Mexico — What Went Wrong?
June 26, 2018 6:30 AM
National Review online
Presidential candidate Andrés Manuel
López Obrador speaks at a campaign rally in Zitacuaro, Mexico, May 28, 2018. (Alan
Ortega/Reuters) [Photo omitted] Mexico gets a massive cash influx in remittances, American
corporations get cheap labor, Democrats get voters . . .
Mexico in just a few days could
elect one of its more anti-American figures in recent memory, Andrés Manuel
López Obrador.
Obrador has often advanced the idea
that a strangely aggrieved Mexico has the right to monitor the status of its
citizens living illegally in the United States. Lately, he trumped that notion
of entitlement by assuring fellow Mexicans that they have a “human right” to
enter the United States as they please. For Obrador, this is an innate privilege
that he promised “we will defend” — without offering any clarification on the
meaning of “defend” other than to render meaningless the historic notion of
borders and sovereignty.
Obrador went on to urge his fellow Mexicans to “leave their towns and find a life in the United States.” He has naturally developed such a mindset because he assumes as normal what has become, by any fair standard, a historically abnormal relationship.
Obrador went on to urge his fellow Mexicans to “leave their towns and find a life in the United States.” He has naturally developed such a mindset because he assumes as normal what has become, by any fair standard, a historically abnormal relationship.
Obrador is determined to perpetuate,
if not enhance, the asymmetry. In the age of Trump, Obrador also reasons that
the furor and hysteria of the American media toward the president represents a
majority and a domestic grassroots pushback against the Trump administration —
apparently because of Trump’s “restrictionist” view of enforcing existing
immigration law. Polls, however, suggest otherwise, despite their notorious
embedded anti-Trump bias.
Mexico, the Aggressor
Facts are stubborn and reveal
Mexico, not the United States, as a de facto aggressor and belligerent on many
fronts. Mexico runs a NAFTA-protected $70 billion trade surplus with the U.S.,
larger than that of any other single American trade partner (including Japan
and Germany) except China. The architects of NAFTA long ago assured Americans
that such a trade war would not break out, or that we should not worry over
trade imbalances, given the desirability of outsourcing to take advantage of
Mexico’s cheaper labor costs.
A supposedly affluent Mexico was
supposed to achieve near parity with the U.S., as immigration and trade soon
neutralized. Despite Mexico’s economic growth, no such symmetry has followed
NAFTA. What did, however, 34 years later, was the establishment of a
dysfunctional Mexican state, whose drug cartels all but run the country on the
basis of their enormous profits from unfettered dope-running and
human-trafficking into the United States. NAFTA certainly did not make Mexico a
safer, kinder, and gentler nation.
In addition, Mexican citizens who
enter and reside as illegal immigrants in the U.S. are mostly responsible for
sending an approximate $30 billion in remittances home to Mexico. That sum has
now surpassed oil and tourism as the largest source of Mexican foreign
exchange. That huge cash influx is the concrete reality behind Obrador’s
otherwise unhinged rhetoric about exercising veto power over U.S. immigration
law.
What is also unsaid is that many of
the millions of Mexican expatriates in the United States who send remittances
home to Mexico are themselves beneficiaries of some sort of U.S. federal,
state, or local support that allows them to free up cash to send back to
Mexico.
When Obrador urges his fellow
citizens to abandon their country and head illegally into the United States,
his primary concern is not their general welfare and futures. He seems
quite unconcerned that those who send home remittances live in poverty in the
United States and seek offsetting subsidies from the U.S. government to find
enough disposable income to save the Mexican government from its mostly corrupt
self.
Why the U.S. government does not tax
remittances and why it does not prohibit foreign nationals on public assistance
from sending cash out of the country are some of the stranger phenomena of the
entire strange illegal-immigration matrix.
There may now be anywhere from 11
million to 20 million illegal aliens in the U.S. America’s open border is the
keystone of Mexican foreign and domestic policy. For all practical purposes,
Mexico City alone modulates the flow of both Mexican and Central American
citizens into the United States — depending on its current attitude toward the
U.S.
There appears to be little real
self-reflection in Mexico about how and why such a naturally rich country —
blessed with good soil, climate, natural resources, ports, and a strategic
geography — remains so dismally poor.
