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Immigration
See other Immigration Articles

Title: Military DREAM Is a Mirage - 10 Years DREAM Recruits Not Worth 3 Months of Recruiting
Source: Center For Immigration Studies
URL Source: http://www.cis.org/krikorian/military-dream-mirage
Published: Dec 11, 2010
Author: By Mark Krikorian
Post Date: 2010-12-11 12:38:07 by HAPPY2BME-4UM
Keywords: None
Views: 186
Comments: 6

Military DREAM Is a Mirage

"10 years' worth of DREAM recruits wouldn't add up to three months' worth of manpower needs for the armed forces — and even that's pushing it, frankly."

The sponsors of the DREAM Act inserted what they clearly considered boob bait for patriotic Americans — a provision that qualifying illegal aliens (came before age 16, here at least five years, have a high school diploma or GED) could convert to permanent status and get a green card if they served two years in the military (as an alternative to two years of college). As Jim Edwards mentioned here yesterday, Clifford Stanley, the Undersecretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness, told reporters that DREAM is a "commonsense" and "obvious" way to increase recruitment:

"They're actually doing very well in our schools, many of them. They’re high quality," Stanley told reporters in a conference call. "As we look at our force now for the future, bringing in talented people in this cyclical nature of how our recruiting business goes is significant."

This guy is obviously a political appointee parroting the administration line, because he knows perfectly well this is malarkey. The Migration Policy Institute estimated that 31,000 illegal aliens — at the absolute outside — would get their green cards via military service (see p. 15 here). And that's over maybe a ten-year period.

That's not even a drop in the bucket for recruitment. In Fiscal Year 2010, which ended September 30, the Pentagon reports it recruited about 165,000 people for active duty (I don't remember if service in the reserves counts in any of the multiple versions of the DREAM Act).

That's an average of about 14,000 a month, so 10 years' worth of DREAM recruits wouldn't add up to three months' worth of manpower needs for the armed forces — and even that's pushing it, frankly, since many of the DREAM beneficiaries would have GEDs, which the military generally doesn't accept.

Others would be rejected because they don't speak English; MPI reports that 12 percent of those qualified for the initial, conditional DREAM status and who already have high-school diplomas or GEDs speak English not well or not at all. (Let me repeat: one out of eight young illegal aliens who have grown up here and have a high school completion credential can't speak English.

So much for being Americans "in all but paperwork," as the DREAM advocates like to put it). What's more, those scoring in the bottom 20 percent of the spread in the military IQ test are barred by law from enlisting, while the next 20 percent are limited to a very small number.

Finally, the radical-left groups have long been outraged that the military option is even there and will be actively working in immigrant communities (where they have a significant base) to dissuade people from recruiting.

In short, the argument that Republicans need to support the DREAM Act because the Pentagon wants it is complete hogwash. Even if the military wanted to foreignize our armed forces as way of keeping labor costs down (as Max Boot has suggested), DREAM wouldn't fit the bill.

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#1. To: All (#0)


Map showing Mexican territory in 1917 (dark green), territory promised to Mexico in the Zimmermann telegram (light green), and original Mexican territory (red line).

U.S. Constitution - Article IV, Section 4: NO BORDERS + NO LAWS = NO COUNTRY

HAPPY2BME-4UM  posted on  2010-12-11   12:46:49 ET  (1 image) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: All (#1)

DREAM On

By Mark Krikorian
December 2010

Op-eds and Magazine Articles

National Review Online, December 1, 2010

The amnesty-for-illegals crowd has found some sympathetic poster children.

Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi have pledged a vote as early as this week on the DREAM Act (Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors), a bill that would legalize illegal aliens who arrived here before the age of 16 and who comply with certain educational or military-service requirements.

The core principle behind this amnesty proposal is that it is aimed at those who have grown up here and are, psychologically and emotionally, Americans. In the words of America’s Voice, a hard-left open-borders group, the beneficiaries of the measure are “patriotic young Americans in all but paperwork.”

