Somehow, it isn't fair that with illegal immigration now a defining
issue of American politics, the one politician more than any other who
has taught Americans to re-imagine their land as a nation with
controllable borders is trailing in the GOP presidential polls. I
refer, of course, to Colorado Rep. Tom Tancredo, whose congressional
career has been guided by a once-seemingly impossible goal: to convince
Americans that we had an illegal immigration problem.
This was something many Americans -- from the business community, with
its addiction to cheap labor, to the great middle class, with its
addiction to cheap childcare and household help -- all too readily
denied.
If convincing people we had an illegal immigration crisis wasn't hard
enough, he also had to persuade people there was a solution to this
problem of porous borders that 10 or 20 million mainly Spanish-speaking
illegal aliens had crossed -- and are still crossing. What are you
gonna do, his detractors would say, build a fence?
Well, yes. That was one idea. And while that fence has yet to be built,
it has been voted into law and signed by the president (despite his
open-border self). In the course of the debate, Tancredo has helped
many Americans once again think of the United States as a sovereign
nation, not a honey pot -- a worthy testament to a congressional career
that he will be bringing to an end by not seeking re-election.
But what about Tancredo's presidential campaign? This week, he debuted
a new TV commercial challenging voters, as well as his fellow
candidates, to link the illegal alien issue to the national security
threat of jihadist terrorism. And despite this being the age of
jihadist terrorism, Tancredo's TV spot is a first. It highlights the
fact that our borders are open to more than just cheap labor by
depicting the ease with which a terrorist enters a shopping mall --
like other terrorists entered the London Underground, the Spanish
trains, a school in Russia -- to deposit a backpack-bomb that explodes
at the end of the commercial. The message is refreshingly direct:
"Tancredo. Before it's too late."
Yes, there is something surreal about the commercial, but not because
of the content. What is surreal is the hysteria that has greeted it.
After 9/11, 3/11, 7/7, Amman, Amsterdam, Baghdad, Bali, Beslan, Davao,
Hadera, Haifa, Jakarta, Jerusalem, Nairobi, New Dehli, Sharm al-Sheik,
Tel Aviv, Tunisia and more, what dolt doesn't wonder if and when
jihadist cowards will attack our own trains, markets, hotels and
restaurants? Tom Tancredo has only taken the mature and responsible
course -- not coincidentally, also the politically incorrect course --
by raising this deadly serious issue with the American people. But for
this he is castigated as a "fear-monger."
Indeed, as if on cue, the Tancredo-hostile Denver Post editorialized:
"New Tancredo ad is a sad case of fear-mongering," adding that Tancredo
had "reached a new low -- if that's possible."
"Is Tom Tancredo Too `Tough on Terror'?" blogged the Washington Post. Conclusion to reach: Way too tough.
The Los Angeles Times quoted one Dennis Goldford, a professor of
politics at Drake University in Des Moines, who described the Tancredo
commercial as "an incredibly fear-based kind of advertisement that some
might say is trying to terrorize people into supporting his view." This
is rich. Acknowledging terrorism as act of terrorism: Professor, grade
yourself an "F."
Meanwhile, the Rocky Mountain News didn't claim even a shred of
impartial coverage, sub-heading its report on the Tancredo commercial:
"Expert says terrorism images are so blatant commercial won't work."
The "expert" here was Bruce Gronbeck, a communications professor at the
University of Iowa who teaches a course on politics on the aftermath of
the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks (heaven help his students). He said:
"This is just blatant, raw fear images, and they've never worked in the
United States, period."
"Fear-mongering." "Terrorizing people." "Blatant, raw fear images." The
way the "experts" talk, they make it sound as if Tancredo is subjecting
citizens to sick "Saw" dismemberment fantasies -- not the plain, awful
reality of our tragically jihad-diminished day. Yes, our shopping malls
are targets. And yes, our borders are porous. Ignoring this makes it
easier to live in a world of pretend, but that's not traditionally
where our best presidents have come from. Indeed, how does any
credible, responsible presidential candidate ignore the potential
connection between shopping-mall targets and porous borders?
Answer: At this nation's politically correct peril.
Source: Townhall.com
Tancredo's Raw Truth About Terrorism
By Diana West
Friday, November 16, 2007
Republican
presidential candidate U.S. Congressman Tom Tancredo (R-CO) introduces
a new television campaign advertisement on illegal immigration to the
press at the Marriot Hotel in Des Moines, Iowa, November 12, 2007.
REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton (UNITED STATES)
Related Media:
VIDEO:
Leaving the House
VIDEO:
Tancredo: 2nd Amendament Rights
VIDEO:
'Tough on Terror'
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