Mexico plays the same role with the
Unites States that North African countries play with Europe, except in the
former’s case, it has a deliberate rather than chaotic emigration policy — and
uses it as direct leverage over the U.S. Mexico’s sense of immigration
entitlement is predicated on the assumption that corporate America wants cheap
labor, that liberal America wants voters, that identity-politics activists need
constituents, that a liberal elite expresses its abstract virtue by its
patronization of the Other — and that until recently most Americans were
indifferent.
Conservatives, who object to waves
of illegal aliens swarming the border, earn boilerplate slurs that they are
cruel, racist, nativist, xenophobic, selfish, and anti-humanitarian.
Open-borders liberals, who once expressed opposition to illegal immigration,
take their cues from the concrete recent record showing that almost all
impoverished immigrants fuel progressive agendas of big government,
redistribution, and entitlements that otherwise have run out of gas.
Exporting human capital — most
illegal Mexican immigrants are now from southern Mexican and indigenous people
— has long acted as a political safety valve for the Mexican government. Its
grandees are largely the descendants of European aristocrats and have shown
little desire to enact the constitutional, human-rights, and economic reforms
that they assume are the norm in the U.S. and that might help Mexican citizens
live safely and profitably in their own homeland. Certainly, there appears to
be little real self-reflection in Mexico about how and why such a naturally
rich country — blessed with good soil, climate, natural resources, ports, and a
strategic geography — remains so dismally poor.
Illegal immigration provides a
useful and nearly perpetual demographic for Mexico inside the U.S. About 12
percent of the Mexican population now lives inside the United States, the great
majority illegally. Los Angeles may be the second-largest city of Mexican
nationals in the world. Of all U.S. immigrants, legal and not, it is estimated
that more than 30 percent come from Mexico, and another quarter arrived from
Central America through Mexico.
The activist expatriate community
also insidiously pressures the U.S. to a more pro-Mexican foreign policy. The
Democratic party has discovered — especially since 2008, the watershed year in
which the Obamas and most of the Democratic party institutionalized the idea of
illegal immigration recalibrating the Electoral College — that open borders
provide a steady stream of potential first- and secure second-generation voters
who in the past have flipped red states blue (such as California, New Mexico,
and Nevada). The careers of identity-politics activists often hinge on having a
permanent pool of poor, unskilled, and minimum-wage-earning constituents who
need collective representation by self-appointed advocates. Without illegal
immigration, Chicano or La Raza studies would in a few years resonate about as
much as a Polish- or Italian-studies department.
Only in the U.S. would an illegal
immigrant cross the border on Monday and in theory be eligible for affirmative
action on Tuesday. Supposedly, a racist and bigoted America owes an illegal
alien and his children employment or education reparations for their own
deprived childhoods in Mexico, or as recompense for the racism they will soon
inevitably encounter in the U.S., a bias that apparently did not bother
millions when they chose to leave their own country and cross the border
illegally.
The existential worry of both
identity-politics activists and the new Democratic party is an immigration that
is diverse, legal, meritocratic, and measured. The second-greatest fear is a
return of the melting pot and the end of the salad bowl, given that
assimilation, integration, and intermarriage might turn a useful bloc of
Hispanics immigrants into something like 20th-century Italian immigrants, who
eventually assimilated and whose politics were no longer predictable.
The longer illegal aliens are in the
U.S., the more they can afford to become staunch pro-Mexican adherents — as
long as they do not have to return to Mexico.
Mexican foreign policy has been as
brilliant as it has been cynical. Its signature theme has been an Art of the
Deal politicking to harangue the U.S. about its supposedly illiberal treatment
of Mexicans, whom Mexico itself has illiberally treated as a way of
facilitating even more illegal immigration. The more the U.S. is on the
apologetic defensive, and the more it has to prove its global humanitarian
fides — the more it is likely to suspend its own immigration law and allow in
more Mexican citizens without legal authorization. In one of the strangest
paradoxes of the present age, Mexico seems to love its people more, the farther
they are from Mexico and the longer they stay away. And that convenient love is
requited: The longer illegal aliens are in the U.S., the more they can afford
to become staunch pro-Mexican adherents — again, as long as they do not have to
return to Mexico.
