Tuesday, April 16, 2024

Join our email blast

Your View

Liberals and conservatives are both off the deep end

5/8/2013

I’ve always considering myself a liberal Democrat. But lately I find myself agreeing with right-wing conservative types on many issues. Have I moved to the right with old age, or is the left going off the chart? Some examples:

1. I oppose the expansion of gambling in Iowa. We already have 21 casinos in a state of 3.1 million. That’s enough! The right-wing group The Family Leader, headed by Bob Vander Plaats, has also taken that position. I never in my life thought I would agree with him on anything.

2. I oppose increasing the gasoline tax by 10 cents per gallon. The Tea Party is against that increase as well.

3. I found a quotation by former ultra-conservative Sen. Barry Goldwater opposing the mixing of religion and politics. It’s incredible that I agree with him. But I do.

Personally, I think both the left and the right have gone off their respective deep ends. Nobody takes the middle ground anymore, and that’s the problem.

CNA - Stop HIV Iowa
–Gary Thelen
West Des Moines

 

Immigrant laws remain divisive for Iowa

As an immigration attorney in Iowa for the past 15 years, I’ve see firsthand how our current patchwork of immigration laws tears Iowa families apart and hurts Iowa businesses. Many relatives of U.S. citizens and residents have waited 20-plus years since they first started the application process to immigrate because of per-country limits. Employers filing for skilled or professional employees wait 17-plus years for a critical employee’s residency to be processed. Young people who were brought here as children, undocumented or visa overstays, are educated in our public schools and after graduation can’t use that education because there isn’t a process to apply for them. Iowa educates foreign-born, young people at our colleges and universities who follow the rules in F-1 or J-1 status. Then we make it difficult for them to stay and contribute after graduation. A large number migrate to Canada, where they are welcomed easily with their Iowa Master’s degrees and Ph.Ds to innovate Canadian
companies.

The recent focus on immigration reform has given me hope and optimism for Iowa to help reverse our declining population but this is tempered by realism. The public is demanding a plan that includes a humane road forward for both the best and brightest that come here for education and our undocumented friends and community members who all want to participate
fully and contribute. The Senate’s bipartisan set of principles demonstrates that lawmakers from both parties can come together to frame a solution that works for our highly educated graduates, undocumented immigrants, businesses, families and indeed for Iowa.

Single-minded focus on border enforcement is a problem. A recent report
shows that border enforcement benchmarks from the 2006, 2007 and 2010 Senate bills have been met. Yet to some, meeting those benchmarks aren’t enough; only 100 percent perfect is acceptable. It is also not attainable. Only throwing money and resources at the border does not address the broken system. We must demand that Congress puts in place clear and reasonable
enforcement goals.

Immigrants make up our past, our present and more importantly will assist
in Iowa’s future. Let’s all move forward together and support reform of the immigration system.

–JoAnn Barten
Ames
 

Send your opinions to Cityview, 414 61st Street, Des Moines, Iowa 50312. Fax us at 953-1394, or e-mail us at letters@dmcityview.com. Please limit letters to 200 words or less. Cityview reserves the right to edit for length and clarity. The writer’s address and daytime phone number will not be  printed, but must be given for verification.

Post a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

Summer Stir - June 2024