There are many problems facing the United States today: a
faltering economy leading to a
recession, a housing foreclosure
problem, a health-care crisis, and
the continuing war in Iraq, to name
a few. But viewers of some of the
most prominent cable news programs
are presented a different reality,
one in which one issue stands above
all others: undocumented
immigration.
Media Matters Action Network
undertook this study in order to
document the rhetoric surrounding
immigration that is heard on cable
news. When it comes to this issue,
cable news overflows not just with
vitriol, but also with a series of
myths that feed viewers' resentment
and fears, seemingly geared toward
creating anti-immigrant hysteria.
There are two types of myths we
discuss in this report. The first
type is the large and most common
myths, about crime and undocumented
immigrants, and the costs of
undocumented immigration in social
services and taxes. These topics are
complex, and there are sometimes
legitimate points buried within the
arguments immigration opponents
make. The second type of myth is the
urban legend: that there is a
conspiracy to take back the
Southwest United States for Mexico;
that there is a secret plan to
construct a "NAFTA Superhighway"
running from Canada to Mexico; that
the U.S. is well on its way to
surrendering its sovereignty to a
"North American Union" (NAU); that
Mexican immigrants are infecting
Americans with leprosy; and that
undocumented immigrants are
responsible for a wave of election
fraud. These myths are discussed
less often, but are notable for
their sheer ludicrousness. The North
American Union and NAFTA
Superhighway are closely related,
and indeed are often discussed in
tandem (the building of the
Superhighway being posited as a step
on the road to the creation of the
NAU), but since each is also often
discussed alone, we examine these
two myths separately.
We focus our analysis on a trio of
cable commentators: Lou Dobbs, Bill
O'Reilly, and Glenn Beck. While
hosts on other cable programs
regularly discuss undocumented
immigration (particularly on Fox
News, where it is a frequent topic
on
Hannity & Colmes and
Special Report with Brit Hume),
these three are the most notable for
a number of reasons. On their
eponymous programs, Dobbs, O'Reilly,
and Beck serve up a steady diet of
fear, anger, and resentment on the
topic of undocumented immigration.
Dobbs is the one most obsessed with
the topic; indeed, instead of
Lou Dobbs Tonight, his
program might be more properly
called
Lou Dobbs Crusades Against
Undocumented Immigration Tonight.
Fully 70 percent of the 2007
episodes of
Lou Dobbs Tonight
contained discussion of undocumented
immigration.
The O'Reilly Factor is
not far behind; 56 percent of 2007
episodes discussed undocumented
immigration. And though
Glenn Beck was less
consumed with the issue (28 percent
of his 2007 programs discussed it),
his show is the one on which viewers
often find the most inflammatory
claims.
Among the study's findings:
During 2007, the alleged connection
between undocumented immigration and
crime was discussed on 94 episodes
of
Lou Dobbs Tonight, 66
episodes of
The O'Reilly Factor, and
29 episodes of
Glenn Beck.
During 2007, the allegation that
undocumented immigrants drain social
services and/or don't pay taxes was
discussed on 71 episodes of
Lou Dobbs Tonight, 13
episodes of
Glenn Beck, and eight
episodes of
The O'Reilly Factor.
Dobbs and Beck have perpetuated two
related myths, that there are plans
to construct a "NAFTA Superhighway"
running from Mexico to Canada, and
that there are plans to join Mexico,
Canada, and the United States in a
"North American Union" similar to
the European Union. Dobbs has
discussed the fictional North
American Union on 56 separate
programs during the past two years.
(These two myths were also given a
boost by Republican presidential
candidate Ron Paul, who pushed the
ideas on the campaign trail.)1
All three programs have presented as
fact the "reconquista" myth, which
states that there is a movement
afoot for Mexico to take over the
American Southwest.
Lou Dobbs Tonight
has also been the show on which
viewers are told about a mythical
explosion of leprosy cases due to
undocumented immigration, and a
mythical epidemic of voter fraud due
to undocumented immigration.
An examination of the rhetoric on
immigration on these programs
reveals the subtle and not-so-subtle
ways these myths find their way into
mainstream discourse and are
validated by figures like Dobbs,
O'Reilly, and Beck. On some
occasions, the hosts repeat a myth's
key elements in explicit terms; at
other times, they mention some of
those elements but not others; and
sometimes they bring up the
catchphrases associated with those
myths without elaborating. Through
sheer repetition, they help
propagate the myths. For instance,
by airing dozens and dozens of
segments on individual cases in
which an undocumented immigrant
committed a crime, Dobbs, O'Reilly,
and Beck feed the misperception that
these immigrants are responsible for
a disproportionate share of crime in
America, even if their comments
about the specific case in question
don't stray from the facts. Finally,
these programs, particularly
Lou Dobbs Tonight, have
hosted some of the most radical
immigration opponents, offering them
a national platform to disseminate
extremist views.
The result is that those opponents —
seeking to foster misunderstanding
about immigration and promoting
views often tinged with hate — gain
critical assistance from cable news.
Though on any given night Dobbs or
O'Reilly may not repeat the most
egregious deceptions of the nativist
right, they are a critical link in
the chain that keeps anti-immigrant
sentiment moving forward.
DOBBS, O'REILLY, BECK, AND THE BIG
MYTHS
CRIME
The Myth:
There is an "undocumented alien
crime wave" sweeping the country.
The Truth:
There is no evidence to indicate
that undocumented immigrants are
more likely to commit crimes than
American citizens; indeed, the
evidence strongly suggests that
immigrants in general are less
likely to commit crimes.2 For
instance, a 2005
study3 conducted by
researchers from Harvard University
and the University of Michigan
revealed both that immigrants
committed fewer crimes than
native-born citizens, and that a
greater proportion of immigrants in
a neighborhood was associated with
lower rates of crime. Another
study4 analyzing
census data found that among men
aged 18-39 (who make up the bulk of
those committing crimes), the
incarceration rate was five times
higher for the native-born than for
the foreign-born. This held true
within ethnic and national-origin
groups, meaning, for instance, that
native-born Hispanics were more
likely to be incarcerated than
foreign-born Hispanics. A recent
study by the Public Policy Institute
of California found that in that
state, which contains more
immigrants than any other, the
foreign-born are incarcerated at a
rate half as high as their presence
in the population, and only
one-tenth as high among men age
18-40, who make up the bulk of
prisoners.5 Robert J.
