Schumer Subcommittee Holds Rigged Amnesty Hearings. Joe Still Not Alarmed
On Thursday, April 30, The
Senate Subcommittee on Immigration, Border Security and Refugees
held its first hearings under the leadership of its new
chairman,
Chuck Schumer.
Judging from the session's defensive title,
it appears expectations are limited: "Comprehensive
Immigration Reform in 2009, Can We Do It and How?"
In an effort to get the answers it was looking
for ("Yes, we can" and "We'll achieve comprehensive
immigration reform by pushing the Obama administration despite
the overwhelming odds against us") the committee assembled a
panel of what it claims are experts.
As we learned late on April 30,
Alan
Greenspan, Former Federal Reserve Chairman and one of
the "experts" summoned, was off to the races as he has
been so many time—saying that illegal immigration makes "a
significant" contribution to the economy. And,
Greenspan added, legalizing the alien workforce would make
things even jollier.
My reaction: I give
Greenspan credit for brashness, given his starring role in
allowing the immigrant-fueled Minority Mortgage Meltdown morph
into the Diversity Recession. If I were Greenspan, I wouldn't
leave my house for the next ten years for fear I would be
assaulted on the street.
Greenspan is
totally unqualified to testify on any subject, most
especially if it has to do with immigration.
Anyway…
Because I understand the importance of your time, I will spare
you an individual breakdown of what each "expert" said in
defense of "comprehensive immigration reform"
a.k.a. Open Borders.
All their remarks are universally predictable, collectively
meaningless and we have heard them, in one form or another,
thousands of times.
Instead, I'll go to the more important matter of analyzing what
impact, if any, a small random group of citizen immigration
enthusiasts working in tandem with assorted Senate immigration
fanatics can have on the overall amnesty question.
But before proceeding, however, and in order to give you the
full flavor of the degree of deceit at work, you should meet
Greenspan's fellow panelists and review their pro-immigration
resumes.
-
J. Thomas Manger, Chief of
Police, Montgomery County, MD. Although Montgomery
County is
by
his own admission an illegal alien gang haven, Manger
has resisted implementing
287 (g)
because, according to him, it "undermines the trust and
cooperation of immigrant communities," and "is too
costly for most agencies" and also requires training that
"would significantly detract from the core mission of local
police to create safe communities."
[Contrasts
Emerge in Testimony on Immigration by Sebastian
Montes, Gazette.net, March 11, 2009]
-
Dr. Joel
C. Hunter, Senior Pastor, Northland Church and Member,
President's Advisory Council
on Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships, Longwood, FL.
Apparently,
Roger
Cardinal Mahony was unavailable. I never heard of Hunter but
figured that if he's a
church guy
and the committee is flying him up from Florida, he must be
bad. And so it turns out. Hunter is a popular
evangelical whose
mission is to get "…people from various backgrounds to
work together constructively rather than negatively."
-
Jeff Moseley, President and CEO of the
Greater Houston Partnership,
Houston, TX. A globalist whose organization
"serves as the primary business advocate for world trade,
economic development and public policy for the Houston
region." Moseley's firm is affiliated with
"Americans for Immigration Reform", an amnesty
advocacy group.
-
Doris
Meissner, Former Commissioner,
U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service and
currently a Senior Fellow at the
Migration Policy Institute.
A patriotic immigration lawyer—yes, there are a few—once
wrote to us
that: "the INS under the dreadful
Meissner was a Bolsheviki nightmare. They definitely
hated European Americans, European Africans, European Europeans,
European Asians, and European Latinos." Now that Meissner is
openly subverting America at
Migration Policy Institute, her Opens Borders fanaticism has
likely deepened.
-
Eliseo Medina, Executive Vice
President,
Service Employees International Union.
See if you can figure out where Medina's coming from. Medina was
born in Mexico, is a farm
worker's son, a former grape-picking
bracero and once a member of the
United Farm Workers board of directors. Furthermore, Medina
is credited with making the ultra-radical, illegal alien
dominated SEIU California's largest union.
-
Wade Henderson, President and
CEO, Leadership Conference on Civil Rights. See him
here
discussing
hate
crimes and the Jena Six.
- Kris Kobach, Professor of Law, University of Missouri—finally, a patriotic immigration reformer!
What a completely amazing group! Luckily for us, our good friend
Kobach is a
well-tested immigration war veteran. Otherwise, he might
feel out of place among the other seven Treason Lobby advocates.