We are warned by Obrador that a new
relationship with the U.S. in on the horizon, and pundits warn us that six of
ten Mexican now view the U.S. unfavorably. But what exactly would a new
militant anti-U.S. policy look like, given that the current relationship is
already so lopsided in favor of Mexico?
There are several U.S. concessions
to Mexico that a nationalist Obrador should logically pursue if he were truly
an anti-American activist of the Venezuelan, Cuban, or Nicaraguan brand. He might
demand repatriation of hundreds of thousands of Mexican citizens currently in
American jails. He could call for the repatriation of the 11 million to 20
million Mexicans living in the U.S. Obrador could either leave NAFTA or demand
increases in Mexico’s astounding $71 billion trade surpluses with the U.S. And,
of course, he could put an end to remittances, arguing that the $30 billion
that Mexican nationals sends home is a burden on Mexico’s exploited expatriate
poor and should cease. Promises, promises . . .
In sum, Obrador is in a surreal
position. He is posing as an anti-American, to channel popular anger at Trump,
while at the same time assuming that an obtuse United States will continue to
tolerate open borders, billions of dollars in remittances, interference in U.S.
politics, huge trade deficits — and somewhere between 11 million and 20 million
illegal aliens inside the United States.
Restoring Symmetry
What might the U.S. do to restore
symmetry and save Mexico from its own delusions?
It should control its own border
with Mexico as carefully as Mexico polices its own southern border. That
vigilance can be achieved mostly by stiffening employer sanctions on hiring
illegal aliens, finishing the wall, and warnings to Mexico that there will be
trade and commercial consequences for cynically facilitating the transit of
millions of illegal aliens from Central America.
It might calibrate trade and
commercial interactions to illegal immigration, allowing Mexico to determine
whether it is worth losing its trade surpluses to maintain its remittances. A
tax on remittances might be useful in funding the construction of a border
wall.
But most important, the moral
calculus of illegal immigration has gone haywire and must be rebooted. It is an
immoral act, not a moral one, to deliberately break the laws of a host country
as one’s first act on entering it.
A million cases a year of tax fraud
through the use of fake names and identification is not just an artifact of
illegal immigration, but a moral crime that callously harms U.S. citizens and
their institutions.
It is not kind to bring small
children illegally into a foreign country, much less to send them ahead,
unescorted, as levers for one’s own later entry.
It is not ethical to cut in front of
an immigration line, when millions of others abroad await, legally and with
patience, their applications for U.S. residence.
It is not honorable for a foreign
leader to claim that his own people are privileged immigrants who deserve, on
the basis of their race or nationality, favoritism over Asian, African, or
European would-be immigrants.
It is an act of belligerency for a
nation to undermine the laws of its neighbor — and boast that more of the same
is to come.
There has been much wild talk of the
“servitude” and “serfdom” of impoverished illegal aliens. But the real moral
travesty is that Mexico’s entire foreign and economic policy is based on
exporting its poor people abroad to scrimp and save cash to send home to
provide the support their own government will not.
The United States has many enemies
in the world, but it is hard to find one that deliberately is trying to undermine
U.S. law by exporting its own citizens to change the demographic and politics
of its supposed ally.
It is almost impossible to find
enemies that can so carefully extract billions of dollars in remittances and
surpluses from the U.S. economy. Most enemies do not send as many human
traffickers and drugs into the U.S. as does Mexico. And does an Iran or North
Korea boast that it has the right to violate U.S. law, interfere in the
domestic politics of America, and vow that it will continue to do so as it
pleases?
So, what, then, is the new Mexico —
a friend, an enemy, neither, or both?
1 comment:
I've had family live in Mexico, and I have been there on many occasions both for work and play. The fact is that those who live there learn quickly that the government is as corrupt as any on the planet, and that there is no sense of justice in the country. As an example, I was told as a child visiting family that if we were in a car accident "and you can walk, get out of the car and go!" When I asked "Why?" I was told that the practice was to "throw everyone in jail first, then they try and figure out what happened, later". It was not "innocent 'til proven guilty", it was guilty 'til proven innocent.
While I love Mexico in general, their police and their politicians are pretty much on the take from the drug dealers, human traffickers and other sundry scumbags, and everyone knows it. Therefore, taking advantage of our recklessly stupid immigration laws is not surprising--it should be expected.
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