Sampson, chairman of the sociology
department at Harvard University,
said that data show that
undocumented immigrants are in fact
"disproportionately less likely to
be involved in many acts of
deviance, crime, drunk driving, any
number of things that sort of
imperil our well-being."6
There have, of course, been
individual crimes committed by
undocumented immigrants, some of
which are quite serious. But in
order to justify a particular focus
in news programs and the claims of a
"crime wave" — not just a few
reports, but the enormous number of
stories and discussions we document
below — crimes committed by
undocumented immigrants would have
to be disproportionate to their
numbers. Immigration opponents might
argue that any crime committed by an
immigrant increases the total amount
of crime in the country, but the
risk of crime is increased only if
the immigrants commit more crimes
per person than the native-born,
since immigration also increases the
population and therefore diffuses
the crime risk to any particular
person.
Immigration opponents often note
that a relatively high proportion of
federal prisoners are foreign-born
(more than a quarter are
noncitizens, according to the
Government Accountability Office7).
But this one statistic gives a
misleading impression of overall
crime. For one, federal prisoners
account for only a small proportion
— less than 10 percent — of the
total incarcerated population, since
most prisoners are housed in state
and local facilities.8
According to the latest Justice
Department statistics available,
noncitizen prisoners accounted for
only 5.9 percent of the combined
federal and state prisoner
population.9 The most
recent Census Bureau
report on the foreign-born
population in the U.S. found that
11.7 percent of the population is
foreign-born — meaning that the
proportion of foreign-born prisoners
is much lower than the proportion of
foreign-born people in the
population.10
The Issue According to Dobbs,
O'Reilly, and Beck:
While cable commentators talk about
many issues with regard to
immigration — effects on employment,
on taxes, or on social services —
none is as inflammatory as crime,
with its ability to stir up fear and
anger. And while crime in general
lends itself to sensationalistic
news coverage, the combination of
crime and immigration is obviously
too good to pass up for some on the
cable dial. Simply put, the three
programs on which we focused,
particularly
Lou Dobbs Tonight and
The O'Reilly Factor, are
awash in discussions of crime and
immigration.
On any given weeknight, there is a
better-than-even chance that on one
of these three programs, someone is
discussing undocumented immigration
and crime. Although Dobbs discusses
immigration more often than
O'Reilly, who in turn discusses it
more often than Beck, each of them
brings up crime a substantial
portion of the time when they do
discuss immigration.
So what do they talk about when they
talk about crime? While sweeping
claims are sometimes made — for
instance, Dobbs has said,
inaccurately, that "just about a
third of the prison population in
this country is estimated to be
undocumented aliens"11 —
more often the focus is on specific
crimes or specific places where
undocumented immigrants are
purportedly committing large numbers
of crimes. Dobbs in particular airs
story after story on communities
where there is a new effort to crack
down on undocumented immigrants or a
high-profile crime has been
committed. Dobbs consistently
criticizes the federal government
for "ignoring the plight of states
overwhelmed by criminal undocumented
aliens."12
Crimes committed by undocumented
immigrants are also linked to other
purported ill effects of
undocumented immigration. When a
Houston police officer was murdered
by an undocumented immigrant, Dobbs
told the city's police chief, "When
we have borders that are
unprotected, when criminal
undocumented aliens are sent across
the border, deported and are
returning and then murdering police
officers. You're talking about an
unfunded mandate. And that unfunded
mandate is laying straight forwardly
on the taxpayers' back in this
country, U.S. citizens who are
paying for it all, the high cost of
medical care, social services, crime
prevention and prosecution, of
course as well."13 Local
officials angry about immigration
get a sympathetic airing from Dobbs,
who describes their complaints
thusly: "The chief of police in the
small town under siege by the
pro-undocumented alien open borders
lobby says his community is being
overrun by criminal undocumented
aliens and drug gangs."14
Dobbs' correspondents, including
Casey Wian, Bill Tucker, and
frequent guest-host Kitty Pilgrim,
serve up a steady diet of stories on
"fed up" Americans facing off
against a federal government
indifferent to the plight of
communities overrun with "criminal
undocumented aliens." The Dobbs
atmosphere may be best described by
a poll question Dobbs posed in
September: "Are you outraged that
the federal government is releasing
tens of thousands of criminal
undocumented aliens onto U.S.
streets instead of deporting them?"15
For his part, Bill O'Reilly will
often take a story of a specific
crime and treat it as though it were
a matter of national urgency. For
example, he devoted segments on 13
separate programs to discussion of a
case in Virginia Beach in which a
drunken driver, who happened to be
an undocumented immigrant, killed
two young women in a traffic
accident. As tragic as these deaths
were, drunken drivers kill dozens of
people every day;
according to the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention,
there were 16,885 fatalities in
alcohol-related auto crashes in
2005.16
O'Reilly was hardly on a crusade
against drunken driving; his
interest was in the fact that in
this case, the driver was an
undocumented immigrant.17
O'Reilly brushes aside arguments
that such cases are unrepresentative
— and even makes attempts to link
immigration to terrorism. "If the
local authorities, and they should
be part of homeland security, were
to be more vigilant on criminal
undocumented aliens, notice the word
criminal, and track them harder, the
Fort Dix thing [a thwarted plot to
kill U.S. soldiers] would have been
caught sooner," he said in June.
"The deaths of the Virginia Beach
thing which we talked about. And all
of these guys at 9-11 were stopped
by local police."18 When
O'Reilly is unavailable, his
compatriots will pick up the slack.
"The never-ending criminal alien
revolving door," said guest host and
conservative columnist Michelle
Malkin last August. "Another heinous
crime, another undocumented alien
suspect with a mile-long rap sheet,
another bloody tragedy wrought by
open borders."19
O'Reilly also uses the immigration
issue to bash "the left": "The most
extreme elements in this country
want open borders, blanket amnesty,
and entitlement for foreign
nationals who have come here
undocumentedly, and generally want
to change the demographics in the
USA so political power can be
assumed by the left," he said last
October. "That is the end game."20
As on many issues, when it comes to
immigration and crime, Glenn Beck
can be counted on to take individual
cases and use them to make
inflammatory claims and
sensationalistic fear-mongering.
"It's time we wake up in this
country," he said last year. "We are
dealing with an undocumented alien
crime wave, and drug smuggling is
just the beginning."21
In November, Beck aired a special
called "Border Crisis," which he
introduced this way: "America's
border crisis. Rape, drugs,
kidnapping, even murder. It is
beginning to look a lot more like a
border war."22 Beck also
often repeats that by virtue of his
or her immigration status, "Every
single undocumented immigrant is
guilty of a crime, every single
one."23 As he put it in
September, "Every undocumented
worker is an undocumented immigrant,
a criminal and a drain on our
dwindling resources."24
Social Services and Taxes
The Myth:
Undocumented immigrants consume a
disproportionate amount of social
services and don't pay taxes,
thereby constituting a drain on
American society.
