From the Right

/

Politics

Both parties fail refugees -- and America along with them

Ruben Navarrette Jr. on

SAN DIEGO -- Now that both sides have had their bouts of deflection and denial, we must untangle the mess at the U.S.-Mexico border.

As you know, a big part of that mess is that -- before they could plead their case for refugee status -- more than 2,500 children were separated with no plan to reunite them with their families.

America doesn't play fair. It insists that those who seek refuge follow the rules -- then it changes the rules. It tells the desperate to only come through designated ports of entry; but, when people do so, it turns them away.

We say that asylum-seekers must show "credible fear" of persecution, then we declare -- as the Trump administration did recently -- that victims of anti-LGBT abuse, domestic assault and gang violence need not apply.

Before liberals get all high and mighty, a similar crackdown occurred in 2014. The Obama administration made it harder for those seeking refugee status to get asylum by narrowing the definition of what it means for someone to face a "significant possibility" of persecution.

This much we learned in the last few weeks: Neither of the two major political parties cares about immigrants or refugees. They only care about their own interests.

 

After all, fear is a bipartisan affliction. Democrats are afraid that foreigners will take jobs from their union buddies. Republicans worry that newcomers -- as Fox News host Tucker Carlson said last week -- want to "change your country forever." So everyone's first instinct is to pull up the drawbridge, some more obnoxiously than others.

At least the media is paying attention to the evil done by government -- if, that is, the evil is committed by Republicans. Contrary to what uninformed and dishonest reporters and anchors told you about how all this inhospitableness toward foreigners began two months ago, it was more like 200 years ago.

We should also have learned this: Families have been separated at the border, in one form or another, for the last 25 years under presidents from both parties. Consider how the federal government works. Presidents, senior staff, and Cabinet officers come and go. But career bureaucrats can stay in these agencies for life. So policies can remain the same no matter who occupies the Oval Office. There's your deep state.

Another lesson: Border enforcement is not child's play. The Department of Homeland Security is a blunt instrument that isn't equipped, or inclined, to run daycare centers for children -- whether unaccompanied or separated from their parents.

...continued

swipe to next page

 

 

Comics

Mike Smith Joel Pett Steve Breen Bart van Leeuwen Phil Hands Jeff Danziger