If we have no 'claim' to the area then neither do they.

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» RE: FTR & FACT Posted by: symcokid
Shrug
Posted by: Longdream on May 17, 2006 7:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We're supposed to be impressed because it wasn't out and out idiotic? Sorry.

Talk's cheap.

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Thomas Palley
Posted by: DaveB on May 18, 2006 12:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... has a great column on this topic: http://www.thomaspalley.com/?p=47

Substantially in agreement with Robert Scheerer, but with a little more detail.

I am interested in the number of liberals with retro ideas on immigration. Shows we have a lot of growing to do. It will be painful.

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"What is needed is a free market for labor"? No, what is needed is a trial for treason.....
Posted by: cry0fan on May 18, 2006 3:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
....for traitors like Scheer. Neoliberal propagandists like Scheer are killing thousands of American citizens every year with this rat race to the bottom which is caused by mass immigration, which causes lower wages for the working poor. Also because of this mass immigration, the poor are not able to afford health insurance, so they are dying.

I call on the Justice Department to indict Scheer for murder and treason.

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S2611
Posted by: robchapman on May 18, 2006 3:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The afternoon before Bush's speech on border security Senator Kennedy introduced Senate bill 2611.
This bill met the five criteria that the President spelled out and does not militarize the US-Mexico border.
S 2611 offers a progressive alternative to the harsh and vindictive terms offered by the GOP majority in the House.
It is still questionable whether the House version should ever be validated by being brought to conference, but if anyone asks what progressives stand for, they can read S2611.

Robert Chapman
Lansing, New York

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base suppression
Posted by: lamar on May 18, 2006 2:28 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Only 12 comments, huh? Looks like Bush's somewhat moderate speech was effective in suppressing the left's ire.

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La lucha cida
Posted by: dix on May 18, 2006 2:51 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sheer and others including Bush and Kennedy miss the most basic point. "Compromise" with injustice is not possible. Solomon established this. It has been said many times but bears repeating, for many of the "illegals" they did not cross the border, the border crossed them. Whether recently or generations ago the effect is that families are arbitratrily split by an abstract line. Families are forced to use coyotes because the current system can make family members excluded. Besides, "illegal" is what you can convince a judge. The execution of Socrates was "legal". The Holocaust was "legal". No one is illegal for accident of birth.
A note to douglashoyt. Mexico is not america's biggest supplier of oil. Canada is. And to doremi, it is the native americans we are talking about. But that includes the Mexican americans and their descendants.

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gypsy56
Posted by: gypsy55 on May 18, 2006 5:25 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
like it's the author's fault we, as americans, suffer from slumping wages and no health care....take a look at who is in power and the giveaways to corporate America (Halliburton as a perfect example)
it is a habit of the greedy guts and ungenerous to scape goat the under dog-the mexicans are simply trying to survive within a broken system which allows people with out wealth and power to be fully taken advantage of...(more working poor americans are depending on food banks to meet their basic needs-corporate CEO's are making 400 times the salaries of the workers providing their salaries)... slap huge fines on the corporations for not paying at least miumumm wage thus eliminating record profits made on the backs of minorites and the poor...
support the reinsurgence of unions...they aren't perfect but do set a benchmark for wages and benefits...it's about group solidarity and saying no to abuses and working class poverty...profiting from others suffering is unreligious and unamerican...
the workers from mexico are trying to survive...after being victimized byNAFTA and CAFTA and scapegoated for low wages in the united states-the bottom line is always about money and corporate america who has bought this government-lock stock and barrel...
don't worry about this writer...worry about the failure of our checks and balancd system to protect us from the man and corporate greed...

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No, Bush's half-right doesn't make him all right
Posted by: cthelyt on May 18, 2006 9:10 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To deal with "illegal immigration," meaning mostly of the brown-skinned variety (just as the "refugee problem" of the 1930s was code for unwanted Jews trying to escape Nazi Germany), Bush left out the reason that the immigrants choose to risk everything and leave all they know and love. That reason is economic security and prosperity for themselves and their families. The so-called free-trade policies and treaties such as NAFTA, CAFTA, and GATT, as well as the demands placed upon developing countries by the IMF and the World Bank, have destroyed the local economies that otherwise would have provided livelihoods for many people who choose to emigrate. Until local economic development and self-sufficiency are encouraged rather than eradicated, desperate people will leave certain ruin in search of possible security time after time.

So, with all due respect to the author, I have to disagree. Bush doesn't get it right if he doesn't undo NAFTA and CAFTA and rein in the IMF and the World Bank's loansharking. Of course he won't do the right thing, because it's so much easier and much more traditional to do the racist and imperialist thing.

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Higher wages w/o stronger borders = more illegal immigrants
Posted by: Krotos on May 20, 2006 6:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The jobs that draw the immigrants will continue to exist, and it is in his failure to deal forthrightly with that magnet that Bush's immigration proposal dramatically fails. In fact, the best way to stem the flow of cheap immigrant labor is to substantially increase the minimum wage requirement to a living wage, and to deploy sufficient U.S. Labor Department inspectors to enforce it.

I'm not sure that I follow this logic. If wages are increased, but the border is not strengthened, wouldn't that simply give illegal immigrants more of an incentive to come here and compete with Americans for those jobs?

I certainly agree with the living wage idea, but it seems to me that strengthening the border is necessary too, if one's goal is to improve the lot of the American worker. Otherwise, as is the case now, there will be a surplus of labor for low-skilled jobs. That means either lower wages (in a free market for labor) or job shortages (if wage floors are imposed).

-K.Ai.-

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Scheer Not Snow As The New WH Press Sec
Posted by: pelle_in_goal on May 20, 2006 4:57 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What a load of....

Bush needs to fix NAFTA. Better yet, he needs to get rid of NAFTA and reform tarriffs and trade with China.

If the US "stole" Texas from Mexico, then China is "dumping" goods on the American market that are made by people paid less than a subsistence wage. These acts were -- or are -- motivated by the same unmitigated greed.

Our current trade arrangement with China is the ultimate reason people keep risking their lives to get across the border. No country can compete with a police state that rules the world's largest work force with an iron fist. Worse, China is still a Stalinist state that can pay most workers in peanuts.

Scheer also supports having undocumented workers pay back taxes and fines as part of an "amnesty" program? Is he kidding? Nothing discriminatory about that as a solution to the illegal immigration problem.

Bush is banging away at illegal immigration because it's the last issue he's got to divide and conquer the American people with. And it's somewhat sickening that Bush may actually have success in exploiting something that -- coincidentally -- evokes a visceral reaction on the part of many. Other than that his Presidency is DOA.

Existing laws are already in effect to curtail the flow of people seeking economic betterment. Undocumented workers are undocumented because Bush's GOP Pioneer employer friends keep buying off immigration investigators -- and their superiors. Meanwhile, Bush keeps sending Congress budgets that cut funding to what's left of the INS.

All Bush learned in Texas was what makes a real "Pioneer." That's why Scheer would make a great press secretary for Bush. We already know what Snow knows. Some may be fooled about Scheer's closet neo-conservatism becasue he writes for the Left, but right now Scheer's the Best PR for Bush that money can buy.

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