Author: Staff

Winning the Next Immigration Battle | Foreign Affairs

U.S. President Barack Obama has made reform of the nations immigration laws his top priority this year. But to succeed, he will need to overcome the old adage “Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me.” The last time Congress passed a comprehensive immigration reform bill, the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986, it did not work out quite as promised. Indeed, rarely has a piece of congressional legislation failed as spectacularly as did the 1986 bill. It was intended to hold back a growing tide of illegal immigration into the United States but did nothing of the sort. The population of illegal immigrants in the United States, which was somewhat over three million at the time the bill was enacted, surged to an estimated 12 million by 2008. Today, there are about 11 million in the United States without authorization. The epic failure of the 1980s sowed mistrust between Congress and successive presidents, and persuaded many lawmakers that immigration reform does not deserve a second chance. As Representative Trey Gowdy R-S.C., who chairs the immigration subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee, put it in early February, after listing the unmet promises of the 1986 bill: “Why should we believe you now?”via Winning the Next Immigration Battle | Foreign...

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Plans to outfit Mexico-US border with sensors scrapped | SmartPlanet

The U.S. government’s plan to lay sensors across the Mexico-U.S. border have been stopped yet again due to technical flaws.First reported by Wired, the Customs and Border Protection, Office of Technology Innovation and Acquisition (OTIA) original filing in 2011 for the intent to install unattended ground and image sensors (UGSs) has now been updated with a cancellation notice.The business solicitation, submitted by the Department of Homeland Security and Customs and Border Protection Office, documents the use of UGS to help blanket the boarder in order to “track, identify, and classify illegal incursions,” therefore saving harassed border agents time and energy when trying to keep the border clear of those trying to jump the fence and enter the United States illegally.via Plans to outfit Mexico-US border with sensors scrapped |...

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Opinion: Defining border security – Eric Olson and Christopher Wilson – POLITICO.com

The recent announcements by President Barack Obama and a bipartisan group of senators outlining broad principles for immigration reform are very welcome. While the specifics of any reform will be hotly debated, a major advance has been made with the emergence of a broad political consensus, from left to right, that the current system is broken and in need of major repair.It would be troubling, then, if this golden opportunity to fix a broken system falls victim to the very same trap that has ensnared other reform efforts. By conditioning reforms on achieving a poorly defined and much misunderstood notion of “securing the border,” the whole effort is at risk of unraveling.via Opinion: Defining border security – Eric Olson and Christopher Wilson –...

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How Economics Has Benefited From Immigration – NYTimes.com

ALL the recent talk in Washington about reforming immigration policy brings to mind Pat Paulsen, the comedian who, every four years, conducted faux campaigns for president.“All the problems we face in the United States today,” Mr. Paulsen would say, “can be traced to an unenlightened immigration policy on the part of the American Indian.”That quip contains a deep truth. Almost all Americans today are beneficiaries of a policy that welcomed our ancestors when they arrived at the border.As an economist, I am often surprised at the hostility that some segments of the population express toward immigration. Most members of...

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New urgency to cross along tougher U.S. border – The Washington Post

In Tecate, Mexico — It does not matter much, when you are on this side of the fence, whether there will be a path to citizenship or something short of it.The path that matters is the one up and over the canyons and ridges of “La Rumorosa,” the Whisper Trail, one of the last places left along the California border where someone with no money and a little desert smarts has a decent shot of getting back in.via New urgency to cross along tougher U.S. border – The Washington...

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