In my college days I was a Goldwater Republican. My roommate and I saw eye-to-eye. Today he is a conservative Republican, and I am a progressive Democrat. We remain close friends, but this divide troubled me. I asked him to help me understand why the right harbors so much animosity towards the left. He responded with a link to a lecture given in 2020, by Tom Klingenstein of the Claremont Institute, a conservative think tank. I now understand the anger. If Klingenstein’s arguments were honest and factual, I would be angry too.
Klingenstein’s lecture is a collection of straw man fallacies, by which one misrepresents or exaggerates an opponent’s position so that it can be easily attacked. In effect, one rebuts an argument that is never made. His portrayal of the Democrat’s border policy is a good example.
America has a tradition of welcoming immigrants. A bronze plaque on the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty proclaims, “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free.” For more than 300 years, people have risked everything to come here. Today, that yearning has overwhelmed our southern border. Our bipartisan immigration laws are outdated, and the sheer number of people seeking entry through Mexico has overwhelmed both our border security forces and our court system.
Democratic officials have consistently supported legislation that would alleviate the problem in ways that are consistent with American principles and tradition. In 2007, the “gang of eight,” made up of Republican and Democratic senators, proposed comprehensive immigration legislation, which passed the Senate, but failed in the Republican-controlled House. Republicans have blocked every comprehensive immigration effort ever since.
Last December, conservative Republican Senator James Langford of Oklahoma introduced another comprehensive, bipartisan immigration package. Again, it passed the Democratic-controlled Senate but failed in the Republican-controlled House. Former President Donald Trump had intervened. fearing that the legislation’s enactment would eliminate immigration as a campaign issue in the 2024 presidential election. If Langford’s bill passed, Trump would not be able to blame the Biden Administration for the border chaos that Republicans have allowed to go on. Incredibly, Langford, who had been chosen by his party to work on the legislation, was then censured by his fellow Oklahoma Republicans for sponsoring the bill.