The Truth:
Some believe that undocumented
immigrants benefit from federal
programs such as food stamps,
Medicaid, SCHIP, and welfare. In
fact, undocumented immigrants are
ineligible to receive these
benefits; anyone seeking to obtain
them must provide proof of legal
status.25 Since the
passage of the Personal
Responsibility and Work Opportunity
Act of 1996, even
documented immigrants
are ineligible for most forms of
public assistance for the first five
years they reside in the United
States or until they attain
citizenship.26 While
there are some social services
undocumented immigrants do use —
public education for children, for
instance — contrary to the rhetoric
one hears on cable news, they also
support government spending through
the taxes they pay.
Undocumented immigrants pay all
kinds of taxes: they pay sales taxes
whenever they purchase goods and
services, they pay property taxes in
the form of rent, and they pay
payroll and income taxes. Many
undocumented immigrants use false
Social Security numbers to obtain
employment; when they do so, these
workers then pay payroll taxes (for
Social Security and Medicare), and
often federal and state income taxes
as well, through paycheck
withholding. As the
New York Times
reported in 200527,
the Social Security Administration
estimates that three-quarters of
undocumented immigrants pay payroll
taxes, adding as much as $7 billion
in Social Security taxes a year to
federal coffers, and another $1.5
billion in Medicare taxes.28
Under current law, none of these
funds will ever be paid back to
undocumented immigrants in the form
of Social Security and Medicare
benefits, as they are not eligible.
This does not mean, however, that in
the short term some states and
localities will not pay more for
services to undocumented immigrants
than they collect in taxes, even if
when all levels of government are
considered, immigrants more than pay
for themselves. According to a
December 2007 report by the
nonpartisan Congressional Budget
Office, "Over the past two decades,
most efforts to estimate the fiscal
impact of immigration in the United
States have concluded that, in
aggregate and over the long term,
tax revenues of all types generated
by immigrants — both legal and
unauthorized — exceed the cost of
the services they use. Generally,
such estimates include revenues and
spending at the federal, state, and
local levels. However, many
estimates also show that the cost of
providing public services to
unauthorized immigrants at the state
and local levels exceeds what that
population pays in state and local
taxes."29
The Issue According to Dobbs,
O'Reilly and Beck:
On CNN's
Lou Dobbs Tonight, and
to a lesser degree on CNN Headline
News'
Glenn Beck and Fox News'
The O'Reilly Factor, it
is common to hear the myths about
social services and taxes from the
programs' hosts, guests, and viewers
(whose emails are read on the air).
Undocumented immigrants and their
children are regularly described as
straining social services provided
at the federal or state level by
receiving Social Security, health
care (hospital emergency room
visits),30 public
education, and other social
services. "I also know our country
is on fire, and the fuel is
undocumented immigration," Beck said
in January 2007. "They put a strain
on our Social Security, our
education, our health care and, yes,
national security."31
(Beck has linked national security
with these budgetary questions a
number of times; for instance, in
October he said, "Not only are you
and I not profiting from
undocumented immigration, we're
losing vital social services and
risking national security along the
way."32) The propagation
of these myths adds up to the often
implied and sometimes explicitly
stated claim that immigrants are
free riders who do not pay taxes
while receiving a bounty of social
services.
Unlike O'Reilly and Beck, Dobbs has
his own stable of reporters, who are
often dispatched to do stories on
local officials angry about
providing services to undocumented
immigrants. Beck and O'Reilly often
make more sweeping claims. "Unless
you're a politician in Washington,
you don't really need a dope like me
to tell you that undocumented
immigration is bad for our national
security, hurts American workers,
and puts a tremendous strain on our
social services," Beck said in
February 2007.33
O'Reilly has argued: "Low-skilled
immigrant labor costs the taxpayers
today $19,000," he said in May. "[E]ach
of us pay $19,000 to supplement
people who are using the hospitals,
the education system." When one of
his guests, a UCLA professor, began
to shake his head, O'Reilly said,
"Don't shake your head. These are
rock-solid stats." (In fact,
O'Reilly was wildly distorting a
study that was itself extremely
tendentious. The study, from a
conservative think tank, charged
that each undocumented immigrant
cost taxpayers $19,000, not that
each American taxpayer pays $19,000
to support undocumented immigrants.)34
What draws undocumented immigrants,
Pat Buchanan told Dobbs in December,
is "basically business and the
welfare, the social safety net draws
them here."35
Dobbs usually closes his show by
reading brief viewer emails without
explanation or refutation, often
giving voice to the false idea that
immigrants are feeding off of
taxpayers without contributing
anything to American society. A
brief sampling:
"Bill in Ohio: 'Please remind your
audience to get their taxes in early
this year. There are anywhere from
eleven to twenty million
undocumented aliens depending on
them. We wouldn't want to let them
down.' " (January 10, 2007)
"Don in North Carolina: 'Lou,
remember the Boston Tea Party —
taxation without representation? Now
representation without taxation (for
undocumented aliens, of course).' "
(January 15, 2007)
"Carl in Wisconsin: 'Just a little
reminder for the tax paying middle
class, to remember to pay their
taxes. Millions of undocumented
aliens are depending on you.' "
(April 9, 2007)
"Bob in Texas said, 'Lou, what's
wrong with these government models?
Undocumenteds: representation
without taxation. U.S. citizens:
taxation without representation.' I
think you have got the essence of
this situation. And Sharon in
Georgia, 'Taxation without
representation — it's time for
another tea party.' " (May 29, 2007)
"Jene in New Mexico: 'Thank goodness
you're reporting on the Hazleton,
Pennsylvania situation, where
undocumented aliens have more legal
rights than the U.S. taxpayers, who
fund much of their social wants and
needs.' " (July 26, 2007)
Overall,
Lou Dobbs Tonight spent
the most time airing claims about
immigrants draining government
coffers and/or not paying taxes. Out
of a total of approximately 260
broadcasts,
Lou Dobbs Tonight
featured these ideas on 71 programs,
or more than one out of every four
broadcasts — and 39 percent of the
programs on which he discussed
immigration.
Glenn Beck repeated
these ideas on 13 programs, and
The O'Reilly Factor on
eight. Thus, while the topic of
immigration and social
services/taxes is regularly
discussed on
Lou Dobbs Tonight, it
only occasionally comes up on the
other two programs, whose
immigration segments are more likely
to focus on crime.
