The Associated Press writes:
" Caught between business supporters who need foreign workers and conservatives clamoring for a clampdown on illegal immigration, President Bush tried on Saturday to give his temporary guest-worker plan a nudge by promising strong enforcement." [Emphasis mine].
Notice the language the AP uses to summarize a debate between the wealthy and the average American:
- Business supporters  "need foreign workers." It's not that businesses "want"  foreign workers. No, it's a proven, scientific fact that they NEED  foreign workers. Didn't you take Econ 101, where they told you that there are no  such thing as needs, just wants -- except for the need for cheap illegal  immigrant labor? (By the way, I need a membership in the Cypress  Point Golf Club, and I expect the President to get to work meeting my need,  posthaste.)
- Meanwhile, those emotional, low-class, racist "conservatives" are  "clamoring" for a "clampdown." (The unspeakableness of this  drives the AP frantic with alliteration.) And we all know what that means! Cue The  Clash:
The judge said five-to-ten
 But I say double that again
 I'm not working for the clampdown
 No man born with a living soul
 Can be working for the clampdown
And, anyway, Bush's "guest workers" will be here just for a "temporary" time. When their legal residency of six years, or whatever it will be is up, they'll just go home. What, do you think they'll break the law? I'm ashamed of you for even imagining that any foreigner wouldn't obey our immigration laws! What possible evidence do you have for such a hateful implication?
A reader writes:
The term  "guest worker" seems to me to be another re-labeling of something to  reduce the opposition to it, a standard leftist tactic.
Calling someone a guest implies all sorts of social obligations on the host -  none of which we in the host group ever asked for. They aren't guests in the new  context - they are simply job thieves, brought in to undermine American workers.  The union people would instantly see them for what they are - scabs, although  that term is normally reserved for strikebreakers. But we all understand that  this is pre-emptive action - let's break the strike before it gets a chance to  start!
There should be no echo on the restrictionist Right giving credence to the  notion of "guest workers". Job theft program, scab program, whatever  grating label our side can come up with - that's what should always be used, so  that the people pushing the program will have to combat popular vernacular and  will not be able to get away with coy labels.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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