Obviously, the Senate doesn't want a level field. Otherwise it
would have invited
Roy
Beck,
Mark
Krikorian or
Dan Stein.
All are
certified Beltway herbivores who would never say anything to
shock the politically correct and are only a quick Metro ride
away from the Dirksen Office Building where the meeting
convened. (Stein did weigh in through
a press release that called Schumer's panel a "kangaroo
court.")
So here we have a panel made up almost
entirely like-minded, amnesty-crazed people feigning a debate
about one of America's most pressing issues while presenting
their conclusions to the committee, another
stacked deck consisting of six open borders Democrats—Patrick
Leahy, Vermont;
Dianne Feinstein, California;
Richard
Durbin, Illinois;
Sheldon
Whitehouse, Rhode Island;
Ron Wyden, Oregon and Schumer, and
four Republicans—John
Cornyn, Texas;
Charles Grassley, Iowa;
John Kyl,
Arizona and
Jeff
Sessions, Alabama.
Of the ten, patriots can only count on Grassley, Sessions and,
most of the time, Cornyn.
But what credibility does the sub-committee and its handpicked
stooges have within Congress' broader spectrum?
The problems start at the top.
To begin with
Schumer,
who replaced
Senator Edward M. Kennedy as sub-committee chairman, is
considered a lesser light without his predecessor's political
skills. Even though "Schume," as some on the Hill
unflatteringly refer to him, has compiled an
immigration voting record that puts him in the same league
with Kennedy, his biggest fans express only guarded optimism
about his abilities.
Ali Noorani,
the annoying Executive Director of the
National Immigration
Forum, takes a particularly cautionary stance, damning
Schumer with faint praise.
According to Noorani: "No human could possibly fill the
shoes of Senator Ted Kennedy when it comes to his stewardship of
the immigration issue across decades of shifting political winds
and economic ebbs and flows, but we have high expectations for
Senator
Schumer nonetheless."
Remember,
Kennedy—the
Senate's beloved Kennedy—couldn't push amnesty through during
booming economic times. Why should we believe that a less
skilled pol like Schumer would be able to do it during a
financial meltdown?
Here's more reason not to get overly
agitated.
Recently
I
wrote that the revival of the
DREAM Act
represented a repeat performance taken from multiple failed
amnesty strategies in the past.
The Senate subcommittee hearings are a
page from that same book.
In 2004, then-President George W. Bush
urgently wanted to pass a Guest Worker program. A Sub-Committee
meeting assembled to address the topic: "Evaluating a
Temporary Guest Worker Proposal."
Then—as now—the odds against immigration
patriots were formidable. Of the ten who spoke only Doctor
Vernon
Briggs, Professor of Industrial and
Labor
Relations at
Cornell University, represented our position by calling
Bush's plan hurtful to American workers.
And Briggs had to go up against tough
opposition, including various Bush flunkies such as the General
Counsel, U.S.- Mexico Chamber of Commerce, the U.S. Deputy
Secretary of Labor, the Director of U.S Citizenship and
Immigration Services and another Migration Policy Institute
shill.
(For the traitors' names and all the other
gory details, read my column that summarized the event
here.)
Briggs was outnumbered 9-1, the economy
was strong and Bush, still in his first term, was riding high.
Despite it all, no guest worker legislation passed that year or
any year since.
Look—this is what the other side does
best. They convene meetings, make noise, get massively
uncritical press, bully, pontificate, scold, threaten and
berate.
But
they lose. In fact, the last victory of any kind that the
amnesty crowd scored was
in 2000 on LIFE Act, a roll over of the now virtually
forgotten
245 (i)
No one is more frustrated and irritated
about their antics than I am. I'm post-retirement age and should
be in my
test kitchen or studying
baseball
statistics.
I know though, that if
VDARE.COM and other patriotic immigration reform groups went
away, we'd be steamrolled within a year.
So my columns continue. But after more than twenty years of fighting to save my country from being overtaken by mass immigration, I know when to be alarmed. I'm not alarmed Schumer and his lackeys—yet.
Joe Guzzardi [email him] is a California native who recently fled the state because of over-immigration, over-population and a rapidly deteriorating quality of life. He has moved to Pittsburgh, PA where the air is clean and the growth rate stable. A long-time instructor in English at the Lodi Adult School, Guzzardi has been writing a weekly column since 1988. It currently appears in the Lodi News-Sentinel.