THE URBAN LEGENDS
The NAFTA Superhighway
In recent years, some conservative
groups have sounded the alarm over a
development that they consider a
growing threat to America: the
construction of a "NAFTA [North
American Free Trade Agreement]
Superhighway" that would run from
Mexico City, Mexico, to Toronto,
Canada. In some tellings, the
highway would be four football
fields wide and allow Mexican truck
drivers to travel unimpeded into the
U.S. without the delays of rigorous
border security checks. According to
the purveyors of the theory, the
highway would be a prelude to the
creation of a multinational North
American Union among the U.S.,
Canada, and Mexico that would
essentially cede American
sovereignty to its neighbors (see
below for more on the NAU).
Rumors of a NAFTA Superhighway have
circulated widely on
right-wing
media
outlets and
websites in recent years. But as
many news outlets and the federal
government have stated, the NAFTA
Superhighway is, in fact, a myth.
In the August 27, 2007 issue of The
Nation magazine, Christopher Hayes
traced the provenance of the
NAFTA Superhighway myth to North
America's SuperCorridor Coalition,
Inc.
(NASCO), a nonprofit
organization that
describes itself as a coalition
of "cities, counties, states,
provinces and private sector
representatives along the Corridor
in Canada, the United States and
Mexico, dedicated to maximizing the
efficiency and security of their
existing trade and transportation
infrastructure."36 NASCO
a few years ago put on its website a
map of the U.S. that traced the flow
of NAFTA traffic from Monterrey,
Mexico, through the U.S. Midwest,
and to points throughout Canada. The
map, which was seen by right-wing
nationalists as a blueprint for a
"NAFTA Superhighway," soon
circulated widely on the right. As
Hayes reported, "The organization
soon found itself besieged with
angry phone calls and letters."37
(NASCO) has since taken the map down
from the website because "it
was causing confusion due to false
and misleading information put up
across the Internet.")
As NASCO
explains on its website, the map
was not a blueprint for a NAFTA
Superhighway but merely traced the
route of trade traffic throughout
Mexico, the U.S. and Canada. On its
website, NASCO stresses that "[t]here
is no new, proposed 'NAFTA
Superhighway' ":
"NAFTA Superhighway" is a slogan for
EXISTING corridors that carry
international trade with Canada
and/or Mexico. NASCO and the cities,
counties, states and provinces along
our existing Interstate Highways
35/29/94 (the NASCO Corridor) have
been referring to I-35 as the "NAFTA
Superhighway" for many years as it
carries a substantial amount of
international trade with Mexico, the
United States and Canada. There are
no plans to build a new NAFTA
Superhighway — it exists today as
I-35.38
Hayes quoted Assistant Secretary of
Commerce for Market Access and
Compliance David Bohigian as saying,
"There is no NAFTA Superhighway."
Sen. Kit Bond (R-MO), a member of
the Committee on Environment and
Public Works,
said that rumors of a NAFTA
Superhighway were "unfounded
theories" that had "no credence."39
So a term that NASCO used to refer
to existing trade routes was
transformed into a catchphrase
referring to a conspiracy to
construct a new highway with
sinister implications for our
national sovereignty. Yet despite
overwhelming evidence that the NAFTA
Superhighway as a vast new
construction project is simply a
figment of some people's
imagination, it has nonetheless
received substantial coverage on
cable news shows. Since January 1,
2006, the NAFTA Superhighway has
been mentioned 33 times on cable
news — 32 of which were on CNN (the
only other mention was on Fox). On
CNN, the culprits were Lou Dobbs,
who mentioned it on his show 20
times, and Glenn Beck, who mentioned
it 12 times.40
Despite repeated attempts by
officials and experts to debunk the
myth of a NAFTA Superhighway, some
remain staunch believers in the
conspiracy. On the October 2, 2007,
edition of
Glenn Beck, the host
seemed to revel in the fact that he
advocated a theory others dismissed
as absurd. "Nobody is talking about
it," he said. "It's a giant roadway
that will run across the United
States connecting Canada and Mexico.
Why is no one talking about it? Um,
because no one will admit to it.
It's only crazy people like me that
dare mention it on the air." He also
linked the superhighway to
immigration: "The NAFTA super
highway will hurt our national
security. It will open new avenues
for undocumented immigration." Three
weeks later, on October 24, Beck
dismissed the doubters: "You've got
the trans — the NAFTA superhighway
that, again, everybody denies, but
you've got it broken up in chunks
being built right now."
As in other cases, it is not
necessary for a television host to
repeat every detail of a conspiracy
theory in order to lend that theory
credence it does not deserve. And
confusion about the idea is only
encouraged by the fact that Dobbs
sometimes uses the term "NAFTA
Superhighway" to refer to an
existing network of roads, while at
other times he refers to a newly
constructed highway, and at yet
other times, he seems to refer to
both. For instance, he introduced a
June 2006 report on the NAFTA
Superhighway by saying, "The U.S.
government is pushing ahead with its
plans for a massive superhighway
that would divide the United States,
running from Mexico to Canada, a
highway that would run through the
heart of the nation." In the report,
however, correspondent Bill Tucker
said the highway is "several
different projects collectively
known as the NAFTA Superhighway."41
In a February 21, 2007 report that
Dobbs introduced by citing "[n]ew
concerns tonight about moves toward
what some call a North America
union," correspondent Lisa Sylvester
explicitly linked the NAFTA
Superhighway to immigration. "This
partnership is being driven by the
U.S. business community, which
envisions ships from China docking
in Mexico instead of California,
Mexican truck drivers transporting
cargo on a NAFTA Superhighway, all
the way to Canada. A cornerstone of
this model is a guest worker
immigration program that relaxes
U.S. borders," Sylvester reported.
She raised familiar anti-immigration
themes, adding, "Critics say the
plan would greatly benefit Mexico
but could mean the loss of American
jobs and an increase in social costs
to U.S. taxpayers.
Dobbs sometimes discusses the issue
in terms vague enough that he might
argue that he was actually referring
simply to existing routes. But on
the July 31, 2007, edition of his
show, Dobbs said, "The mainstream
media finally beginning to pick up
on a story we've been reporting here
for some time — the plan to build a
superhighway — yes, it really exists
— all the way from Mexico through
the United States to Canada."
Recently, Dobbs has focused
attention on a controversy in Texas
around a planned "Trans-Texas
Corridor," a network of highways
within the state of Texas whose
future construction is supported by
Gov. Rick Perry (R-TX), but which
has garnered intense opposition
within the state. Dobbs has taken to
saying that the Trans-Texas Corridor
is the NAFTA Superhighway. "In Texas
tonight," he said on his February
20, 2008 show, "rising outrage over
the so-called Trans-Texas Corridor,
also known as the NAFTA
Superhighway, you know that thing
that Washington doesn't really want
to admit is happening in this
country." It was a follow-up to a
story he did the night before: "It's
the plan to build a massive
superhighway. The Trans-Texas
Corridor, the NAFTA Superhighway,
which will run from our border with
Mexico across Texas and that super
highway intended to go all the way
up to Canada." Dobbs then asked his
viewers to vote in the nightly poll:
"Do you believe the presidential
candidates of both parties should be
required to take a position on the
North American Union and the NAFTA
Superhighway?"