There’s no doubt that this is the most sympathetic group of illegal immigrants. That is precisely why DREAM has been dangled as bait for the more general amnesty proposals described as “comprehensive immigration reform,” with amnesty advocates brandishing the situation of these young people as justification for a broader amnesty. (Though no one seems to have stopped to ask: If such a comprehensive bill would provide amnesty for all illegals, then why would we need DREAM?)

Nonetheless, now that the amnesty crowd has belatedly decided to move ahead on DREAM as a standalone measure, many in the public and Congress are open to the idea of addressing the situation of such young people. But the DREAM Act, in every one of its iterations over the years, has four fatal flaws.

1. The act is billed as legalizing those brought as infants or toddlers, and yet it covers people brought here up to age 16. The examples used by advocates are nearly always people who were brought here very young. The student-body president at Fresno State University, Pedro Ramirez — who was “coincidentally” revealed to be an illegal alien just as the DREAM Act lame-duck effort got under way — came here at age three. Harvard student Eric Balderas was brought here at age four. Yves Gomes was brought here at 14 months, Juan Gomez at two years, Marie Gonzalez at five, Dan-el Padilla at four, and so on.

So why set the age cutoff at 16? If the point is to provide amnesty to those whose identity was formed here, then you’d need a much lower age cutoff. I have a 15-year-old, and if I took him to live illegally in Mexico (and living illegally is a lot harder to do there than here), he would always remain, psychologically, an American, because his identity is already formed. The Roman Catholic Church and English common law set the age of reason at seven. That, combined with a requirement of at least ten years’ continuous residence here, seems like a much more defensible place to draw the line. Unless, of course, you’re just using those who came as young children to bootstrap a larger amnesty.

2. Next, all amnesties have at least three harmful consequences, and the DREAM Act ignores all three. The first of these is massive fraud. Perhaps one-fourth of those legalized under the 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act received amnesty fraudulently, including Mahmud Abouhalima, a leader of the first World Trade Center attack. The fraud in that first big amnesty program was so pervasive as to be almost comical, with people claiming work histories here that included picking watermelons from trees and digging cherries out of the ground.

And yet what does the DREAM Act say about fraud? As Sen. Jeff Sessions (R., Ala.) points out in “Ten Things You Need To Know about S-3827, the DREAM Act,” the measure “prohibits using any of the information contained in the amnesty application (name, address, length of illegal presence that the alien admits to, etc.) to initiate a removal proceeding or investigate or prosecute fraud in the application process.” This is like playing a slot machine without having to put any money in — any illegal alien can apply, and if he wins, great, but if he loses, he can’t be prosecuted even if he lied through his teeth about everything. No amnesty proposal can be taken seriously unless applicants are made to understand, right up front, that any lies, no matter how trivial, will result in arrest and imprisonment.

3. Another problem with DREAM, which all amnesties share, is that it will attract new illegal immigration. Prospective illegal immigrants, considering their options, are more likely to opt to come if they see that their predecessors eventually hit the jackpot. In 1986, we had an estimated 5 million illegals, 3 million of whom were legalized. We now have more than twice as many as before the last amnesty, and they’ve been promised repeatedly that if they hold out a little longer they’ll be able to stay legally. Any new amnesty, even if only for those brought here as children, will attract further illegal immigration.

There’s really no way to prevent this, but to minimize it, you need stringent enforcement measures. This was the logic of the 1986 law and the recent “comprehensive immigration reform” proposals. The critique of such “grand bargains” has been that the illegals get their amnesty but the promised enforcement never materializes — and that critique remains valid. But if the sponsors of DREAM were serious about addressing the plight of people brought here as infants and toddlers, they would include muscular enforcement measures as proof of their bona fides. These would include mandatory use of E-Verify for all new hires, explicit authorization of state and local governments to enforce civil immigration law, and full implementation of an exit-tracking system for all foreign visitors, for starters. And the legal status of all the amnesty beneficiaries would remain provisional until the enforcement measures were up and running and passed judicial muster. Even these might not be sufficient to turn back a new wave of illegal immigration sparked by the amnesty, but the lack of such measures speaks volumes about the real intentions of the DREAM Act’s sponsors.

