On Monday, an “immigration reform” proposal will be announced by a bipartisan group of eight Senators that includes Marco Rubio (R-FL). And tomorrow we will endure President Barack Obama’s “immigration reform” speech

“Immigration reform” as proposed by both sides nearly always includes some sort of “path to citizenship” for illegal aliens with no real reform to the way we decide who gets to come to America and who does not. Not to mention the wide-open borders we make but a feigned attempt to enforce. 

All of which will lead to increased taxes on us, and increased debt on our children, beecause immigrants are enrolled in government assistance programs far more frequently than native born Americans.

(Emphasis added.)

Clearly the answer is not to make illegal aliens legal, because that actually increases their use of government programs. Which makes sense — once “out of the shadows,” they are then free to get in the sunshine-washed government money lines.

Nearly everything anyone is proposing as “immigration reform” should be preempted by something simple and rational — a financial means test. 

If you are going to be on one or more government programs when you get here — you don’t get here. And if you are already here and on one or more programs — you can’t advance your residency status.

Applying to be a guest worker? A resident alien? A citizen? Illegally here and want a path to citizenship? Means tests for all. 

The pro-amnesty crowd may argue that this proposal should be relegated to discussions about welfare reform rather than immigration reform. In that case, fix the welfare sate before you even begin to discuss immigration reform and add millions more citizens who will be dependent upon the government.

We simply cannot afford to continue being the blank check to the planet.