By Jay D. Homnick on 5.31.07 @ 12:06AM
Has President Bush himself read the immigration bill he claims its critics haven't? Has anyone?
I love that story about the fellow who visits a major metropolis
and is brought to the city's great cultural pride, the LaSalle
Museum. He asks the curator if the place was named after Andre
LaSalle, the great impressionist painter. "No," he is told. "It was
named after Claude LaSalle, the writer."
"Really? What did he write?"
"A check."
The great immigration bill of 2007 is being given the grand
treatment, with a full dose of presidential support, and a hefty
measure of ire landing on its detractors. President Bush lashed out
at critics of his immigration reform package the other day, and one
would imagine, hearing such conviction, that he is the author of
the legislation. Indeed he specifically aspersed conservative
gripers for not having "read the bill," implying by the slur that
he was ready to be quizzed on its minutest codicils. Sadly, the
truth is he probably does not know a fraction of what it contains
and the further sadder truth is that to a large extent it is
unknowable.
Forty-nine percent of Americans, when prodded by pollsters, aver
that the immigration system should be subjected to thoroughgoing
reform...of one sort or another. Besides for the stupidity of that
poll question -- allowing those who believe anyone should enter the
country at will to vote "Yes" alongside those who believe no one
should ever come in -- it casually relies upon a general ignorance
of the price of reform. Any reform.
Respondents to that poll question should first read this handy
primer: The Hard-Boiled Guide to "How a Bill Becomes a Law." Let's
skip over all the nasty contentious partisan internecine infighting
preliminary to, and in conjunction with, committeeing and voting
and conferencing and signing. Now we have a thoroughly
Rose-Gardened photo-opped Truman's-penned Spanish-blurbed
vellum-covered crisp-leafed volume, or set of volumes, containing
7,000 pages of freshly minted law-of-the-land. Enter the
wheelbarrow stage left, cart away the colossus, and let the
celebration begin.
Then comes the pleasant task of implementing our modern-day gem
of legislative genius. First, millions of taxpayer dollars are
spent by the INS to pay lawyers to "read the bill" and deliver
opinions of what the darned thing means. Not surprisingly, some of
these assessments will contradict each other. More committees, more
management teams, more oversight, more oversights, more layers of
bureaucracy, more millions. Finally, they arrive at a tentative
conclusion, a working document, a coherent policy memo; well, more
than one, actually, as different regional offices flex their
muscles. But something more or less livable anyway. Until the
lawsuits.
Here is a projected scene that is very realistic if not
inevitable. Cases are moving up through the Federal court system.
The INS is being sued by taxpayer-funded immigrant advocacy groups
over this or that issue of interpretation. A group of highly
skilled and highly paid lawyers are duking it out in the highest
courts in the land. Then someone gets the bright idea of tracking
the amount of government money involved. Suddenly you realize: you,
the taxpayer, are footing every line item on this invoice. You are
paying for the La Raza lawyers, for the INS lawyers, for the
judges, the clerks, the bailiffs, the whole kit and caboodle. It
will cost you billions just for the executive and judicial branches
of government to "read the bill" the legislative branch -- you paid
for that, too -- wrote... you know, the one you had the nerve to
criticize because you were too lazy to read.
In reality, the dumbest and least cost-effective way in the
world to remedy systemic flaws is to rashly rewrite the entire
system. It is like holding a Constitutional convention just to
revisit a single problem. Like rewriting the rules of baseball from
top to bottom because not enough fans are coming to games. Like
replacing the entire Procter & Gamble product line because
sales of Pringles are down. Like rebuilding your house from the
foundation up because of a leaky roof.
There are problems in immigration, sure. Some are
enforcement-related, like our inadequate policing of borders and
workplaces. Solution: do it right. Some are policy-related, like
our treating Haitians worse than Cubans just because their
government is broken through corruption rather than Communism.
Solution: fix the policy, no new law needed. Some are
administrative, like the backlogs in old applications and a poor
system of identifying applications with mutual impact. Solution:
bring in efficiency experts. But for goodness' sake, let us not
make the gargantuan error of replacing one bloated unwieldy
devil-we-know with another bloated unwieldy devil-we-don't.
Which brings us to the other old joke about the supplier who
sends the merchant a memo: "Due to poor payment history, your order
cannot be filled until remuneration is received." The merchant
fires back angrily: "Please cancel my order. I cannot wait that
long for delivery." We're still trying to pay for the last botched
bill.
topics:
Constitution, Law, Communism, Immigration, Oil