Columnists, Opinion
 By  Staff Reports news Published 
8:55 am Friday, June 4, 2010

Arizona and our national self-abatement

The Arizona immigration law has become the occasion for a sorry exercise in national self-abasement.
When Mexican President Felipe Calderon addressed a joint session of Congress recently, he rapped Arizonians — ignorantly and unfairly — for using “racial profiling as the basis for law enforcement.” If Democrats felt any residual reflex to stand up for their fellow Americans in Arizona, who are grappling with a hellish problem partly caused by the misgovernment of the country whose president stood before them, they swiftly repressed it.
They rose and applauded, and the president of Mexico and a majority of America’s Congress united in their disdain for Arizona’s handiwork. No one seemed to mind that they were cheering a man from a country where the kidnapping and abuse of migrants is “a human-rights crisis,” according to Amnesty International.
President Barack Obama tried to interpret the strange customs of his compatriots, who cling to guns, religion and a belief that the Southern border should mean something.
The law is a “misdirected expression of frustration over our broken immigration system,” Obama explained in his best sociological diagnosis. In other words, those poor boobs have deluded themselves up into thinking that checking the identification of suspected illegal immigrants makes sense.
In his reference to a “fair reading” of the law, Obama at least implied he had read the 10-page text, a feat beyond his cabinet. His attorney general and secretary of homeland security blasted away at the law without pausing even to give it a good skim.
And why would they? It wouldn’t change their view of the law, or its supporters. The country’s progressives believe that they are a lone oasis in a vast archipelago of racism and backwardness called the United States of America. If they apologize for their country, it’s only because they think they have so much for which to apologize.
Obama says that Justice Department lawyers are reviewing the law — or, more accurately, looking for any possible excuse to challenge it.
They’ll have to be creative.
A Department of Justice memo from 2002 says that states have the “inherent power” to make arrests for violations of federal law, and drafters of the Arizona statute were careful not to exceed federal statutes.
There are other, more direct ways to vitiate the law. Robert Morton, the head of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, says the government might “not necessarily process illegal immigrants referred to them by Arizona officials.” This is the nation’s top immigration cop flirting with civil disobedience against enforcement of the nation’s immigration laws. If Morton gets the vapors over asking suspected illegals for their ID, he’s clearly in the wrong line of work.
At bottom, the dispute over the state’s law is a conflict of visions. The law’s supporters believe we should take the border seriously, and assert the country’s sovereign right to control who comes here and who doesn’t; its detractors believe any serious effort to make good on that sovereign right is exclusionary and tinged with racism because it’s primarily directed at Latinos.
In this struggle, the latter camp sees Felipe Calderon as an ally, and thrills to his disparagement of their countrymen.

Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.

(c) 2010 by King Features Synd., Inc.

Also on The Madison Record
City extends sales tax funding for Madison schools
A: Main, Madison County Record, News, ...
Maria Rakoczy 
February 4, 2026
MADISON - The Madison City Council approved an ordinance at the Jan. 29 city council continuing funding for the Madison City School District from a po...
Former Sparkman football player living his dream in Super Bowl LX
A: Main, Madison County Record, News, ...
Super Bowl LX
Bob Labbe 
February 4, 2026
HARVEST - All eyes of the sports world will be on Sunday’s Super Bowl which will feature former Sparkman High and Troy University star player Dell Pet...
Woman found dead after early Friday morning fire in Madison
A: Main, Madison County Record, News, ...
Apartment fire marks the 5th structure fire for Madison Fire and Rescue in 15 days
Staff Reports 
February 4, 2026
MADISON - A woman was found dead after an early morning house fire in Madison on Friday. Madison Fire & Rescue said crews responded to the fire on Cre...
Mayor Ranae Bartlett discusses sales tax, academy and activities
Madison County Record, News, The Madison Recor, ...
MADISON WEEKLY
Gregg Parker 
February 4, 2026
MADISON – In “Madison Weekly” for the week of Jan. 25, Mayor Ranae Bartlett endorsed Madison City Council’s vote to approve continuation of a half-cen...
Firefighters Harper, Martin awarded for lifesaving assistance
Madison County Record, News, The Madison Recor, ...
Gregg Parker 
February 4, 2026
MADISON – Jacob ‘Jake’ Harper and Jonathan Martin have been recognized for their bravery in service with Madison Fire and Rescue Department. Firefight...
Newcomers and Neighbors Club to meet Feb. 12
Events, Madison County Record, News, ...
Gregg Parker 
February 4, 2026
MADISON - The Madison Newcomers and Neighbors Club, a Women’s Social Organization will meet on Thursday, Feb. 12 at the Hogan Family YMCA, 130 Park Sq...
Girl Scouts to kick off cookie season on Friday
Lifestyles, Madison County Record, News, ...
Staff Reports 
February 4, 2026
NORTH ALABAMA - It’s that time of year! Girl Scouts in North-Central Alabama are getting ready for the start of the 2026 Girl Scout Cookie season — a ...
Parenting class to advise on adolescents’ destructive behavior
Events, Madison County Record, News, ...
Gregg Parker 
February 4, 2026
MADISON – The challenge for parents who live with and try to guide an adolescent can escalate when the youth demonstrates confrontational and even vio...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *