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Froma Harrop
Froma Harrop
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Arizona May Prod Feds to Finally Act

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President Obama is right that Arizona's tough immigration law is "misguided." And Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer is right that her state has been "more than patient waiting for Washington to act." The two are not unrelated.

Enforcing our immigration laws is a federal responsibility, which Washington has failed to meet. It's too bad that the Arizona law comes just as the Obama administration had started doing what must be done — and a plan for effective immigration reform has some Senate support.

After eight years of passivity under the Bush administration, Immigration and Customs Enforcement is actively going after companies found to be employing illegal workers. That and a weak economy are credited with having slowed the surge of illegal immigrants into this country. (Note that ICE is managed by Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, a former Arizona governor.)

But as Brewer said, patience is gone. Border states like Arizona have long served as highways and convenient havens for illegal immigrants. Meanwhile, locals fear with good reason that the drug war in Mexico is unleashing a new wave of entrants and violence. The recent murder of rancher Robert Krentz, presumably by an illegal immigrant, pushed many Arizonans over the edge.

The result is a policy that is disturbingly unfair to Latino populations. The law makes it a crime to move around without immigration documents and lets police demand such papers from anyone suspected of being in the United States illegally.

You know who that means: people from Mexico or who look like they could be from Mexico. And although the governor has promised to train officers against racial profiling, how could there not be? What would make an Arizona law enforcer suspect that someone is here illegally other than that person's ethnic appearance?

Stopping brown people in the street is not the way to address the problem.

The great majority of illegal immigrants come for work. Though they shouldn't be here, these are mostly good people supporting their families. These poor folk deserve to be treated humanely.

Arizona doesn't need a new law to capture and deport the criminal element. As in many other states, police already check the immigration status of anyone charged with a crime. Those here illegally are referred to ICE.

Harassing countless innocents alongside illegal immigrants is a callous and futile way to stop massive flows of undocumented workers. The more successful approach is to remove the job magnet by fining and possibly jailing their employers.

It is already against the law to hire illegal aliens, but the giant loophole is the lack of a counterfeit-proof form of identification. If the job-seeker presents a reasonably good-looking document, a company can't be held liable if that person is found to be working illegally.

An immigration reform proposal put together by Sens. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., and Lindsay Graham, R-S.C., would end that dodge by creating a Social Security card that contains fingerprints, eye scans or other biometric markers unique to every individual. Employers would check the information against a national database for all new hires, be they immigrant or native born.

No, Arizona is not going about this the right way. But its radical law may spur overdue action. Now is the best time for it, when a slow economy has deflated the cheap-labor argument that only illegal immigrants will wash dishes or mop floors.

Effective immigration controls are not impossible. Canada has a large immigration program and virtually no illegal workers. Until the federal government creates a rational system, states are going to pass laws out of anger and panic. It's time for Washington to do its duty.

To find out more about Froma Harrop, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2010 THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL CO.

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Comments

3 Comments | Post Comment
Is this what we're coming to in America? Not the immigration bill, but lying to citizens with a sense of authority that implies fact. Has the author actually read the law? Or perhaps she just read the white house press release. In reality, "brown people" will NOT be stopped on the street, and nobody has to carry any more documents than they carry now.
Is it racist to ask people stopped by law enforcement because they have broken the law to check your identification? Of course not, and this law makes it pretty clear in this section-
11-1051 B. For any lawful contact made by a law enforcement official or a law enforcement agency of this state of a law enforcement official or a law enforcement agency of a county, city, town or other political subdivision of this state where reasonable suspicion exists that the person is an alien who is unlawfully present in the United States, a reasonable attempt shall be made, when practicable, to determine the immigration status of the person, except if the determination may hinder or obstruct an investigation.... Maybe the illegal immigrants came for work, but they broke US law by entering illegally. Canada does not put up with that, neither does Australia or Japan. We simply look the other way and then pay the price with our lost jobs and our taxes.
Arizona's law does not attempt to change federal law, contrary to the alarmist story the law specifically states that it does not change federal civil rights laws- read these two sections:
11-1051 E. Except as provided in federal law, officials or agencies of this state and counties, cities, towns and other political subdivisions of this state may not be prohibited or in any way be restricted from sending, receiving or maintaining information relating to the immigration status of any individual or exchanging that information with any other federal, state or local governmental entity for the following official purposes....
K. This section shall be implemented in a manner consistent with federal laws regulating immigration, protecting the civil rights of all persons and respecting the privileges and immunities of United States citizens.
Our authors answer- a national ID card- is rubbish. Schumer's proposal will invite fraud and abuse, and put a harsh burden on every citizen, even if they have never seen an illegal immigrant in their entire life. There is simply nothing in the Arizona law to encourage or permit harrassment of anyone. If you are suspected of criminal activity, the cops can ask you for ID. If you're illegal, well, then you have just broken another law and you have put yourself and your family at additional risk. The very least I'd expect from this law is illegal immigrants (from ANY nation) might actually have to stop breaking laws.
This story is an alarmist view that does not take the actual law into account, and citizens should go and read it before they believe this wild opinion. See for yourself, check out http://www.azleg.gov/legtext/49leg/2r/bills/sb1070h.pdf and read the bill!
Comment: #1
Posted by: C. DiGiacomo
Tue Apr 27, 2010 5:44 PM
One difference that Ms. Harrop conviently forgets to mention is that Canada's southern border is the United States and Canada enforces its immigration laws.

On the other hand, the Southern border of the United States is Mexico. Most of the population of Ciudad Juarez has abandoned their city due to the high incidence of drug violence such as bombs killing officials trying to enforce the law and decapitations of rival drug gangs. Even American citizens are no longer safe as the recent killings of three Americans proves.

Ms. Harrop says the problem is our immigration laws. However clear the Canadian immigration laws are I suspect the Canadian government would act swiftly and decisively to patrol their southern border and if faced with similar criminal activity on its southern border!

As to playing the race card, if the color of the skin fits with the problem of illegal immigration (illegal means against the law Ms. Harrop) then wear it.

Comment: #2
Posted by: Tom
Mon May 3, 2010 1:40 PM
Once again, it's clear from reading Ms. Harrops' editorial that she has no idea of what she writes. Perhaps it would be good for the author of any nationally distributed editorial to first do some research. Her sentence in today's Arizona Republic about "Stopping people in the street is not the way to address the problem." made me just shake my head in frustration. One cannot drive a car in this country without a driver's license, which must be shown whenever the driver is stopped. One cannot board a commercial aircraft in this country without first showing identification. The list goes on and on. The public needs to get a grip, but it especially doesn't help when we have so-called "experts" writing editorials without any basis in fact.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Ann A'Hearn
Mon May 3, 2010 7:20 PM
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