4. Finally, all amnesties reward illegal immigrants — in this case, both those brought here as children and the adults who subjected them to this limbo. Any serious proposal to legalize young people brought here as infants or toddlers would need to prevent the possibility that their parents and other adults responsible for bringing them here illegally would ever receive any benefit from the amnesty, namely, future sponsorship as legal immigrants. This could be done in two ways: Either the amnesty recipients would not be put on a “path to citizenship” at all, but instead be given a time-limited work visa, indefinitely renewable so long as they stay out of trouble. This would mean they could not petition for any relatives to immigrate in the future. Alternatively, the amnesty beneficiaries could receive green cards and eventual citizenship, but we would abolish all the legal-immigration categories for family members other than spouses and minor children of U.S. citizens. Either way, the adults who knew what they were doing would never be rewarded.

A DREAM Act 2.0 that addressed these problems — that prosecuted fraud, implemented enforcement, prevented downstream legal immigration, and focused much more narrowly on those who came very young — would possibly be something that even I, were I a congressman, might be able to vote for. But the lack of these elements is clear proof that the amnesty crowd isn’t interested in fixing the specific problem of a sympathetic but small group of people; rather, these young people are simply poster children who have been used for years to try to justify a general amnesty for all illegal aliens. And when the DREAM Act fails, as it will, Pedro Ramirez and his fellows will need to ask the pro-amnesty politicians and lobbying groups why they were sacrificed on the altar of “comprehensive immigration reform.”

U.S. Constitution - Article IV, Section 4: NO BORDERS + NO LAWS = NO COUNTRY

HAPPY2BME-4UM  posted on  2010-12-11   12:48:58 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: All (#2) (Edited)

related


Bennett: GOP might pass own version of DREAM Act next year


http://www.alipac.us/ftopic-221014-0-days0-orderasc-.html


Republicans who voted for the Dream Act



http://www.alipac.us/ftopic-220854-0-days0-orderasc-.html


ALIPAC's Targeted 31 Senators Up for Reelection in 2012


http://www.alipac.us/ftopic-219596-days0-orderasc-0.html


The amnesty program that tried and failed
Oct 8, 2006 ... The 1986 amnesty legislation also showed that even strictly monitoring work sites and the border is doomed to failure without addressing the ...
http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/news/articles/1008amnesty-intro.html


If the 1986 Amnesty was such a gross failure, why would anyone try ...
Mar 29, 2010 ... 80 % of the citizens do not want another amnesty they want these people deported immediately. in 1986 there where promises made and none of them ...
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20100329133921AAo3jMx



Reagan's Attorney General, Ed Meese, Says Amnesty Then And Now A ...
Ed Meese, the attorney general under President Ronald Reagan, supported the 1986 amnesty that was passed. Now he says things today look similar and the amnesty that he supported in 1986 was a mistake and utter failure.
We're doomed to repeat the mistakes of the past again. Meese compares the bill from '86 to the bill that is in the Senate that is expected to pass today.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/24/opinion/24meese.html?_r=2&oref=slogin


FAIR: Chief Overseer of 1986 Amnesty Says Don't Repeat a Failed Policy


Apr 6, 2006 ... Rather than stemming the tide of illegal immigration, the 1986 amnesty and subsequent extension amnesties, coupled with a manifest failure ...
http://www.fairus.org/site/PageServer?pagename=media_release4062006b


Measuring the Fallout (Cost of the 1986 amnesty after ten years)
I fault all administrations from Reagan on for this failure. ... but the 1986 amnesty was a mistake we should learn from and not repeat. ...
http://www.cis.org/articles/1997/back197.htm


