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Shut The Golden Door

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  • Shut The Golden Door

    SHUT THE GOLDEN DOOR
    Dimitri Vassilaros

    Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
    June 27 2008
    PA

    Immigrants to America have not changed much. But their new homeland
    sure has.

    That's why Mark Krikorian, executive director of the Center for
    Immigration Studies, says the golden door must be slammed shut to
    illegal and legal aliens.

    In his just-published book, "The New Case Against Immigration,"
    Mr. Krikorian, the grandson of Armenian immigrants, says he's looking
    at the entire elephant in America's living room with his eyes wide
    open -- as opposed to blind people examining one part each of the
    beast to guess what stands before them.

    "Many critics of immigration are scattershot; they pick something from
    column one or two," Krikorian says. For example, some claim illegal
    immigration has created a crushing burden on hospitals that don't
    refuse to treat anyone in need, even though many illegals don't pay
    for the "free" health care.

    "They are all facets of the same problem," Krikorian says. "Immigration
    (legal and illegal) is not compatible with modern society," he says. In
    this post-industrial age, a high level of education trumps a strong
    back carrying a good work ethic.

    Yes, so-called grunt work is there for those who want it. But there's
    precious little opportunity for advancement. "It's a mismatch of 19th
    century-style workers in a 21st-century economy," he says.

    But what about second-generation immigrants? Surely they will catch up.

    The second generation does do better than their parents, Krikorian
    says. As before, there are similar increases in income rates from
    first- to second-generation families. However, now immigrants start
    so much further behind that even their kids' progress is not enough
    to help them catch up, he says.

    They are starting further and further behind, so they are that much
    further behind than the rest of America, Krikorian says.

    And while it's self-evident the immigrant is motivated to be in
    America, he's not necessarily motivated to be an American, Krikorian
    says. When in Rome, ... .

    "Assimilation is different today," he says. Even a very poor immigrant
    does not have to say adios to the old country, thanks to phones, e-mail
    and other technology. There are immigrants who do what Krikorian calls
    "transnational living," living in two countries during the same time --
    for example, coming to America to work part of the year and spending
    the rest of it in, say, Mexico with family and friends.

    "People never lose touch the way they used to," Krikorian says.

    "We have lost our cultural self-confidence to persuade people to join
    and assimilate," he says. "My mom is the daughter of immigrants. The
    Massachusetts public schools taught her to be an American. But what
    are kids learning now? It sure as heck is not memorizing the Gettysburg
    Address or 'Hail, Columbia.'

    "Now they are learning, at best, to be ambivalent about America and,
    at worst, that it's a terrible place. Why would kids want to join
    that?" Krikorian says.

    The mind-numbing array of government programs offered "free"
    to seemingly every alien, legal or not, is another reason to end
    immigration before the welfare state bankrupts the United States,
    he says.

    Krikorian wants his book to remind Americans what Abraham Lincoln
    said: "As our case is new, so must we think anew and act anew. We
    must disenthrall ourselves, and then we shall save our country."
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