If there is any confusion about
whether "the NAFTA Superhighway"
refers to a soon-to-be constructed
behemoth or merely to existing trade
routes, Dobbs has done nothing to
clear it up. His program sometimes
includes a brief mention without any
explanation, often in the form of
viewer email, as in this example
from April 2007: "Vicki in Michigan
writes, 'Why are we still hearing
nothing about the North American
Union from Congress? Construction is
due to begin on the NAFTA
Superhighway in 2007 and Americans
know nothing about this.' "42
Where Vicki got her information is
impossible to say, but at the time
there were articles on the Web
alleging that construction on the
Superhighway was soon to begin,
written by the likes of Jerome Corsi.
The viewer mail segment thus allows
ideas with questionable provenance
to be delivered to an audience of
millions.
In recent months, there have been
even more. "Time now for e-mail,"
Dobbs said in February 2008. "Sharon
in Pennsylvania: 'Lou, where are all
the environmentalists on the NAFTA
Superhighway? They were there for
the border fence, where are they
now?' I think that's one of the best
questions in a long time about where
are the environmentalists."43
Three days earlier, Dobbs' read
another viewer's comments on the
air: "Barry in Pennsylvania wrote:
'Dear Lou, I just wonder how many
politicians will lose their property
due to "Eminent Domain" for the
NAFTA Superhighway. If I was a
betting man, I'd have to say none!'
"44
The night before that, Dobbs once
again conflated the Trans-Texas
Corridor with the NAFTA
Superhighway, alleging with no
evidence that the TTC will extend to
Canada: "And we want to, if we may,
bring to your attention something
that has many Texans outraged. They
want answers on that corridor, the
NAFTA Superhighway running from
Mexico through Texas all the way to
Canada. Most Americans have joined
Texas in wanting answers tonight.
But Washington and the companies
competing for those contracts don't
want to provide them."45
Dobbs has referred to the
Trans-Texas corridor as "a proposal
that has infuriated Texans, a
proposal to build a super highway
from our border with Mexico across
Texas all the way to Canada,"46
making clear he is talking not about
existing routes but about a new
construction project, and one not
confined to Texas. As NASCO has
written, however, "The Trans Texas
Corridor is an initiative launched
by Texas Governor Rick Perry and
developed by the Texas Department of
Transportation to attempt to solve
the critical, long-range
transportation problems projected
for the State of Texas over the next
20 to 30 years ... We have no
authority over this initiative and
know of no plans to extend it to
other states. Any decision to expand
the TTC beyond the State of Texas
would be made by that state's
Department of Transportation."47
The result of Dobbs' continuing
crusade is that viewers of
Lou Dobbs Tonight
regularly hear references to the
NAFTA Superhighway, though at
various times the term as Dobbs uses
it appears to refer to different
things. What they do know is that
the powers-that-be are trying to
keep it hidden, and that the
consequences will be dire.
The North American Union
The NAFTA Superhighway is frequently
mentioned in connection with another
myth: the North American Union. Some
believe that there is a conspiracy
to merge Mexico, the U.S., and
Canada into an economic and
political entity, like the European
Union, that would share a common
currency, the "amero."
According to
critics who believe in the
conspiracy, the plan took shape in a
2005
report by the Council on Foreign
Relations titled "Building a North
American Community," which called
for the "establishment by 2010 of a
North American economic and security
community, the boundaries of which
would be defined by a common
external tariff and an outer
security perimeter." Critics also
see the 2005 Security and Prosperity
Partnership of North America (SPP)
among Mexico, the U.S., and Canada
as the vehicle by which the North
American Union will be created.
Jerome Corsi, author of
The Late Great U.S.A.: The Coming
Merger With Mexico and Canada
and one of the most vocal
propagators of the North American
Union story,
calls the SPP a "secret agenda
... to dissolve the United States of
America into the North American
Union. The [Bush] administration has
no intent to secure the border, or
to enforce rigorously existing
immigration laws."48 (Corsi
was also the co-author of the
discredited book
Unfit for Command: Swift Boat
Veterans Speak Out Against John
Kerry (Regnery, 2004)
and has a
history of posting racist,
homophobic, xenophobic,
anti-Catholic, and anti-Muslim
comments on the conservative online
forum FreeRepublic.com.)
But as numerous media outlets have
reported, the North American Union
is a conspiracy theory that has been
conjured up by anti-immigrant and
nativist groups. The Bush
administration, responding to
accusations that the SPP lays the
groundwork for the North American
Union, has declared on the SPP
website that the rumors have no
basis in truth. The SPP, it says,
"does not change our courts or
legislative processes and respects
the sovereignty of the United
States, Mexico, and Canada. The SPP
in no way, shape or form considers
the creation of a European
Union-like structure or a common
currency. The SPP does not attempt
to modify our sovereignty or
currency or change the American
system of government designed by our
Founding Fathers."49
Last August, during a summit in
Quebec, Canada, President Bush
dismissed a question about the
possibility of a North American
Union. "It's quite comical,
actually, when you realize the
difference between reality and what
some people are talking on TV
about," Bush
said. Robert Pastor, an American
University professor whose 2001
book,
Towards a North American Community:
Lessons From the Old World for the
New, has been cited as a
blueprint for the plan,
said, "Nobody is proposing a
North American Union."50
Yet, as
The Boston Globe
reported in November, "belief in
the NAU — that the plans are very
real, and that the nation is poised
to lose its independence — has been
spreading from its origins in the
conservative fringe, coloring
political press conferences and
candidate question-and-answer
sessions, and reaching a kind of
critical mass on the campaign
trail."51
Despite the denials by officials and
experts, some media figures continue
to spread the myth of a planned
North American Union. As with many
of myths discussed above, Dobbs has
been the most prominent
disseminator. While he has never
mentioned the "amero" (perhaps the
oddest part of the conspiracy
theory), since January 1, 2006, the
North American Union has been
discussed on
Lou Dobbs Tonight 56
times, with an additional 11
mentions on
Lou Dobbs This Week. On
the November 29, 2006, edition of
Lou Dobbs Tonight, Dobbs
teased a "special report" on how "[t]he
president is also determined to push
his quiet agenda to create a North
American Union of the United States,
Mexico and Canada without the
approval of the people or the
Congress." On January 17, 2007,
Dobbs told viewers, "It's
unofficially known as the North
American Union. Some, for some
reason, suggest there's no such
thing, that there is no plan to
merge the United States and Mexico
and the United States [sic] without
the knowledge and approval of the
citizens of those three countries.
