Thanks to Hillsdale College President Larry Arnn for sending   the October issue of Imprimis, a publication of Hillsdale College with   over 3,700,000 readers per month – this edition of Imprimis is adapted   from a speech given by Arkansas Senator Tom Cotton (photo above) on September 18   in Washington, D.C., @ Hillsdale's Eight Annual Constitution Day   Celebration.  
  Student's of the Constitution are well aware that this past   September 17 marked the 230th anniversary when the Constitution was unanimously   passed by all the states represented @ the Constitutional Convention thereby   starting the ratification process that made the Constitution the supreme law of   the land – one of the greatest gifts God ever gave to man.
  The speaker @ the above mentioned Hillsdale College event, Tom   Cotton, was elected by the voters of Arkansas to the U.S. Senate in 2014 where   he serves on the Senate Banking Committee, the Senate Intelligence Committee,   & the Senate Armed Services Committee.  In 2005 Cotton enlisted in the   U.S. Army but did not pursue a commission as an officer @ the rank of Captain in   the Judge Advocate General's Corps of the U.S. Army that someone of his   education would normally aspire to; instead he pursued a route with his   recruiter that guaranteed his enrollment in Officer Candidate School after which   as an Army officer he deployed to Iraq with the 101st Airborne & to   Afghanistan with a Provincial Reconstruction Team.  His military   decorations include the Bronze Star Medal, Combat Infantry Badge, & Ranger   Tab.
  In short, Senator Cotton is a good guy as the following   excerpts from his Constitution Day Celebration speech   indicate: 
  1.  Citizenship is the most cherished thing our nation can bestow. Our   governing class ought to treat it as something special. We ought to put the   interests of our citizens first and welcome those foreigners best prepared to   handle the duties of citizenship and contribute positively to our   country.
  2.    The   word naturalization implies a   process by which foreigners can renounce their former allegiances and become   citizens of the United States. They can cast off what accident and force have   thrust upon them—race, class, ethnicity—and take on, by reflection and choice, a   new title: American. 
  3.  Government now takes nearly half of every dollar we earn and   bosses us around in every aspect of life, yet can't deliver basic services well.   Our working class—the "forgotten man," to use the phrase favored by Ronald   Reagan and FDR—has seen its wages stagnate, while the four richest counties in   America are inside the Washington Beltway.
  4.     For years, all Democrats and many   Republicans have agreed on the outline of what's commonly called "comprehensive   immigration reform," which is Washington code for amnesty, mass immigration, and   open borders in perpetuity.
  This approach was embodied most recently in the   so-called Gang of Eight bill in 2013. It passed the Senate, but thankfully we   killed it in the House (where Cotton served for one two- year term), which I   consider among my chief accomplishments in Congress so far. Two members of the   Gang of Eight ran for my party's nomination for president last year. Neither won   a single statewide primary. Donald Trump denounced the bill, and he won the   nomination.
  Likewise, Hillary Clinton campaigned not just for mass   immigration, but also on a policy of no deportations of anyone, ever, who is   illegally present in our country. She also accused her opponent of racism and   xenophobia. Yet Donald Trump beat her by winning states that no Republican had   won since the 1980s.
  5.  While we wish our fellow man well, it's only our fellow citizens   to whom we have a duty and whose rights our government was created to protect.   And among the highest obligations we owe to each other is to ensure that every   working American can lead a dignified life. If you look across our history, I'd   argue that's always been the purpose of our immigration system: to create   conditions in which normal, hard-working Americans can   thrive.
  Look no further than what James Madison said on   the floor of the House of Representatives in 1790, when the very first Congress   was debating our very first naturalization law. He said, "It is no doubt very   desirable that we should hold out as many inducements as possible for   the worthy part of mankind to come   and settle amongst us, and throw their fortunes into a common lot with   ours."  "The worthy part," not the entire world. Madison continued, "But   why is this desirable? Not merely to swell the catalogue of people. No, sir, it   is to increase the wealth and strength of the community."
  "To increase the wealth and strength of the   community." That's quite a contrast to today's elite consensus. Our immigration   system shouldn't exist to serve the interests of foreigners or wealthy   Americans. No, it ought to benefit working Americans and serve the national   interest—that's the purpose of immigration and the theme of the story of   American immigration.
