|
Printer Friendly PDF Format
Subscribe to FFF Email Update
Subscribe to Freedom Daily
What Do You Mean We?
by
Sheldon Richman,
April 19, 2006
To say the least, there is tension between the ideas that we live in a free society and that government may determine whom we may sell to, rent to, and hire. This is the real heart of the immigration debate. Who should decide such things, free individuals or the state?
This question is obscured by the democratic myth. People
often say, We as a nation have the right to decide
who comes here and who doesnt. So we must get
control of our borders. The problem with this is
that we as a nation dont do anything.
Individuals act, sometimes in concert with other
individuals, but collectives do nothing. When we say
the nation does such and such, we mean a
group of politicians calling themselves the
government and claiming to act for the nation do
such and such. Its true that in a society such as
ours people vote for officeholders. But the connection
between punching out a chad in a polling station and
politicians making immigration policy is, shall we
say, roundabout. It is so roundabout that it makes no
sense at all to say that punching out a chad is the same
as determining immigration policy. Thats a fairy
tale. Its time we became men and women and put away
childish things.
Note that to the extent that we exercise the
collective freedom of determining who can and
cant come here, real flesh-and-blood individuals
lose that freedom. The Washington Post
reports that immigration authorities are cracking down on
employers who hire immigrants who have not complied with
the bureaucratic demands made of them. The
Post states, Serious criminal charges
once typically reserved for drug traffickers and
organized-crime figures are increasingly being used to
target businesses that employ illegal immigrants, a
strategy highlighted last week when three Maryland
restaurateurs pleaded guilty to federal offenses and
agreed to forfeit more than $1 million in cash and
property. The little-publicized approach, which can
include charging such employers with money laundering [!]
and seizing their assets, amounts to a strategic shift in
the enforcement of immigration law in the
workplace. You can get 10 years for harboring
illegals, 20 for money laundering.
The assistant secretary of U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement, put it plainly: If youre
blatantly violating our worksite enforcement laws,
well go after your Mercedes and your mansion and
your millions. Well go after everything we can, and
well charge you criminally.
Our worksite enforcement laws? So
much for free enterprise. Funny how the alleged party of
the free market can be at the head of the mob demanding
draconian sanctions against people who hire the
wrong people. Its not hard to divine
the true priorities of that party.
In all the blather about immigration, no one has stepped
up to explain why, in what Mencken called the land of the
theoretically free, individuals are not free to hire and
sell and rent to whomever they wish. If I want to rent an
apartment to and employ a Mexican, thats no
ones business but my own, regardless of whether
hes cleared some arbitrary bureaucratic hurdles.
The politicians should butt out, which in an earlier time
was the essence of Americanism. I dont think the
government school curriculum features that very
prominently.
The usual reply to my its no one elses
business argument is that immigrants create harmful
spillover effects. They use the schools, hospital
emergency rooms, and so on. But notice that in that list
of strained facilities, you never find Wal-Mart, Kmart,
and Sears. Why is it that private businesses have no
trouble handling increasing numbers of customers? Only
welfare-state facilities cant take it. Maybe
theres a message here. And maybe immigrants are
being scapegoated for the governments failings.
Sheldon Richman is senior fellow at The Future of Freedom Foundation, author of Tethered Citizens: Time to Repeal the Welfare State, and editor of The Freeman magazine. Visit his blog Free Association at www.sheldonrichman.com. Send him email.
|