Observations from the Edge
Robert T. Nanninga
Buzz Publications
May 31, 2007
Jon Bell of Vista, emailed me last week telling me I was right and
wrong about the U.S. Occupation of Iraq and requested I “take
pen in hand and address a more pressing and dangerous issue. That is
the impending Federal legislation (S.1348) that would give INSTANT legal
status to 12-20 million lawbreaking, invaders of US sovereignty. You
should demand the Federal Govt throw the illegals out of the US and
encourage your readers through letters, emails, faxes to their elected
reps do the same.”
O.K. First of all, I don't use a pen to write this column, I use a
computer. And second I would never demand the federal government throw
the illegals out because I think the federal government is the problem.
The “Secure Borders, Economic Opportunity & Immigration Reform
Act of 2007” (S.1348) is no different.
It's hard for me to get worked up about immigration, legal or otherwise.
Sure there needs to be immigration reform, yes, a closed border is impossible
to achieve and maintain, and over population unemployment and social
inequality are a huge issues that must be addressed. Also clear is how
the US federal government enables the status quo to continue to suit
the needs of their corporate masters in spite of various calls for changes
to immigration policy.
Looking to Washington for remedy, is as futile, as it is self defeating.
A California separatist I am more interested in what Arnold Schwarzenegger
is doing to mitigate the unending influx of non-Californians, and their
impact on limited resources and our tenuous quality of life.
That said, I figured I could find find 500 words to wax philosophical
about U.S. Sovereignty, federal mendacity, and the importance of writing
local officials.
In the past, when I have written about immigration it was usually regarding
the ecological destruction resulting from failing attempts at border
security. Habitat destruction due to border traffic, human and vehicle,
border patrol and military exemptions from environmental regulation,
and anthropogenic barriers blocking animal migration, are my cup of
tea.
The task before me however is to address the federal government failing
to enforce it's own regulations, and the granting immigration amnesty
to millions of law breaking foreign nationals. My question is, if workers,
employers, congressional representatives, and the Bush Administration
don't adhere to current border regulations and immigration policy, why
would a rational man expect anybody to adhere to S.1348?
Clearly cheap labor and corporate profit are the motivating factors
in the land of immigration politics. And since corporatists control
all 3 branches of the US government, where is the evidence any amount
of organized protest would alter the strategically mismanaged bureaucratic
nightmare encompassing the Mexican/American border?
Then there is the question of US foreign policy in Latin America, and
what part the US government has played in creating the economic hardships
faced by the people of Mexico and Central America nations such as Guatemala.
Personally, I am of the opinion that as long as there are people looking
for food and fresh water, migration will continue, legal and otherwise.
I also believe overpopulation is the real issue. And only the weather
will change.