September 1, 2008 • Vol. 13, No. 47 Download Now! (pdf)

 

EDITORIAL
The Thin Man
by William Kristol

SCRAPBOOK
Bob Herbert's History Lesson

ARTICLES
Don't Cry for Russia
by Cathy Young

Keynote Kalamities
by Matthew Continetti

Would You Hire Barack Obama?
by Dean Barnett

An Awkward Alliance
by Stephen F. Hayes

Unsuper Delegate
by Richard Burr

Hillary Supporters for McCain
by Salena Zito

FEATURES
Misfortunes of War
by Noemie Emery

The New Jews?
by Jennifer Rubin

Faith-Based Campaign
by Terry Eastland

BOOKS & ARTS
No Way Out
by Christopher J. Walker

The Texas Way
by William McKenzie

Crime Pays
by Steven J. Lenzner

Hef's Cold War
by Cynthia Grenier

Le Film Mediocre
by John Podhoretz

CASUAL
A Summer Car
by Joseph Bottum

PARODY
The Podestionary


« Security & America's "Global Image" | Main | Pathetic »

Caveat Emptor

Conservative columnist George Will isn't a fan of the House-passed immigration bill. He believes it’s bad policy and bad politics. A few months back, he criticized “faux conservatives” for trying to pin the “amnesty” moniker on the Senate-passed bill.

[C]onservatives should favor reducing illegality by putting illegal immigrants on a path out of society's crevices and into citizenship by paying fines and back taxes and learning English. Faux conservatives absurdly call this price tag on legal status "amnesty." Actually, it would prevent the emergence of a sullen, simmering subculture of the permanently marginalized, akin to the Arab ghettos in France. The House-passed bill, making it a felony to be in the country illegally, would make 11 million people permanently ineligible for legal status. To what end?

And in today’s Washington Post Will argues that the GOP risks inflicting long-term political damage if it stumbles on immigration.

So, safely assuming that the House-Senate conference fails to produce a compromise acceptable to both houses, when Congress returns to Washington after the Labor Day recess, the House may again pass essentially what it passed in December….

The cost of this, paid in the coin of lost support among Latinos, the nation's largest and fastest-growing minority, may be reckoned later, for years. Remember this: Out West, feelings of all sorts about immigration policy are particularly intense, and if John Kerry had won a total of 127,014 more votes in New Mexico, Nevada and Colorado, states with burgeoning Latino populations, he would have carried those states and won the election. But for now, the minds of Republican candidates are concentrated on a shorter time horizon -- the next 4 1/2 months.

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