Well, tonight, you're going to find
out that there really is such a
thing and it's all part of a plan."
Dobbs has paid particular attention
to the Security and Prosperity
Partnership, portraying it as the
first step to an abdication of
American sovereignty. "The proposed
legislation," he said of an
immigration bill on May 30, 2007,
"favored by President Bush and
Senator Kennedy and others who are
misguided, contains language in
Section 413 that, if approved by
Congress, would endorse and
legitimize the Security and
Prosperity Partnership of North
America, which is the foundation of
this administration's efforts to
create a North American Union, and
which would further threaten, in my
opinion, our national sovereignty."
Ten days earlier, he was even more
blunt — although as he often does,
Dobbs put the ideas in the mouths of
unnamed "critics": "Critics of this
amnesty deal say the agreement sells
out American citizens, national
security and this nation's
sovereignty. Those critics say the
Bush administration and some
pro-amnesty lawmakers are hell bent
on creating a North American union
without the consent of the American
people or Congress."52
This idea — that the SPP leads to
the North American Union, which
undercuts American sovereignty — is
one Dobbs has returned to many
times. "The SPP, which many consider
to be simply a blueprint for the
North American Union," he said on
June 21, 2007, "would weaken U.S.
laws and regulations and diminish
American sovereignty." Dobbs'
reporters also repeat the charge.
"You know, many people have not —
have not even heard about the
Security and Prosperity Partnership,
but there is a lot of criticism out
there," Lisa Sylvester said on the
August 20, 2007, edition of
Lou Dobbs Tonight. "A
lot of people believe that will mean
a roll back of environmental and
worker standards, and that we are
just handing over our sovereignty
for the rights of this North
American Union." In an October 2006
report on the prospects for a North
American Union that included quotes
from Jerome Corsi and the head of
the notorious John Birch Society,
Sylvester said, "The coalition to
block the North American union wants
to defeat a proposed NAFTA
superhighway that would stretch from
Texas all the way to Canada." Dobbs
then said, "These three countries
moving ahead their governments
without authorization from the
American people, without
congressional approval, this is
straightforward an attack on
national sovereignty as there could
be, outside of war."53
This is one of a number of areas in
which Dobbs' rhetoric on immigration
is at odds with that of the
reporters on his own network. For
instance, after President Bush's
August 21, 2007, denial that there
were secret plans for a North
American Union, CNN reporter Suzanne
Malveaux noted, "[T]here's a lot of
talk in the blogosphere and
conspiracy theorists who believe
that this summit was really a secret
plot, if you will, to establish a
supergovernment in support of big
business — that even there'd be some
sort of superhighway that would be
traveling through all three of the
countries." Yet in the very next
hour, Lisa Sylvester — who was guest
hosting
Lou Dobbs Tonight —
described Bush's comments as "an
apparent shot at our very own Lou
Dobbs and our reporting on the
threats the SPP may pose."54
Glenn Beck
was a distant second to
Lou Dobbs Tonight with
nine mentions of the North American
Union through the end of 2007. On
the October 9, 2007, edition of his
show, Beck hosted Corsi, who said,
"[W]e've become a dual country. It's
headed toward the North American
Union." On December 18, 2007, Beck
interviewed Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX) and
discussed both the NAFTA
Superhighway and the North American
Union. Responding to Paul's
expressed belief that the North
American Union wasn't in the offing
any time soon (despite how often
Paul has railed against it), Beck
said, "If you've done your homework,
you know that the ambassador to the
U.N. from Mexico says it [the NAU]
has to happen before our Social
Security and Baby Boomers start to
retire. That's just a few years
away."
Reconquista
Another myth that has circulated on
cable news with little refutation is
the concept of "reconquista." The
term refers to the theory that
portions of the American Southwest
(territory referred to as "Aztlan")
belong to Mexico, and that there is
a secret plan to retake this area
for Mexico. In recent years, several
media figures have alleged that
undocumented immigrants from Mexico
and activist groups that support
them subscribe to a reconquista
agenda.
The worst offender has been CNN's
Lou Dobbs. Since January 2006,
Lou Dobbs Tonight has
discussed or mentioned "reconquista"
or "Aztlan" nine times. In two of
the earliest mentions, the show
described reconquista as not having
"broad support"55 and not
representative of "the views of most
Hispanics."56 But in
subsequent reports, the show
portrayed it as growing in strength.
On the March 31, 2006, edition of
the show, correspondent Christine
Romans said, "Long downplayed as a
theory of the radical ethnic fringe,
the la reconquista, the reconquest,
the reclamation, the return, it's
resonating with some on the
streets." Romans went on to say, "[T]he
growing street protests in favor of
undocumented immigration, Lou, are
increasingly taking on the tone of
that very radicalism."
On May 2, 2006, correspondent Lisa
Sylvester claimed, "The
organizations [supporting
pro-immigration boycotts and
demonstrations] want amnesty for
all, and many openly embrace the
reconquista movement, Mexico taking
over the southwestern United
States." The reconquista theory was
also raised by studio guest Pat
Buchanan, who has also written about
it in his book,
State of Emergency: The Third World
Invasion and Conquest of America
(St. Martin's Griffin, 2007). "The
ultimate goal of [then Mexican
President] Vicente Fox is the
erasure of the border between the
United States and Mexico," Buchanan
told Dobbs in September 2006. "La
reconquista is the objective, Lou."57
Dobbs' program is not the only one
on which the reconquista story has
been told. On Fox News Channel's
The O'Reilly Factor,
reconquista has been mentioned three
times since 2006. Guest right-wing
pundit Michelle Malkin claimed that
"the intellectual underpinnings of
reconquista are embraced by the vast
majority of mainstream Hispanic
politicians"58 and that
the pro-immigrant rallies in spring
2006 saw "hundreds of thousands of
law breakers coming out and ...
really pushing a very radical,
extremist reconquista agenda."59
On multiple occasions, Glenn Beck
has cited a poll conducted for an
anti-immigration group allegedly
proving that a majority of Mexicans
think the American Southwest belongs
to their country as evidence that
the reconquista movement is real.60
Reconquista is a term associated
with
El Plan Espiritual de Aztlán, a
document drafted in the early
formation of the
Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de
Aztlan (Chicano Student Movement
of Aztlan, or MEChA), a group with
affiliates at numerous college
campuses and several high schools
that
works toward "improving the
social and political situation of
the Chicano/Hispanic community."
