Monday, December 24, 2007

Jacoby With Answers to the Immigration Challenge

I have to admit that I was somewhat surprised to discover that a strong conservative seemed to offer the most reasonable solutions to our immigration challenge. Yet, that is exactly what I found in Tamar Jacoby, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute.

In a bulletin adapted from a transcript of a Manhattan Institute forum held in New York City on May 15, 2007, Jacoby comments that even more important than resolving the technicalities of immigration is the need to address what happens to immigrants once they come to America.

Jacoby reminds us that there are already about 35 million foreign-born people living permanently in the U. S. and another 1.5 million coming every year to settle. If they aren't allowed to "be all they can be," not only will their economic success and social mobility be in jeopardy, but as Jacoby asks, "...what will happen to the United States?'

Jacoby goes onto explain how both the right and the left are getting it wrong as the right fights for a tow the line stance and the left fears that assimilation will force immigrants to give up their identity. "I feel that the right and the left have failed the immigrants, and failed the nation, by not figuring out a way to talk to each other about this," warns Jacoby.

For more information on Tamar Jacoby's suggestions regarding how to address immigration visit:
http://www.manhattan-institute.org/html/jacoby.htm