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Pious Perverts See other Pious Perverts Articles Title: “Worse than A Crime—A Blunder”: Ron Paul’s Tragic Turnaround On Immigration Worse than A CrimeA Blunder: Ron Pauls Tragic Turnaround On Immigration By Washington Watcher Congressman Ron Pauls apparent entry into the presidential race will certainly be welcomed by many on the anti-Establishment Alternative Right. Pauls heterodox views on foreign policy and the Federal Reserve, along with his consistent opposition to government spending, had earned him an army of loyal supporters since before his long-shot presidential campaign in 2008. (Indeed, VDARE.com columnist and patriotic immigration reform leader Rev. Chuck Baldwin has just proclaimed: The Tea Parties Now Have Their Man.) VDARE.com wrote extensively about Ron Pauls mixed but interesting immigration record during the 2008 campaign, including an interview he did with Peter Brimelow. Back then we noted that he was generally good on the issues of amnesty, sovereignty, welfare for illegal aliens, and above all birthright citizenship (of which very few professional politicians had then heard). He was bad on E-Verify and Real ID. And his positions on legal immigration were disturbingly vague. But as the 2008 campaign wore on, it became clear that Paul had no idea how to use the immigration issue, with the result that the chameleon Mike Huckabee and the amnestiac John McCain (!!) regularly outpolled him among self-reported immigration patriotsgreatly to the disgrace of his campaign managers. Since the presidential primaries, Paul has been virtually silent. His post-campaign book, The Revolution, did not mention immigration at all. Pauls congressional websites platform for 2010 was identical to that for 2008. He called for increased border security, rejection of amnesty, an end to birthright citizenship, no welfare for illegals, and a vague true reform of legal immigration. On the legislative front, Paul has been Missing In Action. He voted against the DREAM Act, but has not co-sponsored any significant piece of immigration legislation. Now, at last, Paul has finally given a comprehensive discussion of his views on immigrationin his latest book Liberty Defined, where he lists his positions on fifty different issues. But what heor the left-libertarian faction that seems to have his ear/ byline after the strange death of Rothbardian paleolibertarianismactually says about the issue of immigration is a profound, and in fact tragic, disappointment. Ominously, Paul begins by trying to triangulate between the Open Borders Left and a non-existent restrictionist straw man. Thus his immigration chapter opens: There seem to be two extreme positions on immigration: completely closed borders and totally open borders. Bunk! No patriotic immigration reformer want a closed border. We want a secure borderwhere we control who comes in and does not. No-one wants to get rid of tourists, cross-border commerce, or even all legal immigration. We just want to keep out drugs, illegal aliens, and terrorists out, while limiting and selecting the inflow of legal immigrants. Pauls triangulation continues: Baloney! Far from offering a third way between the Left and Right, Paul sounds exactly like both Barack Obama and the GOP establishment: To his discredit, Ron Paul echoed Obama all the way down to the clichés about splitting up families and children without Mexican roots. But at least Obama and Gingrich didnt pretend that deporting illegal immigrants would require violating the Posse Comitatus Act. Paul, Gingrich, and Obama set up a false dichotomy. Most patriotic immigration reformers, certainly none in Congress, do not advocate for mass deportationsmuch less employing the army in the task. They simply argue that stepping up interior enforcement and sanctions against employers will encourage illegal aliens will go home on their homeattrition through enforcement. Additionally, it now turns out that Paul now opposes all employer sanction laws. He writes: Of course, E-Verify would get rid of the problem of employers having to deal with counterfeit identification. But Paul was one of just two Congressmen to vote against reauthorizing E-Verify. And how is asking employers to follow a very simple regulation compulsory servitude? Paul doesnt mind illegal aliens working anywayhe argues "Many claim that illegal immigrants take American jobs. This is true, but most of the jobs they take are the ones unemployed Americans refuse at the wage offered." Of course, a believer in free markets should understand that this is merely another way of saying American labor has been underbid. The real question: why should a Paul Administration ally with the owners of capital against labor, by increasing its supply? Particularly when immigrant labor is cross-subsidized by the taxpayer-funded welfare statea complication that Paul, like most modal libertarians, rarely address. (For that matter, modal libertarians never even acknowledge that a powerful libertarian critique of immigration has been developed, for example by Han-Herman Hoppe.) Nor, now, does Paul support interior enforcement. He comes out against SB 1070. He asserts: Pauls line about assassinating American citizens refers to the Obama administrations decision to deem Al Quaeda Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki an enemy combatant, whom the CIA can