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What's Wrong With Arizona?

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Over the weekend, Los Angeles Cardinal Roger Mahony joined in on the attack against the new law passed by the Arizona legislature to expand police powers to arrest and deport illegal immigrants. The law basically makes it a crime to be an undocumented alien. If that doesn't sound like an inherently controversial proposition, believe me, it will by the time it gets to court.

Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer, a Republican, is still deciding whether to sign the bill. If it becomes law, it is certain to keep lawyers and judges busy, if no one else.

The obvious danger is that it will be an invitation to racial profiling, to stops based solely on appearance and to punishment for the status of being undocumented rather than for the act of entering the country illegally. Unbridled discretion to stop, detain and punish people for their status is almost the definition of that which due process condemns.

Even so, it seems to me that Mahony's strident criticism is unfair to the angry, frightened and frustrated citizens who live in fear of the violence that illegal immigration is bringing to the border. It only contributes to the very kind of polarization he condemns. Calling the bill "the country's most retrogressive, mean-spirited and useless anti-immigrant law," Mahony wrote on Sunday that the "tragedy of the law is its totally flawed reasoning: that immigrants come to our country to rob, plunder and consume public resources. That is not only false, the premise is nonsense."

Most immigrants come to this country for the same reasons my grandparents did: in the hopes of finding opportunity and freedom, because they want a better life for themselves and their children and are brave enough and desperate enough to face huge obstacles and great dangers in their quest for that.

They do not come to rob, plunder and consume public resources; they come to work and to contribute.

The same, however, is not true of the smugglers, the coyotes who prey upon the desperate and use violence as their way of doing business — that business being trafficking in people, drugs and weapons, leaving citizens in border towns rightly frightened and desperate.

Bad times produce bad laws. The problem is not the premise of the law, but the desperation that has state officials and decent citizens searching for equally desperate solutions.

Talk to decent people in Texas, New Mexico and Arizona, as well as California, where I live, and you don't hear them railing against people consuming public resources. When California Republican gubernatorial candidate Steve Poizner recently proposed that undocumented children be kicked out of school, the move was seen by almost everyone — including his opponent Meg Whitman, who is way ahead of him — as an act of desperation, proof that his candidacy is floundering. What was once seen as a winning strategy in political terms is now rightly recognized as a loser in both the courts of law and public opinion.

The federal government is supposed to secure the border. Its failure to do so effectively not only invites measures like Arizona's, but complicates — if not dooms — the prospect of immigration reform at the national level.

In the final analysis, the greatest threat to the rule of law is the lawlessness that leaves both desperate immigrants and desperate citizens vulnerable and afraid. Rather than condemning each other, we need to find ways to secure the border that are consistent with the values and security we all came to this country hoping to find.

To find out more about Susan Estrich and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

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Comments

3 Comments | Post Comment
What's wrong with AZ? Nothing. The question to ask is: "What's wrong with the states that have NOT passed a law like this?" I think presuming that the majority of illegals are here for a better life, is an awfully dubious assumption. The fact is, you don't know WHO they are or why they are here. That's what illegal means - people who haven't been screedn and approved by the authorities. Besides, it's indisputable that their numbers contain a certain percentage of pedophiles, drug runners, people smugglers, and weapons smugglers. Were that not the case, nobody in the US would know what cocaine is or would have some gun that's illegal in all 50 states...but both are here, aren't they? Just another left winger who doesn't understand the gravity of the situation. Imagine my surprise.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Matt
Tue Apr 20, 2010 11:59 PM
Having lived in New Mexico most of my life, I can honestly say I've never knowingly met an undocumented individual. How would anyone know who is and isn't documented? I don't know about Arizona, but something like 60% of New Mexico is hispanic, and much of that spanish-speaking. They'd have to setup roadblocks and check everybody, the sheer amount of resources that would be needed to enforce this law would be ridiculous. ------------------- Realistically, I think the real purpose of a law like this is that if someone is caught for doing something else (like vandalism), and it turns out they are also undocumented, this would add to their punishment. I don't really think that Arizona plans to round up all hispanics and check their papers. I think that instead, they want to use this law to further punish illegal immigrants who have already been caught doing something illegal. Littering might be a petty crime, but if you're also undocumented, it'll get you deported. It's like banning cell-phone use in most states. In many jurisdictions, an officer cannot stop you for using a cell phone, but if he busts you for speeding, he can tack a cell-phone usage penalty on top.------------------------ I don't think a law like this is unreasonable, as long as it is enforced in a reasonable manner.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Nathan H.
Wed Apr 21, 2010 12:22 PM
Arizona, in my experience, really does have a lawless streak to it, a vigilante mentality; it's a hanging judge and jury kind of place. I do not say this as an insult or sideways compliment. Its just the way Arizona is. I have a theory as to why this is and until someone comes up with a better one, I think it goes pretty far in explaining where Arizonans are coming from.
And where the are coming from - is jail. Lots of them are ex-jailbirds. Arizona has the highest percentage of ex-con population of any state in the nation - by far. Why is this?
One of Arizona's biggest industries is contract prisons. Not only do these privately and publicly run prisons house Arizona's homegrown criminals, they also house convicts from a number of other states. My former home state, Alaska, routinely ships its cons to Arizona with a one-way ticket south.
The situation for Arizona is that these prisoners eventually serve their term and are set free - in Arizona. Many of them stay there. (If you were faced with the prospect and expense of returning to frozen Alaska after living in the land of perfect weather and cheap prices, what would you do?)
Let's admit that people who go to prison tend to have issues with the law. More than most of us, they tend to either ignore the law or take it into their own hands. Arizona, like many outposts of future civilizations (Australia and the state of Georgia come to mind), has enough ex-cons and descendants of ex-cons living there that the Arizonan outlook on life and its state's politics are decidedly affected.
Comment: #3
Posted by: frumious
Thu Apr 22, 2010 10:35 PM
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