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September
20, 2006
Amnesty and
the Welfare State
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
Last
week I spoke about simple steps Congress should
take to address the problem of illegal immigration.
Simple, however, does not mean easy. While the
American people are demanding real immigration
reform, many in Washington lack the political will
to do what is required.
That's why I've joined my colleagues in the
House Immigration Reform caucus in demanding
legislation this year that focuses on securing
physical control of our borders while rejecting
amnesty in any form. Congress has taken notice, and
took an important first step last week by passing
the Secure Fence Act of 2006 -- legislation that
provides physical security by lengthening border
walls and creating a virtual border fence that
extends thousands of miles.
But many Senators, Representatives, and
administration officials remain committed to
pursuing amnesty in some form. The dictionary
defines amnesty as a general pardon for offenders
by a government, and most of the immigration reform
proposals in both chambers of Congress certainly
meet that definition. Millions of people who broke
the law by entering, staying, and working in our
country will not be punished, but rather rewarded
with a visa and ultimately citizenship. This is
amnesty, plain and simple. Lawbreakers are given
legal status, while those seeking to immigrate
legally face years of paperwork and long waits for
a visa.
What message does this send to the rest of the
world? If we reward millions who came here
illegally, surely millions more will follow suit.
Ten years from now we will be in the same position,
with a whole new generation of lawbreakers seeking
amnesty.
The immigration problem fundamentally is a
welfare state problem. Some illegal immigrants --
certainly not all -- receive housing subsidies,
food stamps, free medical care, and other forms of
welfare. This alienates taxpayers and breeds
suspicion of immigrants, even though the majority
of them work very hard. Without a welfare state, we
would know that everyone coming to America wanted
to work hard and support himself. Since we have
accepted a permanent welfare state, however, we
cannot be surprised when some freeloaders and
criminals are attracted to our shores. Welfare
muddies the question of why immigrants want to come
here.
Illegal immigrants also threaten to place a
tremendous strain on federal social entitlement
programs. Successive administrations support
so-called "totalization" agreements that allow
millions of illegal immigrants to qualify for
Social Security and other programs -- programs that
already threaten financial ruin for America in the
coming decades. Adding millions of foreign citizens
to the Social Security, Medicare, and disability
rolls will only hasten the inevitable day of
reckoning. Social Security is in serious trouble
already, and sending benefits abroad to millions of
illegal aliens who once worked here will cost
hundreds of millions or even billions of dollars.
Every American who hopes to collect Social Security
someday should stridently oppose totalization and
amnesty proposals.
The problems associated with illegal immigration
will not be solved overnight, but we cannot begin
to address them until we take the hard steps of
securing the borders, rejecting amnesty, and
reclaiming our right as a sovereign nation to
control immigration without apology.
Paul
Archive
Dr. Ron Paul is a Republican
member of Congress from Texas.
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