lawfully kill. Ironically, Al-Awlaki is an anchor baby born to Yemeni parents here on a student visa. He is currently working with al-Qaeda in Yemen. Whatever your views on Obamas terrorism policy, the concept of "reasonable suspicion "is not a "vague charge" made up by Kris Kobach and Russell Pearce in SB 1070. Police power to question individuals where they believe there is "reasonable suspicion" was established in the 1968 Terry v. Ohio case, and local police had been using this authority in criminal investigations long before then. SB 1070 simply applied this pre-existing standard, which was used by police in other crimes and federal immigration authorities, to local immigration enforcement. Along with Pauls imaginary calls for the US Army to round up illegal aliens, this analogy can only be seen as an intentional attempt to conflate basic interior enforcement with the most extreme hypothetical big brother violations of civil liberties. So if we arent going to have deportations, interior enforcement, employer sanctions, or amnesty, whats Pauls plan? He writes: Paul is right about one thing: after reading this, I am a member of the confused right. How does this proposal not create second-class citizens? And how is it better to have a mass of semi-legal immigrants in this country than not to have them here at all? Worst of all, Paul calls for increasing legal immigration from its present record levels. He writes: "With free markets and private property, a need for immigrant labor becomes obvious. Make it legal and easy with a generous visitor work program." And Paul attacks the motives of immigration patriots. Thus he claims that immigrants This is just immigration enthusiast anti-American myth-making. The reality: despite the fact that illegal immigrants and newly arrived legal immigrants are ostensibly barred from most means tested welfare, the Center for Immigration Studies reports that 57% of immigrant households with children are on welfarecompared to just 39% of native-born households (and 30% for native-born whites). And, disgracefully, Paul insinuates that there are racist motives behind immigration restriction. He writes: "It's hard to hide the fact that resentment toward a Hispanic immigrant is more common than toward a European illegal immigrant." (Link added.) This, again, is a completely hypothetical assertion. Some 77% of illegal immigrants come from Latin Americaand less than 5 % of illegal and 9% of legal immigrants come from Europe. There are a few good things in Pauls book. While he opposes Arizonas law, he does assert the rights of states to enact their own immigration bills. He calls for ending all aid to illegal aliens, including public education. (Greatbut how would it work, exactly?) He reiteratesalbeit in just one sentencehis opposition to birthright citizenship. Nevertheless, Liberty Defined clearly shows a shift towards open borders libertarianism by Paul. This is a truly saddening development. Why the shift? Paul is very principled man. He does not usually shift his core beliefs based on political expediency. But he has shown a willingness to wiggle on issues such as race and immigration, where he does not seem to have very strong beliefs one way or the other. Note that Former New Mexico Governor Gary Johnson has also thrown his hat into the GOP presidential nomination raceand he is promoting a more left-wing libertarian view on both gay marriage and immigration. Paul has a cult following among libertarian college students around his group Young Americans for Liberty. The majority of them dogmatically support open borders, as do most of the Beltway Libertarian Establishment. Thus Reason Magazines Shikha Dalmia explains her support of Johnson over Paul: It is possible that Paulor his handlers worry about these dedicated libertarians loonies defecting into the Johnson camp? Pauls shift on immigration could be a costly mistake. As he discovered in 2008, dedicated libertarian loony followers do not necessarily translate into popular votes. And the vast majority of Republicans support patriotic immigration reform. Recent polls show that Republicans want an Arizona style immigration law in their state by over a 7-1 margin. And they oppose birthright citizenship by over a 5 to 1 margin. Losing a few pot-smoking college students who might pass out campaign flyers between bong hits is not worth alienating these voters. Nor is the condescending tolerance of the MSM. Napoleons police chief Joseph Fouché famously said of the duc dEnghiens judicial murder: It was worse than a crime; it was a blunder. Ron Paul needs every vote he can get in his insurrectionary candidacy. In spurning immigration patriots, he has blundered.
Poster Comment: It's not a turnaround, just full disclosure.
Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 5.
#4. To: Prefrontal Vortex (#0)
RPs position seems a bit scattered. He'll have to clear things up and I'm sure he will.
If you stop subsidizing the education, housing, medical care of illegals and shut off their access to food stamps, welfare, etc., then you could have an open border and the number of persons crossing into the US would decline drastically.
#7. To: ratcat (#5)
(Edited)
This explains all the people of Norwegian descent in Minnesota and North Dakota. Darkie will always beat a path to the white man's door, welfare or not.
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