The 1986 amnesty failed spectaculary, why repeat the mistake ...
Aug 30, 2005 ... Georgie Anne Geyer discusses the 1986 amnesty, that was supposed to ..... What failure? How are we suffering? The strongest nation on earth. ...
http://24ahead.com/blog/archives/003759.html


The Reagan Amnesty Vs. The Bush Amnesty - Right Wing News ...
Jun 19, 2007 ... #1) In 1986, they didn't have the complete and utter failure of the 1986 amnesty to use as a guide. In other words, the idea of an amnesty ...
http://rightwingnews.com/mt331/2007/06/the_reagan_amnesty_vs_the_bush.php



1986 Redux: Proposed Senate Immigration Reform Repeats Past ...
May 30, 2007 ... The 1986 bill granted amnesty, then tried to enforce the law, ... -Senate-Immigration-Reform-Repeats-Past-Failure?
http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2007/05/1986-redux-proposed-senate-immigration-reform-repeats-past-failure


American Chronicle | 97% of Illegal Aliens Take Jobs That ...
Apr 7, 2006 ... On light of the utter failure of America 's last attempt at granting amnesty, IRCA of 1986, there must not be any talk of Guest Worker ...


http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/view/7801


Get the two-page Truth Sheet. - AMNESTY HANDOUT
Impact of Amnesty: In analyzing the 2007 CIR bill, Robert Rector of The Heritage
Foundation stated, “The main fiscal impact… will occur through two mechanisms:


(1) the grant of amnesty, with accompanying access to Social Security, Medicare and


welfare benefits, to 12 million illegal immigrants who are overwhelmingly low skilled;
and


(2) a dramatic increase in chain immigration, which will also be predominantly low
skilled.”


“The bottom line is that high school dropouts are extremely expensive to U.S. taxpayers.
It does not matter whether the dropout comes from Ohio, Tennessee, or Mexico. It does

matter that the Senate immigration bill would increase the future flow of poorly
educated immigrants into the U.S. and grant amnesty and access to government
benefits to millions of poorly educated illegal aliens already here. Such legislation would
inevitably impose huge costs on U.S. taxpayers.” Heritage research has concluded that
the cost of amnesty alone will be $2.6 trillion.


And the number of additional LEGAL
immigrants who will join those who were the recipients of amnesty through chain

migration, i.e., family reunification, will approach 70 million over a 20-year period,
assuming there are only 12 million illegal aliens.
http://www.ancir.org/reports/The%20Truth%20About%20Amnesty.pdf

U.S. Constitution - Article IV, Section 4: NO BORDERS + NO LAWS = NO COUNTRY

HAPPY2BME-4UM  posted on  2010-12-11   12:56:04 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: All (#0)

Uncle Sam Wants Tu

Author:
Max Boot, Jeane J. Kirkpatrick Senior Fellow for National Security Studies

February 24, 2005
Los Angeles Times

It is hard to pick up a newspaper these days without reading about Army and Marine Corps recruiting and retention woes. Nonstop deployments and the danger faced by troops in Iraq are making it hard for both services to fill their ranks. The same goes for the National Guard and Reserves. (The Navy and Air Force, which are much less in harm's way, have no such difficulty.)

Just to stay at their present sizes, the Army and Marines are shoveling money into more advertising, extra recruiters and bigger enlistment bonuses. And yet it's clear to everyone (except, that is, President Bush and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld) that the U.S. military is far too small to handle all the missions thrown its way. We need to not only maintain the current ranks but also to expand them in order to recover from a 1990s downsizing in which the Army lost 300,000 soldiers.

Some experts are already starting to wonder whether the war on terrorism might break the all-volunteer military. But because reinstating the draft isn't a serious option (the House defeated a symbolic draft bill last year, 402 to 2), some outside-the-box thinking is needed to fill up the ranks. In this regard, I note that there is a pretty big pool of manpower that's not being tapped: everyone on the planet who is not a U.S. citizen or permanent resident.

