08/31/2012
I just had to look something up on the Rasmussen Reports website, and I noticed for the first time that they run political commentary, with a noticeable bias to the left.
This, for example, from liberal Providence Journal commentator Froma Harrop. Headline: Bad Immigration Ideas From All Directions.
The piece isn’t as bad as some. Ms. Harrop actually starts of with a swing at the California TRUST Act, which, as she points out, would require local law enforcement to defy federal law.
A paragraph or two later, though, and we're squelching around in the "Comprehensive Immigration Reform" swamp.
In Tampa, Fla., meanwhile, the Republican National Convention has produced a party platform with far less "give" for illegal immigrants. It calls for no future amnesty and supports "humane procedures to encourage illegal aliens to return home voluntarily" ? a polite way of saying "self-deportation."
[Eek! So I guess "self-deportation" is a phrase that cannot be said politely. Why not? Deportation is a lawful procedure. If you do it yourself, you're sparing the public fisc the cost of that lawful procedure. What’s not to like? Where is the impoliteness? ? JD]
Two different approaches, each unwise in its own way.
Absent comprehensive reform, the Obama administration has done a heroic job enforcing the country’s immigration laws as fairly as possible …
Fair comment, if misguided; but why is Rasmussen running political commentary at all? It’s a polling organization, that ought to be scrupulous about keeping its distance from political controversies.
This is a content archive of VDARE.com, which Letitia James forced off of the Internet using lawfare.