Critics61
claim that El Plan Espiritual de
Aztlán outlines a plan of
recapturing the Southwestern United
States for Mexico and that MEChA
itself promotes racial separatism.62
MEChA leaders, however, say that El
Plan is an outmoded document from
the 1960s. "When did we say we
wanted a separate nation? We never
did,"
said Graciela Larios, who was
head of the University of
California, Riverside, MEChA club.63
Gustavo Arellano, who writes the
"¡Ask a Mexican!" column for the OC
Weekly and was a former
member of MEChA, in a column for the
Los Angeles Times
wrote, "few members take these
hilariously dated relics of the
1960s seriously, if they even bother
to read them." Arellano added, "MEChA's
primary objectives are not
secessionist but educational (get as
many Hispanic high schoolers into
the universities as possible and
help them stay there) and cultural."64
The influence of the extreme right
on the mainstream press was
literally on display in a May 2006
Lou Dobbs Tonight report
on then Mexican President Vicente
Fox's visit to Salt Lake City.65
In that
report, correspondent Casey Wian
characterized Fox's trip as a
"Mexican military incursion," and
claimed that "[y]ou could call"
Fox's trip to the United States "the
Vicente Fox Aztlan tour." During the
report, CNN
featured a graphic of "Aztlan"
that was sourced to the
Council of Conservative Citizens
(CCC) — an organization linked to
white supremacists and often
described as a descendant of the
White Citizens Councils present in
the South in the middle part of the
20th century, which were known as
the "uptown Klan."66 A
CNN spokesperson called the
inclusion of the CCC graphic "regrettabl[e]."
Voter Fraud
Another myth that has been repeated
about undocumented immigrants is the
notion that large numbers of them
are attempting to vote
undocumentedly.67 The
main purveyor of this myth is, once
again, CNN's Lou Dobbs. In 2007,
there were 24 episodes of
Lou Dobbs Tonight and
Lou Dobbs This Week that
raised the specter of voter fraud
among undocumented immigrants.
All of Dobbs' mentions of the issue
occurred after September 2007. The
story that prompted most of his
coverage was former New York Gov.
Eliot Spitzer's plan to allow
undocumented immigrants to apply for
a state driver's license. According
to Dobbs and other opponents of the
proposal, allowing undocumented
immigrants to obtain licenses would
open the door to voter fraud by
allowing immigrants who are not here
legally to register and vote.
Dobbs raised the specter of so many
undocumented immigrants voting that
our very democracy would be in
peril. On the October 23, 2007,
edition of his show, he called
Spitzer's plan an "outrageous
proposal to give away those driver's
licenses to undocumented aliens and
open the door to massive voter
fraud." On October 25, 2007, Dobbs
said of Spitzer, "He doesn't seem to
care much about the issue of massive
voter fraud, which he is providing
here." On his November 7, 2007,
show, Dobbs proclaimed that
Spitzer's proposal was "a planned,
purposeful fraud on voting ... And
if that happens, it is a democracy
absolutely in jeopardy."
In one report, the show brought up
an actual example of voter fraud. On
the December 3, 2007, broadcast,
correspondent Bill Tucker reported
"that more than 300 undocumented
aliens had successfully registered
to vote in just one county in
[Texas]." That claim presumably
referred to a report earlier in the
year by Bexar County Elections
Administrator Jacque Callanen that
330 noncitizens
were registered to vote in the
county.68 Despite
Tucker's claim, the county did not
report that all 300 were
undocumented, merely that they were
not citizens. And how many of these
actually had cast a vote in
elections since 2001? The number was
41. Moreover, there have been only
22 election fraud cases in Texas
since 2002, all of which involved
mail-in ballots, campaign finance,
or unlawful conduct at polling
places.69
Dobbs also warned of voter fraud in
the 2008 primary elections. Prior to
the Nevada caucuses, Dobbs claimed,
"The powerful Culinary Workers Union
is to play a critical role in that
effort. The union is encouraging its
members to caucus on behalf of
Senator Obama — but in point of
fact, as many as half of the union's
members are undocumented aliens." In
fact, Dobbs' "point of fact" was
wrong. The union's political
director had told the Associated
Press that half the union's members
are immigrants, not "undocumented
aliens."70
As for the larger claim of voter
fraud made by Dobbs and others,
study after study has shown that
voter fraud is an exceedingly rare
occurrence. Michael Waldman and
Justin Levitt of the Brennan Center
for Justice at New York University
School of Law state that proven
voter fraud "happens
about as often as death by lightning
strike."71 According
to a
study of the issue by Lorraine
C. Minnite, a professor at Barnard
College in Columbia University, only
24 people were convicted of or
pleaded guilty to federal voter
fraud charges between 2002 and 2005.72
Another
study by the nonpartisan
research institute Demos concluded,
"Available evidence suggests that
the incidence of election fraud is
minimal across the 50 U.S. states
and rarely affects election
outcomes."73 Moreover,
academics and historians say that
the objective of most voter fraud
claims throughout U.S. history has
been the disenfranchisement of
certain voting blocs in the U.S.
Minnite
writes, "Fraud allegations today
typically point the finger at those
belonging to the same categories of
voters accused of fraud in the past
— the marginalized and formerly
disenfranchised, urban dwellers,
immigrants, blacks, and lower status
voters. These populations are mostly
found among those still struggling
for full inclusion in American
life."74
These facts notwithstanding, Lou
Dobbs continues to offer an imagined
epidemic of voter fraud as one more
reason to be angry about
undocumented immigration.
Leprosy
Of the many myths about undocumented
immigrants that have circulated in
recent years, one of the most
insidious is that they are
responsible for an increase in the
number of leprosy cases in the
United States. The worst offender
is, unsurprisingly, CNN's Lou Dobbs.
Dobbs has discussed leprosy
(technically known as Hansen's
disease) in the context of
undocumented immigration a total of
10 times since 2005. The first time
he brought up the issue was on the
April 14, 2005, edition of
Lou Dobbs Tonight.75
In that episode, CNN correspondent
Christine Romans quoted "medical
lawyer" Dr. Madeleine Cosman as
saying, "We have some enormous
problems with horrendous diseases
that are being brought into America
by undocumented aliens," including
"diseases we have only rarely had
here in America, such as Chagas
Disease, leprosy, malaria." Romans
added that, according to Cosman,
"there were about 900 cases of
leprosy [in the U.S.] for 40 years.
There have been 7,000 in the past
three years."
But on the May 6, 2007,
edition of CBS' 60
Minutes, correspondent
Lesley Stahl refuted that report.