Since 9/11, Bush has expedited the naturalization process for soldiers. But to enlist, the Pentagon requires either proof of citizenship or a green card. Out of an active-duty force of about 1.4 million, only 108,803 are foreign-born (7%) and 30,541 are noncitizens (2%).

This is an anomaly by historical standards: In the 19th century, when the foreign-born population of the United States was much higher, so was the percentage of foreigners serving in the military. During the Civil War, at least 20% of Union soldiers were immigrants, and many of them had just stepped off the boat before donning a blue uniform. There were even entire units, like the 15th Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry (the Scandinavian Regiment) and Gen. Louis Blenker's German Division, where English was hardly spoken.

The military would do well today to open its ranks not only to legal immigrants but also to illegal ones and, as important, to untold numbers of young men and women who are not here now but would like to come. No doubt many would be willing to serve for some set period in return for one of the world's most precious commodities -- U.S. citizenship. Open up recruiting stations from Budapest to Bangkok, Cape Town to Cairo, Montreal to Mexico City. Some might deride those who sign up as mercenaries, but these troops would have significantly different motives than the usual soldier of fortune.

The simplest thing to do would be to sign up foreigners for the regular U.S. military, but it would also make sense to create a unit whose enlisted ranks would be composed entirely of non-Americans, led by U.S. officers and NCOs.

Call it the Freedom Legion. As its name implies, this unit would be modeled on the French Foreign Legion, except, again, U.S. citizenship would be part of the "pay." And rather than fighting for U.S. security writ small -- the way the Foreign Legion fights for the glory of France -- it would have as its mission defending and advancing freedom across the world. It would be, in effect, a multinational force under U.S. command -- but one that wouldn't require the permission of France, Germany or the United Nations to deploy.

The Freedom Legion would be the perfect unit to employ in places such as Darfur that are not critical security concerns but that cry out for more effective humanitarian intervention than any international organization could muster. U.S. politicians, so wary (and rightly so) of casualties among U.S. citizens, might take a more lenient attitude toward the employment of a force not made up of their constituents. An added benefit is that by recruiting foreigners, the U.S. military could address its most pressing strategic deficit in the war on terrorism -- lack of knowledge about other cultures. The most efficient way to expand the government's corps of Pashto or Arabic speakers isn't to send native-born Americans to language schools; it's to recruit native speakers of those languages.

Similar considerations early in the Cold War led Congress to pass the Lodge Act in 1950. This law allowed the Army Special Forces to recruit foreigners not living in the United States with the promise of citizenship after five years of service. More than 200 Eastern Europeans qualified as commandos before the Lodge Act expired in 1959. There's no reason why we couldn't recruit a fresh batch of foreigners today. It would certainly be easier than trying to sweet-talk more troops out of recalcitrant allies or, these days, recruiting at U.S. high schools.

U.S. Constitution - Article IV, Section 4: NO BORDERS + NO LAWS = NO COUNTRY

HAPPY2BME-4UM  posted on  2010-12-11   12:59:51 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: HAPPY2BME-4UM (#3)

All this crap is simply the planned destruction of our society.

Lod  posted on  2010-12-11   13:17:34 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: Lod, HAPPY2BME-4UM (#5)

All this crap is simply the planned destruction of our society.

Exactly.

That is exactly what it is. It is a Psychiatrically developed and designed program to fragment and thus Balkanize America's culture.

The function of the program is to disrupt and divide thus creating a situation where an effective mass resistance to tyranny cannot form.

It is for that same reason that Christianity, and basically most all religion, is under attack. However the Psychs particularly dislike Christianity because of its moral and ethical precepts.

"One of the least understood strategies of the world revolution now moving rapidly toward its goal is the use of mind control as a major means of obtaining the consent of the people who will be subjects of the New World Order." K.M. Heaton, The National Educator

Original_Intent  posted on  2010-12-11   14:39:36 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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