- NRI tries to score big in US election.
Byline: Chidanand Rajghatta WASHINGTON: Illegal immigration and border security is not exactly the unnoticed elephant in the room in the upcoming US election, but an Indian-American aspirant for Congress chose to use pachyderms to show just how porous the American ......
- The border patrol.
THE BEST ECONOMISTS keep an eye out for borders--lines in time or space dividing sharply different levels of economic activity. In all likelihood, such borders reflect a discontinuity in incentives: On one side of the line work is encouraged, on ......
- How porous are US borders?
Byline: Chidanand Rajghatta WASHINGTON: In the upcoming US elections, illegal immigration and border security is not exactly the unnoticed elephant in the room, but an Indian-American aspirant for Congress chose to use pachyderms to show just how porous the American ......
- Bomb smugglers: border security woes.
ACCORDING TO the Government Accountability Office (GAO), the Department of Homeland Security has fallen far behind in its effort to install portal monitors and handheld radiation detection equipment at points of entry into the United States. That's too bad, because ......
- Immigration Solutions; Permanent residency through employment.
Byline: Robert L. Reeves The US State Departments May 2007 visa bulletin brought welcoming news to thousands of immigrants as the priority date in the employment-based third-preference (EB-3) skilled worker/professional category for Philippine nationals and nationals from countries other than ......
- Security for whom & against what?
Anyone who has flown on commercial airlines since 9-11 knows that America has changed dramatically. Invasive and humiliating searches have become routine procedure. Long lines, delays, metal detectors, explosive residue detectors, partial disrobing, wanding, pat-downs, multiple I.D. checks, intrusive questioning ......
- Where's the Fence? (Build it and they won't come).
Last year, responding to pressure from angry constituents over our continued open border with Mexico, Congress okayed funding for constructing hundreds of miles of fence along the border. The Bush administration, however, has dawdled and delayed; only a couple miles ......
- Don't give up on reform.
Byline: The Register-Guard Republican presidential candidate Rudolph Giuliani has denounced the immigration reform package now stalled in the Senate as "a typical Washington mess." He's certainly right that the compromise is messy, although it can still be salvaged this year ......
- Border emergencies and amnesty.
On August 12, New Mexico's Democratic Governor Bill Richardson, describing the situation on his state's border with Mexico as "chaotic," declared a state of emergency. Three days later, Arizona's Democratic Governor, Janet Napolitano, did likewise. Both declarations prompted outrage from ......
- Build reform, not walls.
Byline: The Register-Guard The United States doesn't need a 2,000-mile wall spanning the U.S.-Mexico border from the Pacific Ocean to the mouth of the Rio Grande. It needs a realistic immigration policy. Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif., proposes extending an existing ......
- Guilty by association: note to conservatives; most immigrants aren't terrorists. (Columns).
SHORTLY AFTER TWO men were arrested in last October's sniper shootings, ending a crime spree that had terrorized the D.C.-Baltimore area and left 10 people dead, a detail emerged that galvanized a large segment of the American punditry. One of ......
- Immigration: citizens & strangers.
Discussions of immigration often oversimplify or distort the moral issues at stake. Contemporary liberalism promotes the twin ideals of individual autonomy and equality. But these ideals, as commonly interpreted, have a corrosive effect on attempts to regulate immigration, since restrictions ......
- Blood money on the border.
Mexican drug cartels, which are supported and protected by that nation's extravagantly corrupt government, have lavished bribes on Customs and Border Patrol agents to transform "the Texas-Mexico border into one of the major transport corridors for marijuana, cocaine, and heroin," ......
- Now do you believe we need a draft? We're in a new kind of war. Time for a new kind of draft.
PRESIDENT BUSH HAS SAID THAT THE new war against terrorism will be a different kind of conflict. He is more right than he knows. Not only are we facing a uniquely shadowy enemy, one committed to inflicting mass civilian casualties ......
- Border agents to serve in Iraq.
The U.S. State Department has contracted a private firm called DynCorp to recruit 120 veteran law-enforcement members with border-security experience to relocate to Iraq. According to the Houston Chronicle, these officers would serve as mentors for newly trained Iraqi border ......