Mar
31
Late addition to the show
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Former Fox, now MSNBC commentator Monica Crowley is starting a new radio show that debuts Saturday right after my program. She’ll join me after the 11 o’clock news to chat about it.
Mar
30
This week on the Big Show
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Former Mexican Foreign Minister (and possibly future President) Jorge Castanedo on immigration. And with a somewhat less official, but just as heartfelt a report from this side of the border: my brother Tom from South Florida. Congressman Allen joins us for Town Meeting and Senior Political Correspondent Michael Winship from New York.
Mar
29
That’s lavender to you, pal
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One of the weird things about living on a boat is, on a nice day, people stroll up to the edge of the dock and stare. (Imagine what it would be like if people wandered into your driveway and stood there, staring at your house.) Yesterday I was working on deck and some guy who had been staring at the boat for awhile yelled “Hey pal–aren’t you embarrased having a purple mast?”
Number One, it’s lavender. Number Two, it used to belong to Fortuna Light, one of the most successful Whitbread boats of the late 80s—so that mast has been around the world in some pretty extreme conditions. And Number Three, no, I’m not embarrased. I’m comfortable enough in my manhood that I can have a purple mast. And get my back waxed. So there.
Mar
29
Immigration
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The most virulent anti-immigrant activists—most of them hard core Republican conservatives–are trying to tell you that immigration reform is about Homeland Security. The funny thing is these people are calling for a fence between the US and Mexico–but not between the US and Canada. And terrorists can just as easily sneak across that border. In fact, the US Canadian border is 4,000 miles long and is patrolled by 600 agents. The US Mexican border is 2000 miles long and is patrolled by 9,000 agents. If you were a terrorist, where would you try to sneak in?
So it’s not about keeping terrorists out, it’s about keeping Mexicans out.
I heard Rush talking about this on Monday. He characterized the half million Mexicans coming into the US each year as criminials who are unwilling to work. As usual, he’s got it exactly backwards. The main reason they are coming to the US is to work–to make a better life for themselves and their family. Think about it–what would it take to convince you to leave your home and your country? Quite a bit, I bet. It’s not something you do because you’re lazy. It’s something you do because you have just what we need in this country–a willingness to work hard to achieve your dreams.
This might be a good time to dredge up a segment with my Brother Tom from a year or two ago. He lives and works in South Florida–with lots of aliens, legal and illegal.
Mar
28
Senior Political Correspondent Michael Winship
Wow. As the United States Senate is being dragged, kicking and screaming during this election year into the national debate over immigration, two remarkable events occurred.
First, the unexpected, enormous turnout at pro-immigrant demonstrations across the country this past weekend — half a million in Los Angeles, and thousands more in Houston, Detroit, Milwaukee, Phoenix, Washington and many other American cities.
Second, and certainly not coincidentally, Monday night’s 12-6, bipartisan vote in the Senate Judiciary Committee sending a comprehensive, compassionate and, yes, moral plan for immigration policy reform to the Senate floor. Makes you proud to be, well, an American…
The proposed legislation offers a hand to the nation’s 12 million illegal immigrants and the possibility of granting them citizenship without forfeiting national security. It creates a guest worker program, includes additional visas for agricultural workers and nurses, and protects from prosecution churches and other humanitarian groups providing food and shelter to illegals. But it also doubles the size of the Border Patrol and calls for the creation of a “virtual” wall of high tech cameras, sensors and unmanned drones to patrol the boundary between the United States and Mexico.
This is just the beginning of what promises to be the continuation of a long, contentious and sometimes xenophobic debate. As South Carolina Republican Senator Lindsey Graham remarked after the committee vote, “The only thing that’s off the table is inaction.” (He’s one of the four Republican committee members who voted yes.)
Amendments and counter-amendments will attempt to remove the more liberal aspects and stiffen regulation and enforcement. Other legislation will be proposed. There will be arguments, both shrill and reasonable, about illegals taking jobs and straining the welfare state. Some will continue to suggest deportation of all illegals, although it’s estimated that, beyond the logistical and civil liberties nightmare, removal would cost $41.2 billion every year for five years, more than the entire budget of the Department of Homeland Security.
Whatever comes out of the Senate will have to be reconciled with the far more draconian legislation passed by the House of Representatives in December. It makes illegal immigrants felons rather than putting them, as they are now, in violation of civil law, and has no guest worker provision.