  6.  The   economy we're living in today is in no small part a result of the 1965 Act,   which opened the door to mass immigration of unskilled and low-skilled workers,   primarily through unlimited family chain migration. And that's not an economy   anyone should be satisfied with.
  Today, we have about a million immigrants per   year. That's like adding the population of Montana every year—or the population   of Arkansas every three years. But only one in 15—one in 15 of those millions of   immigrants—comes here for employment-based reasons. The vast majority come here   simply because they happen to be related to someone already here. That's why,   for example, we have more Somalia-born residents than Australia-born residents,   even though Australia is nearly twice the size of Somalia and Australians are   better prepared, as a general matter, to integrate and assimilate into the   American way of life.
  In   sum, over 36 million immigrants, or 94 percent of the total, have come to   America over the last 50 years for reasons having nothing to do with employment.   And that's to say nothing of the over 24 million illegal   immigrants   who have come here. Put them together and you have 60 million immigrants, legal   and illegal, who did not come to this country because of a job offer or because   of their skills. That's like adding almost the entire population of the United   Kingdom. And this is still leaving   aside the millions of temporary guest workers who we import every year into our   country.
  7.  Unlike many open-border zealots, I don't believe   the law of supply and demand is magically repealed for the labor markets. That   means that our immigration system has been depressing wages for people who work   with their hands and on their feet. Wages for Americans with high school   diplomas are down two percent since the late 1970s. For Americans who didn't   finish high school, they're down by a staggering 17 percent. Although   immigration has a minimal effect overall on the wages of Americans, it has a   severe negative effect on low-skilled workers, minorities, and even recent   immigrants.
  Is automation to blame in part? Sure. Globalized   trade? Yes, of course. But there's no denying that a steady supply of cheap,   unskilled labor has hurt working-class wages as well. Among those three factors,   immigration policy is the one that we can control most easily for the benefit of   American workers. Yet we've done the opposite.
  I know the response of open-border enthusiasts:   they plead that we need a steady supply of cheap unskilled labor because there   are "jobs that no American will do." But that just isn't so. There   is no job Americans won't do. In   fact, there's no industry in America in which the majority of workers are not   natural-born Americans—not landscapers, not construction workers, not ski   instructors, not lifeguards, not resort workers, not childcare workers—not a   single job that over-educated elites associate with immigrants. The simple fact   is, if the wage is decent and the employer obeys the law, Americans will do any   job. And for tough, dangerous, and physically demanding jobs, maybe working   folks do deserve a bit of a raise.
  8.  But   the harmful impact on blue-collar workers isn't the only problem with the   current system. Because we give two-thirds of our green cards to relatives of   people here, there are huge backlogs in the system. This forces highly talented   immigrants to wait in line for years behind applicants whose only claim to   naturalization is a random family connection to someone who happened to get here   years ago. We therefore lose out on the very best talent coming into our   country—the ultra-high-skilled immigrants who can come to America, stand on   their own two feet, pay taxes, and through their entrepreneurial spirit and   innovation create more and higher-paying jobs for our   citizens.
  To put it simply, we have an immigration system   that is badly failing Madison's test of increasing the wealth and strength of   the community. It might work to the advantage of a favored few, but not for the   common good, and especially not the good of working-class   Americans.
  This is why I've introduced legislation to fix   our naturalization system. It's called the RAISE Act: Reforming American   Immigration for a Strong Economy.
  The RAISE Act will correct the flaws in the 1965   Act by reorienting our immigration system towards foreigners who have the most   to contribute to our country. It would create a skills-based points system   similar to Canada's and Australia's. Here's how it would work. When people apply   to immigrate, they'd be given an easy-to-calculate score, on a scale of 0 to   100, based on their education, age, job salary, investment ability,   English-language skills, and any extraordinary achievements. Then, twice a year,   the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services would invite the top scorers to   complete their applications, and it would invite enough high-scoring applicants   to fill the current 140,000 annual employment-based green-card   slots.
