Tuesday, April 04, 2006

Flat Tom (The Hidden Friedman)

Tom Friedman's Wednesday column, High Fence and Big Gate (fully available to Times Select subscribers) returns our columnist turned best-selling author to his raison d'être--the flattened world. This time in conjunction with our recent national thoughtful mulling over of the subject of immigration:

So far, neither President Bush's proposal to allow the nation's millions of illegal immigrants to stay temporarily on work visas, nor the most hard-line G.O.P. counterproposal, which focuses only on border security, leaves me satisfied. We need a better blend of the two — a blend that will keep America the world's greatest magnet for immigrants. Why?

First, the world is flattening, and as a result more and more people around the globe have access to the same technological tools for innovation and entrepreneurship. In such a world, where innovation is concentrated really matters — because that is where the best management, research and sales jobs will be located for any company.

Because of its deeply rooted culture of immigration, the U.S. has a huge advantage in such a world. If we are smart, we can still cream off the most first-round intellectual draft choices from around the world — more than any other country — and bring that talent to our shores to start companies and work in others.

[...]

Second, a steady flow of immigrants keeps a society flexible and competitive. In this flat world, more people than ever can leverage technology. So whatever can be done — whatever today's technologies enable and empower — will be done by someone, somewhere. The only question is whether it will be done by you or to you. The more open your society is to new people and ideas, the more things will be done by you, not to you.

We shouldn't just welcome educated immigrants, but laborers as well — not only because we need manual laborers, but also because they bring an important energy. As the Indian-American entrepreneur Vivek Paul likes to say: "The very act of leaving behind your own society is an intense motivator. ... Whether you are a doctor or a gardener, you are intensely motivated to succeed."

[...]

An amnesty for the 11 million to 12 million illegal immigrants already here is hardly ideal. It would reward illegal behavior. But since we are not going to deport them all, some version of the Arlen Specter bill seems like the right way to go: Illegal immigrants who were in the U.S. before Jan. 7, 2004, could apply for three-year guest-worker visas, each renewable one time if the applicant paid a $1,000 fine and passed a background check. After six years, if the immigrant learned sufficient English and paid another $1,000 fine and back taxes, he or she could start to apply for citizenship.

But because I strongly favor immigration, I also favor a high fence — if not a physical one, then at least a tamperproof national ID card for every American, without which you could not get a legal job or access to government services. We will not sustain a majority in favor of flexible immigration if we can't control our borders.

Good fences make good immigration policy. Fences make people more secure and able to think through this issue more calmly. Porous borders empower only anti-immigrant demagogues, like the shameful CNN, which dumbs down the whole debate.

In regards to the demagoguery of CNN (in particular, Lou Dobbs), Media Matters has a good run-down of recent comments by big-time media talking (ass) heads--like Dobbs as well as O'Really and Hannity--decrying the waving of the Mexican flag. (At least Dobbs has the rhetorical sense to say that he doesn't even like Irish flags on St. Paddy's Day.)

mexican flag

And look who else has been seen waving the Mexican flag...

I'm looking forward to celebrating Syttende Mai (or Grunnlovsdagen, aka Norwegian Constitution Day) this year on the 17th of May. I'm gonna let my Norge flag fly! And since I don't have a traditional bunad, I'll have to make do with just a regular Norwegian sweater... and a menacing grimace for Mr. Dobbs.

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