Immigration: divisive issue
In the last few days - as if fending off TEA Partiers and worrying about how new GOP wunderkind Scott Brown will vote isn't enough - observers see a rift in the Republican Party over immigration.
Two pieces have drawn my attention. One is an article by Peter Slevin in the Washington Post and the other comes through the Center for Immigration Studies as a Backgrounder by James G. Gimpel, who is a professor of government at the University of Maryland. Both look at immigration as an issue which could permanently relegate the GOP to minority status.
But the two pieces disagree on why. Slevin and the Post, no friend of conservative Republicans, blames the hardline stance of TEA Partiers who want the borders secured and illegal immigrants frogmarched out of the country. Conversely, the Gimpel piece simply notes that, "The decline (in GOP voting share) does not seem to be associated with the local Republican Party’s position on illegal immigration." Instead, the Gimpel study seems to indicate this has more to do with socioeconomic status and the state of politics where newly-arrived immigrants seem to congregate, large urban areas.
I've noted before that at the current time it's better to not lose the base the GOP has by being soft on illegal immigration than cater to a group who is more likely to vote with their meager pocketbooks and support all the government goodies they can get. It's going to be just as much up to the Latinos to bring themselves out of the ghetto that Democratic policies have placed them in as it is the black population's own job to get off of the plantation Democrats have placed them on. Those who have immigrated here legally have just as much - if not more - of a stake in stemming the illegal flow as native-born Americans do.
For over 200 years, history has shown that the best way to get ahead in America is to assimilate into its culture. Certainly we can celebrate our heritage (I sure like my Polish cuisine) but the route to success over time has been to emphasize the "American" part of the moniker much more heavily than the "Polish," "Mexican," or "African." In years past, immigrants were eager to shed their old ways and Americanize their first-generation offspring - now we only Americanize them insofar as striving to have them born in the United States to become "anchor babies."
If a nation is to survive for long, it must have clearly defined borders and be prepared to only allow in those it deems worthy of entry. While I know some of my associates in the political and blogging worlds believe totally in the idea of a free market which includes providing labor, that policy has to have limitations or it will lead to chaos.
Immigrants in our history came for opportunities, and these opportunities only came to those who worked hard and were willing to sacrifice their blood, sweat, and toil. Unfortunately, our system of entitlements has brought forth a different sort of immigrants, and while they remain a few bad apples in a bunch that is still willing to work hard for little financial gain, those bad apples sap the strength of the whole.
But while the TEA Partiers are falsely accused of having a strain of xenophobia, it's worth pointing out that the Gimbel study shows that ideology trumps race at election time among a larger and larger share of the minority population. Regardless of what the Republican Party does to attract minorities, it would never be enough for liberal Democrats to give them credit for trying. Just as we see in the black population, voting against their self-interest is becoming a problem for Latinos as well, and the immigration issue is just a red herring to the real problem of victimization practiced by poverty pimps of all colors.
Blaming the man for holding you down is a universal language.