Immigration Reform Plan Is A Farce
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- A bipartisan group of senators has just lit a soggy fuse under the
immigration debate. The statement of principles tabled by four senators from
each party is such an impotent byproduct of compromise that calling it
bipartisan is redundant. This manifesto of mediocrity fails to address the
biggest immigration problems facing America -- starting with the question of
"Why?"
Does anyone ever ask WHY there are so many illegal immigrants in America? While
it's understandable that foreign citizens want to come to America for the great
opportunities, why do so many of them insist on doing it illegally? Maybe -- and
I speak from personal experience -- it's because the system has become so
complex that only a highly paid immigration lawyer or consultant can navigate
it. Why isn't there anything in this new proposal (or anywhere else)
acknowledging that one of the reasons why people circumvent proper procedure and
instead take their chances by overstaying a visitor's visa or jumping the border
is because doing things legally is cost-prohibitive and far too complex? What
should be just a process has grown into an entire industry.
I have immigrated to both the U.S. and France. In moving to America as a
professional with a job offer in hand (and later in renewing my status), I
almost broke the bank on legal and processing fees. At one point, I felt as if I
was working just to pay my immigration costs. In France, it was a snap to do all
the paperwork myself, and the cost of the initial application and subsequent
renewals is reasonable.
Here's the French rationale: If we make the process easy and inexpensive, then
almost everyone will willingly do things legally. The entire application process
for immigration to France takes place at your local police detachment, which is
part of the Interior Ministry (the French equivalent of the Department of
Homeland Security). Therefore, there isn't a good excuse for someone to neglect
to immigrate legally -- unless you're a criminal who has a natural aversion to
police detachments.
France certainly has its own immigration problems, but they're tied primarily to
official policy being too lenient, as well as to France being at the behest of
the immigration policies of other eurozone countries.
The regularization of illegal immigrants living in the U.S. should start with
the simplification and streamlining of a ridiculously bloated bureaucratic maze
that serves no purpose beyond acting as a life-support system for immigration
lawyers. Then you'll see who's really a criminal and who simply doesn't have the
resources to afford the costly and complex paperwork.
Various other countries have begun to realize that immigration reform is
significant in shaping the sort of country you want. So it's a mystery why the
new Senate proposal recommends clearing family reunification immigration
backlogs or facilitating an unskilled worker program when it should be focused
on building America's competitive advantage.
In this highly competitive economic climate, why would America want to import
immigrants whose sole qualification is being related to other people already in
America? Why focus on filling low-skill jobs that teenagers could be doing to
pay for their college education instead of tweeting and Facebooking all day?
Here's another idea the Senate committee might want to consider before foisting
another masterpiece of uselessness on the American people:
Countries such as Canada, Russia and France require language testing for
immigrants. Canada requires it for both skilled and unskilled immigrant workers.
France demands that immigrating foreign spouses learn French before even
arriving, and that immigrant professionals and skilled workers take French
language and culture classes for up to 400 hours upon arrival. Russian Prime
Minister Dmitry Medvedev's government proposed a new bill earlier this month
mandating that all migrants with the exception of highly skilled professionals
be required to pass basic Russian language, civics and history tests. Medvedev's
rationale is that not being properly integrated "leads to conflicts and crimes."
I don't know why requiring these basic standards should be so controversial or
outrageous. How arrogant or oblivious would you have to be to wash up on the
shores of a country in which you can't communicate and have nothing significant
to contribute and not expect to become a burden on those around you?
According to Russia's RT News, Medvedev went further in saying that the focus
needs to be on luring skilled professionals and building a "civil workforce." He
responded to accusations of "discrimination" by saying that "it's absolutely
normal. Such a practice exists in the majority of foreign countries. At least in
countries that care about their future."
Can the practitioners of aggressive compromise in this bipartisan committee
honestly say that their limp offering is in their nation's best interests?
COPYRIGHT 2013 RACHEL MARSDEN