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Writers on the Range: The Arizona solution

Ed Quillen
Writers on the Range

Having lived in Colorado for all of my 59 years, I’ve certainly suffered from immigration. It’s cost me a job or two because immigrants from the East Coast went to better schools and boasted more impressive resumes. I’ve had to compete against well-heeled California immigrants for housing.

After these immigrants settle in, they assault our customs and culture. They’re always in a hurry, so they drive too fast. They try to outlaw humble items that offend their aesthetic sensibilities, like woodpiles, junk cars and clotheslines. If they’re from Texas, they want our schools to focus on Jefferson Davis rather than Thomas Jefferson, and to do so after starting the day with public prayer. If they hail from California, then they push our schools to focus on improving self-esteem, rather than grammar or biology.

But irksome as those immigrants may be, they’re not the ones who get the headlines these days. Instead, it’s Arizona’s new immigration law – the one that cracks down on undocumented immigrants, requiring anyone reasonably suspected by police of being an immigrant to produce the appropriate papers.



Long before the Arizona law was proposed, I’d sometimes get asked how I thought America should handle immigration from Mexico. I’d usually cite Edward Abbey’s idea: Catch them at the border. Issue rifles and ammunition, then send them back to Mexico to fix whatever there is about that nation that compelled them to leave it.

The idea has a certain appeal because I, like Abbey, worry about the environmental effects from having too many people in our arid part of the world. Then again, Mexican immigrants are part of the American tradition. Like my own ancestors, they come to the United States in hopes of a finding a better life. You can’t hate people for that.



I’m enough of a history buff to know that the border between the United States and Mexico is basically just a line drawn by politicians. Every afternoon, when I walk my dog on the east side of the Arkansas River, I’m crossing what was the U.S.-Mexican border for a quarter of a century. The boundary hasn’t always been where it is today. Still, it is a border, and national borders are supposed to mean something.

But what should be done? Neither major political party is going to be of much help here. Republicans may believe in law and order, but it’s also a party that believes in cheap labor, and Democrats are loath to offend any ethnic minority. Consider the options:

*They’re lawbreakers, so round ’em up and send them back to Mexico. Most estimates put the undocumented population at about 12 million people. That’s a lot of people – more than the combined populations of Utah, Nevada, Idaho, New Mexico, Montana, Alaska, North Dakota and Wyoming. Could we hire enough cops, provide enough holding facilities? Could we conduct fair hearings with due process before we transport them south for hundreds of miles? We’re talking about 240,000 busloads of people here, which is an awful lot of buses.

*Build a better fence. Unfortunately, as many have observed, a 10-foot-high border fence just leads to 11-foot ladders. Ignore for a moment the environmental issues that come from fragmenting habitat along the 1,969-mile border, and consider that the Great Wall of China failed to keep Manchu “immigrants” out of the Celestial Kingdom – one of its gates was opened by a disgruntled Ming border officer. Also note that most of the violence along the Arizona-Mexico border comes from drug smugglers – there’s a lot of money to be made in that pursuit. As the Roman orator Marcus Tullius Cicero noted, “There is no fortress so strong that money cannot take it.”

*Penalize employers. The Populists suggested this back in 1892, when their platform denounced “imported pauperized labor” that “beats down wages.” But I’ve been an employer. It did not give me any special expertise in determining whether identification documents were forged, or if an applicant was telling the truth about his birthplace (which I couldn’t ask about anyway, since it’s illegal to discriminate on the basis of national origin). It’s not hard to imagine how a lot more employment discrimination could develop if there was more enforcement aimed at employers.

So I don’t see any realistic near-term solution to America’s immigration issues. But I do have one suggestion for Arizona: Instead of demanding documents only from suspected illegal immigrants, the state should demand documents from everyone – even if you’re blond and blue-eyed and have no trace of an accent. You’d still need to produce proof of citizenship to check out a library book or to pay a water bill.

This approach would avoid even a hint of racial or ethnic profiling, so there would be no reason to boycott the state on that account. And eventually Arizona’s beleaguered residents, tired of producing their citizenship papers on a daily basis, would put serious pressure on the Legislature or else mount a repeal initiative.

For as Ulysses S. Grant stated in his first inaugural address, “I know of no method to secure the repeal of bad or obnoxious laws so effective as their stringent execution.” Let’s support some “stringent execution” in Arizona, and see how long that law lasts.

Ed Quillen is a contributor to Writers on the Range, a service of High Country News (hcn.org). He writes in Denver, Colorado.


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