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Squeaker Harry Reid, the
lame duck
Senate Majority Leader pulled the
DREAM Act amnesty off the floor of the US Senate
on Thursday, knowing he didn't have the votes to win. No
wonder. What a legislative abomination.
The
lame duck House has already proved how little it cares
for those who elected its members by
voting,
albeit
not all that impressively,
for the DREAM Act amnesty.
House Speaker Pelosi had expected a breeze vote, but it
squeaked with 52% vs. the 60% she predicted.
Many members from both parties simply didn't
show—eight Democrats and 11 Republicans.
Still, DREAM simply did not have the 60 votes it needed
in the Senate.
The
switchboards were flooded.
I tried repeatedly—even going through the home office
numbers of my Democratic Senators (I'm a donor!). But I
was told even there the
voice mail boxes
were too full to take calls.
Hey,
with so many
Americans out of work,
the citizenry had the time to voice their anger at the
chutzpah
of trying to give our country away to aliens.
OK, there is a case to be made for helping young aliens
brought here by their illegal alien parents. But the
DREAM Act is neither the forum nor the vehicle for
making a real, lasting solution.
In
fact, at this time of extended depression, why aren't we
having a
MORATORIUM
on all immigration, until the level of unemployment goes
to half or less of its present almost 10%??
As
columnist Alan Abelson of Barron's
recently noted,
the true rate of unemployment is 17% when the exiting
college students and those out of work for a long time
are counted.
I
took a couple of my young grandchildren to the famous
Civil War Battlefield
at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania last weekend. To me, the
Democrats' immigration drive seem a wild charge like the
one
General Pickett
made that fateful third day of that
historic battle.
If the South had won there, the USA might now be two
countries, one without the progress in civil rights
initiated then with a Northern victory—but still far
from fully achieved even today in either the North or
South.
So what should really happen now when the smoke of the
current wild charge abates? A real debate should start
with an immigration moratorium.
No-one seems to be talking about a moratorium
these days. But, hey, Mr. Obama, you accepted a two-year
layoff on the tax increases in your present deal, so why
not a two-year (or whatever) moratorium—followed by a
bi-partisan Commission for Defining Immigration Needs
and Legislation to report to Congress before that
immigration moratorium ends?
We could then decide, just to list a few obvious items,
on:
Unfortunately, so far the voices of the majority, the
constant 65% of all Americans who say we have too much
immigration, have not been listened to by either major
party.
As
the late California demographer
Meredith Burke
once opined, "If we are going to allow present policy to double America's population
in this century, shouldn't we at least have a national
debate about it?" Indeed we should.
Like those charging Rebs at Cemetery Ridge at
Gettysburg, the House vote on December 8th may yet be
seen as the "High
Tide"—and ultimately the failed end—of the lengthy
campaign to pass yet another amnesty.
But for now, today's deferral of the DREAM Act may not
be permanent. Senator Reid will try again. And this
time, he will flash the House-passed bill in front of
his battered colleagues.
Think
of the power of the elites massed against the American
people! A huge Democratic majority (although
some of them
right on about immigration), all these heavyweight
national elites like the
US Chamber of Commerce,
the
Roman Catholic Bishops,
the liberal foundations like
Carnegie, Ford and others
pouring huge money into flooding the country. And
somehow the DREAM Act is still not yet passed.
Could
it finally be that the Congress knows in its heart of
hearts that its
precious priority of electability
may be on the line? Another big amnesty is simply not
palatable. If this Congress should pass it and President
signs it, they may well be provoking their own further
dismissal in 2012.
If the tax proposal gets passed shortly, the amnesty
advocates have more time to work on those Senators now
saying "no".
Patriots were not able to kill the DREAM amnesty once
and for all today.
They must keep faxing and phoning and emailing.
Donald A. Collins [email him], is a freelance writer living in Washington DC and a former long time member of the board of FAIR, the Federation for American Immigration Reform. His views are his own.