  We'd still admit spouses and unmarried minor   children of citizens and legal permanent residents. But we'd end the preferences   for most extended and adult family members—no more unlimited chain migration.   We'd also eliminate the so-called diversity visa lottery, which hands out green   cards randomly without regard to skills or family connections, and which is   plagued by fraud. We'd remove per-country caps on immigration, too, so that   high-skilled applicants aren't shut out of the process simply because of their   country of origin. And finally, we'd cap the number of refugees offered   permanent residency to 50,000 per year, in line with the recent average for the   Bush era and most of the Obama era—and still quite generous.
  Add it all up and our annual immigrant pool would be   younger, higher-skilled, and ready to contribute to our economy without using   welfare, as more than half of immigrant households do today. No longer would we   distribute green cards essentially based on random chance. Nor would we import   millions of unskilled workers to take jobs from blue-collar Americans and   undercut their wages. And over a ten-year period, our annual immigration levels   would decrease by half, gradually returning to historical   norms.
  
I totally agree with Senator Cotton's assertion that " Citizenship is the most cherished thing our nation can bestow".
ReplyDeleteAccepting immigrants and Citizenship for immigrants should both include a desire from immigrants to assimilate with our core values, adherence to our Constitution, and strong prospects of contributing to our economic growth.
So then why do we have sanctuary cities and states? My new NJ elected governor stated NJ would become a sanctuary state.
We need to identify the root driver for sanctuaries for illegal aliens. It is for the Elite Left obsession with control and power at virtually any cost. More illegals increase pool of current and future voters and voter fraud. They also drain our Treasuries and debt and increase odds of toppling whatever today remains of a partial capitalist system. The Elite Left are Marxist, Socialist, or Communist. All 3 are essentially the same. Fundamentally transforming the US is their goal.
This is so clear, right in front of us. It angers me when I hear a journalist ask a conservative politician about the reasons for Elite Left immigration policy and the politician may say it may be due to guilt feelings.
Guilt? Really?
The Elite Left purposely ignores any guilt feelings that interfere with their drive for Marxism.
How can the Elite Left feel any guilt when they:
Support NFL players disrespecting the flag
Are totally against 1st Amendment
Trash Christians while apologizing for Sharia Muslims that kill gays while the Elite Left champions Gays for their votes
Become apoplectic whenever
a conservative attempts to speak at a college
Apoplectic whenever Christians peacefully place mangers with Jesus, Mary, Joseph in public square
Apoplectic whenever school athletes from both teams gather to pray together after games and pass laws disallowing head coaches to join them
Apoplectic whenever anyone disagrees with them, totally against honest debate
We can go on and on ... Americans must not stick their heads in the sand and get their asses kicked as a result. No violence please. Key point is that we must identify Clearly what the problem is before planning how to resolve it.
So how do we resolve this?
ReplyDeleteGet the word out to friends and neighbors.
Tweet tweet tweet. Twitter is great at expanding solutions rapidly and broadly
Especially tweet high profile politicians, economists, globalists, academics of the root cause of this problem.
In your communication, argue that our immigration policy harms all Americans on multiple fronts. This includes economically and safety wise. No nation has as borderless immigration policy as the US. Immigration should improve our nation economically. We should not accept immigrants unless they clearly profess they champion our core values and culture
Most of our immigration laws are sound. However, many are not enforced. And some that try to be enforced are thwarted by Elite Left judges, mayors, and governors.
A nation's core #1 responsibility is to protect their citizens. The Elite Left fails miserably in this regard and must be called out in their plans for a stealth coup supplanting our constitutional democracy with an authoritarian Marxist regime.
Call out the Elite Left on their hypocrisy and then champion traditional American principles such as free speech, free markets, equal justice for all, and above all our constitution.
For the record, my parents were Polish and Lithuanian prisoners of war via Nazi Germany. They came to the US pursuing traditional American values, joining few of their relatives in NJ. The US choice was clear after learning of the Communism that enveloped their native countries. They loved the US dearly, were devout Christians and extended that mind set to me, gifts I am most thankful for. They came to the US the right way for the right reasons and the US greatly benefited from them and similar immigrants who worked hard and became proud citizens. Yes- immigrants made this country greater, at a time when the US was very careful who to admit, in order to protect the safety and economics of its citizens.
ReplyDelete