THE DAILY BLADE: A To Z Approach On Illegal Immigration In AZ
The Wall Street Journal calls AZ “a laboratory for new ways to crack down on illegal immigrants.” Spurred in large part by “transplants” from other parts of the country, The Journal notes that AZ enacted 13 laws aimed at curbing illegal immigration, many of which triggered lawsuits or have yet to be enforced. These include making English the state's official language and denying punitive damage awards to illegal aliens in civil court.
However, a new state punishing employers who hire illegals has withstood legal challenge, which bodes well for at least some of the others. Here’s a round-up of the state’s initiatives to relieve the burden that the nation’s failed immigration policy created:
† By executive order, Gov. Janet Napolitano is allowing real estate regulators and police to share information on “drop houses” where human smugglers stash illegal aliens until their fee is paid or arrangements can be made to deliver them to their final destinations in the state. She wants to target property managers who knowingly rent homes to smugglers. The Phoenix metropolitan area is believed to have about 1,000 drop houses, according to The Associated Press.
† Last year, Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio authorized his deputies to arrest illegal immigrants in the course of duty - resulting in the arrests of hundreds. After the murder of a Phoenix police officer by an illegal alien, Scottsdale police have been asking for proof of citizenship from every suspect arrested since October 15th and turning illegals over to ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement). Now, Phoenix police have begun asking anyone who is arrested on drunken driving, murder and other criminal offenses whether (s)he is in the U.S. legally, and will report some of them to ICE. Mayor Phil Gordon said that the new policy exempts people stopped for civil traffic violations like speeding, and that police will not randomly stop people to ask their immigration status. “We are doing what every city in this country should be doing but doesn’t,” Gordon tells The New York Times.
† Deputies perform background checks on visitors to the jails under the jurisdiction of the Maricopa County Sheriff's Office, and anyone who cannot prove citizenship has been subject to arrest since July 2007 (third item). Sheriff Arpaio has also set up a hot line to report illegal immigrants, which is advertised on the side of the sheriff's vehicles with a big red "Do Not Enter" sign and the word "Illegally" scrawled over it, reports The Wall Street Journal.
† In 2006, voters passed a referendum, Proposition 300 that prohibits college students from receiving state financial assistance unless they can prove they are legal residents, and also bars colleges from offering in-state tuition for illegal immigrants. Illegals are free to attend college – and school administrators are not required to report them to the authorities – but have to pay their own way, just as they would in Mexico where there are no programs that offer financial aid to those wanting to pursue a college education. “Arizona has been overwhelmed with illegal immigration and all the negative things that follow — crime, increased public service costs, especially education, and depression of our wages — and the federal government seems barely capable of doing much,” State Representative John Kavanagh (R-Fountain Hills) tells The New York Times. He adds, “Denying the in-state tuition, besides being fair to residents, also deters illegal immigrants from coming here.”
So what’s the upshot of all this enforcement activity? Coupled with the collapse of the housing market - builders are among the top employers of illegals in the state – these initiatives are “steering Hispanic immigrants out of the state,” reports The New York Times:
State Representative Russell K. Pearce, a Republican from Mesa and leading advocate of the crackdown on illegal immigration, takes reports of unauthorized workers leaving as a sign of success. An estimated one in 10 workers in Arizona are Hispanic immigrants, both legal and illegal, twice the national average.
“The desired effect was, we don’t have the red carpet out for illegal aliens,” Mr. Pearce said, adding that while “most of these are good people” they are a “tremendous burden” on public services. …
Several school districts in heavily Latino areas have reported sudden drops in enrollment. …
The Cartwright Elementary School District in west Phoenix, for instance, reported a loss of 525 students this school year (dropping the enrollment to 19,845), while in previous years enrollment had grown or remained stable among its 23 schools. …
Juan Leon, a construction subcontractor and the husband of Elizabeth Leon, the day care worker, said illegal immigrants had made it harder for legal residents like him to find work. Companies that employ them can bid much lower on projects than he can because they pay workers much less, Mr. Leon said.
With fewer illegal immigrants relying on public services the tax burden on many Arizonans will eventually ease – for one thing, new schools won’t have to be built and new teachers won’t have to be hired – pumping more discretionary dollars into local businesses to help get the economy back on its feet faster.
Always Remember And Don’t Ever Forget
French President Nicolas Sarkozy wants all fifth-graders in his country to be “entrusted with the memory” of one of the 11,000 Jewish children who were deported to Auschwitz and other death camps in eastern Europe during the Nazi occupation of France. Speaking to French Jews at a dinner in Perigueux, Sarkozy said, “Nothing is more moving, for a child, than the story of a child his own age, who has the same games, the same joys and the same hopes as he, but who, in the dawn of the 1940s, had the bad fortune to be defined as a Jew.”
Since 2002, fifth-graders have studied the Holocaust as a crime against humanity, watching films, visiting museums and memorials and taking field trips to concentration camps, The New York Times reports, and schools that lost students to the Holocaust hang plaques in their memory.
Some psychiatrists and teachers object to the curriculum change on the grounds that forcing students to identify with a specific victim would be psychologically traumatic, and would “unfairly burden children with the guilt of previous generations,” reports Reuters. Counters Sarkozy: “You do not traumatize children by giving them the gift of the memory of a country.”
Others complain that the proposal doesn’t go far enough, and should also include Gypsies and other victims of the Nazis. The Stiletto agrees, and suggests that the proposal also be extended to include the Armenian Genocide – France has a large population of Armenians in the Diaspora, and their history of near-extermination is currently not taught in French schools.
The Armenian Genocide is not taught in Turkish schools – it is a criminal offense to teach, talk about or write about Ottoman Turkey’s systematic annihilation of its Christian Armenian population (second item) - which is why Turks are convinced it never happened (last item, “The Other Shoe Drops”).
Israeli children do not learn about the Armenian Genocide in school, according to historian and scholar Yair Auron, author of “The Banality of Denial: Israel and the Armenian Genocide” (Transaction Books, 2003), which is why Israel can enter into a military and economic alliance with Turkey without too many people asking inconvenient and uncomfortable questions about what “never again” should mean to Israelis.
And, except for a handful of school districts in MA and CA that have a large Armenian population, the Armenian Genocide is no longer taught in American schools, which is why our elected officials caved in to Turkish threats and tabled a vote on a symbolic resolution to acknowledge the 20th century’s first crime against humanity.
"It is ignorance that produces abominable situations. It is not knowledge," insists Sarkozy.
The Stiletto wholeheartedly agrees.
The Stiletto Scoops Best Of The Web Today
Now that they are forbidden to use waterboarding, military interrogators have turned to smorgasbording.
- Gitmo Has Become A Fat Farm, The Stiletto Blog, October 4, 2006
If We Can't Waterboard, We'll Coffeeboard!
- Best of the Web Today, February 14, 2008
Presidents Day Bonus
In honor of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln, two presidents famous for their honesty, here is a very thoughtful article from New York Magazine about when kids tell their first lie (it’s way sooner than you think) and advice on proactive strategies parents can use to raise honest children (author Po Bronson debunks the conventional wisdom that “they’ll grow out of it”).






Re the second other-shoe-dropping:
http://therenaissancebiologist.blogspot.com/2008/02/civics-test.html
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