Nonetheless, the judiciary committee’s action is a fine start. It proves that an appreciation of freedom and the many different nationalities and ethnicities that built this fractious republic isn’t dead. Yet.
Most of the committee bill’s language comes from legislation jointly proposed by Senators John McCain and Ted Kennedy. Key within it is a plan that would offer current illegal immigrants a difficult but fair, eleven-year path to citizenship. As described by Michelle Mittelstadt in the Dallas Morning News, “Illegal immigrants who pay a $1,000 fine and pass a criminal background check could apply for a visa, good for six years, allowing them to work here legally and travel out of the country. They later could apply for legal permanent residence, and ultimately citizenship, if they pay an additional $1,000, show English and civics proficiency, and make good on all back taxes… Illegal immigrants couldn’t cut in front of the more than 3 million ‘green card’ applicants who have obeyed the law, remaining overseas while their paperwork is processed.”
All of this brings to mind “A Nation of Immigrants,” a book by Ted Kennedy’s older brother that first came out in the late fifties. It was reissued shortly after Jack Kennedy’s death. “Immigration policy should be generous; it should be fair; it should be flexible,” Kennedy (or his speechwriters) wrote. “With such a policy, we can turn to the world and to our own past, with clean hands and a clear conscience… The immigrants we welcome today and tomorrow will carry on this tradition and help us to retain, reinvigorate, and strengthen the American spirit.”
I think of two friends, one Polish, the other Canadian, each of whom recently became United States citizens, each of them proud of their accomplishment and looking ahead to the future, to what this nation can give them and vice versa, etc..
I think of the place I live, Manhattan, and the energy and passion that built and drives it, fueled by the spirit of so many diverse cultures; and even my small upstate New York hometown, originally a Native American village, which over the years has been enhanced by the Irish, Germans, Italians and many others who came to build and work and stayed. Hey, there’s even a Mexican restaurant there now — a real one. None of this “yo quiero Taco Bell” mierda.
And I think of a man named Alberto Mora, former general counsel to the United States Navy. As recently reported in The New Yorker magazine, he left the Pentagon in the wake of a battle lost against the Bush administration and “what he saw as a disastrous and unlawful policy of authorizing cruelty toward terror suspects” at Guantanamo. “I was appalled by the whole thing,” he said. “It was clearly abusive, and it was clearly contrary to everything we were ever taught about American values.”
A conservative, Mora is the son of immigrants, a Cuban father and Hungarian mother, each an exile from Communist regimes. He learned his values from them. In The New Yorker, Jane Mayer wrote, “Mora’s first memory, as a young child, is of playing on the floor in his mother’s bedroom, and watching her crying as she listened to a report on the radio declaring that the 1956 anti-Communist uprising in Hungary had been crushed. ‘People who went through things like this tend to have very strong views about the rule of law, totalitarianism, and America,’ Mora said.”
We need those views, those truths that, lately, have been somewhat less than self-evident. In “A Nation of Immigrants,” John F. Kennedy wrote. “Immigration reminds every American, old and new, that… American society is a process, not a conclusion.”
copyright 2006 Messenger Post Newspapers
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Mar
26
3.25 Show Hour 1
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Senator Susan Collins on Port Security and the Brady Bunch vs. the Partridge Family and my new meditation CD.
Mar
26
3.25 Show Hour 2
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The fanatics of the Westboro Baptist Church talking about demonstrating at the funeral of a soldier killed in Iraq. About halfway through the hour I switched from Margie to Shirley Phelps…and Shirley didn’t know I had just been talking to her sister. Listen to her get blindsided…..
Mar
26
3.25 Show Hour 3
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Fall out from Westboro Baptist Church segment, the trouble with the Religious Right, Sr. Political Correspondent Michael Winship.
Mar
26
3.25 Show Hour 4
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Polygamy & Pat Robertson…
Mar
24
Saturday on the Show!
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Sex, polygamy, religion, politics—all the things you aren’t supposed to talk about in polite company. Shirley Phelps Roper is scheduled to make a return appearance to the show–she’s the nutty woman from the Westboro Baptist Church who is behind the protest of the soldier’s funeral in Maine this weekend. Also, how fundamentalist Christians are threatening lots of American values. Plus Senior Political Correspondent Michael Winship, Katherine Harris running for the Senate in Florida, my new mediation CD, and do whiny kids grow up to be conservative?
Don’t forget, you can now subscribe to the show on iTunes (go to the iTunes music store and search for “Willy Ritch”) or listen to it right here starting Saturday night.
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