According to Stahl, data from the
National Hansen's Disease Program (NHDP)
of the Department of Health and
Human Services showed that "7,000 is
the number of leprosy cases over the
last 30 years, not the past three,
and nobody knows how many of those
cases involve undocumented
immigrants." (According to the NHDP,
there were just 398 cases of
Hansen's disease between 2002 and
2004 — the "past three years" at the
time of Cosman's statement.) Dobbs
defended Romans' citation and told
Stahl, "If we reported it, it's a
fact."
On the next evening's edition of
Lou Dobbs Tonight, both
Dobbs and Romans defended their
claims. Romans stated, "We don't
make up numbers here," adding that
she was quoting the "7,000 cases of
leprosy" statistic from an article
"in
The Journal of American Physicians
and Surgeons" by "Cosman,
a respected medical lawyer and
medical historian." Romans again
quoted Cosman's article, stating,
"Suddenly, in the past three years
America has more than 7,000 cases of
leprosy."76 But as Carl
Bialik of
The Wall Street Journal
wrote in a May 8, 2007, post on
his blog, The Numbers Guy, Cosman
had cited a February 18, 2003,
New York Times
article to justify her claim of
the number of people afflicted with
leprosy. Bialik noted that the
Times article had
compared the "900 recorded cases in
the United States 40 years ago" with
the number "today," in which "more
than 7,000 people have leprosy." The
article was not referring to
occurrences of leprosy "in the past
three years," as Cosman wrote.77
Despite the fact that Romans'
original 2005 report on leprosy has
been proven false, Dobbs has never
admitted to the error on his show.
Indeed, on the May 16, 2007,
edition of
Lou Dobbs Tonight, Dobbs
sought to revive the leprosy scare,
stating, "The number of reported
incidents of leprosy in this country
is rising and that isn't the worst
of it." Though Dobbs was now citing
accurate statistics, viewers may
have wondered if an increase of
leprosy cases to a total of 166 in
the entire country was really
something to worry about.
Correspondent Bill Tucker presented
the report, ending the segment by
saying, "The United States
Citizenship and Immigration Service
requires that legal residents be
screened for leprosy, but that
screening is not effective if a
person is not symptomatic. Of
course, undocumented immigrants are
not screened at all." On the June
18, 2007,
edition of CNN's
Lou Dobbs Tonight, Dobbs
tried to downplay his program's
airing and affirming of a falsehood
about the number of leprosy cases in
the United States, saying the
comment was "eight seconds long and,
as I said, took place two and a half
years ago." He also
claimed that the May 16, 2007,
report "set the record straight,"
even though it did not note the
uncritical citation of the false
statistic or Dobbs' repeated defense
of it.
While
Lou Dobbs Tonight has
raised the leprosy myth the most,
other shows have also been guilty of
perpetuating it. On the October 11,
2006, episode of Fox News'
The O'Reilly Factor,
guest Pat Buchanan stated that "a
lot [of] diseases are coming back.
And it's because these 12 million
undocumenteds are coming across the
border. ... Leprosy is making a
comeback." On the May 30, 2007,
edition of MSNBC's
Scarborough Country,
Buchanan repeated Dobbs' claim that
there were "7,000 cases [of leprosy]
in the first three years of this
century, only 900 in the last 30
years before it." In neither
instance did the hosts correct
Buchanan's claim.
According to James L. Krahenbuhl,
director of the NHDP, Hansen's
disease "is not a public health
problem."78 As reported
by
The New York Times in
mid-2007, Krahenbuhl noted that the
recent rise in Hansen's disease
cases "could be a statistical
fluctuation, or it could be a result
of better data collection in recent
years." According to the Times
report, "[T]he 137 reported cases
[in 2006] were fewer than in any
year from 1975 to 1996."
Every Vote a Landslide
Every night, Lou Dobbs asks viewers
to vote yes or no on a poll question
that he poses. These questions
revolve around Dobbs' pet issues,
undocumented immigration in
particular, and are usually framed
in ways that ensure an overwhelming
response affirming the CNN host's
own views. Indeed, the results of
Dobbs' viewer polls tend to resemble
those of elections in dictatorships,
with tallies that frequently hit 95
percent and higher in agreement with
Dobbs' stance on the issue. Here are
some recent results:
"The results of tonight's poll — 99
percent of you say the majority of
American citizens want a federal
government that will secure our
ports and borders and enforce our
immigration laws." (December 20,
2007)
"The results of our poll, 98 percent
of you responding that it is
reasonable and appropriate for
American citizens to expect that
local state and federal governments
will work together to enforce all of
U.S. laws including immigration. How
about that?" (December 14, 2007)
"Ninety-three percent of you say
efforts to confer benefits on
undocumented aliens designed to
expedite a nationwide massive voter
fraud. We'll see." (October 23,
2007)
"The results of our poll tonight
overwhelming — 95 percent of you say
the federal government will not act
to stop concerted efforts nationwide
to register millions of undocumented
aliens in advance of our 2008
elections." (October 16, 2007)
"The results of tonight's poll: 99
percent of you are outraged that the
federal government is releasing tens
of thousands of undocumented aliens
onto U.S. streets instead of
deporting them." (September 13,
2007)
"Now, the results of tonight's poll
— 98 percent of you do not believe
Congress will actually provide the
necessary resources to prosecute and
jail every undocumented alien caught
crossing the border." (August 28,
2007)
"Now the results of our poll: 95
percent of you responding that the
federal aid should be cut off to
sanctuary cities that protect
undocumented aliens in America. And
5 percent, of course, disagreeing."
(April 23, 2007)
"Ninety-eight percent of you voted
that undocumented immigration,
failed border security and sanctuary
laws are contributing to the rise in
gang violence in this country."
(March 5, 2007)
"The results of tonight's poll,
overwhelming, 98 percent of you
saying you don't believe our already
broken Social Security system can
handle paying benefits to
undocumented aliens who work in this
country 18 months." (January 3,
2007)
VALIDATING THE EXTREMISTS
While O'Reilly and Beck have
certainly contributed their share of
fuel to the anti-immigrant fire, it
is Lou Dobbs who is at the center of
the controversy over immigration.
All these programs, particularly
Lou Dobbs Tonight, not
only provide a means for immigration
myths to achieve a wide circulation,
but they also offer a forum for some
of the most extreme elements of the
anti-immigrant movement.
Lou Dobbs hosts a variety of
opponents of undocumented
immigration on his program. For
instance, representatives of the
Center for Immigration Studies
(CIS), a group that campaigns for
tougher immigration policies, were
interviewed or quoted on
Lou Dobbs Tonight 34
times in 2007. But while groups like
CIS might have some mainstream
credibility, other guests do not.
Dobbs has on many occasions hosted
members of the Minuteman Project, a
group that sends its members,
bearing arms, to the border to look
for people sneaking across from
Mexico. Jim Gilchrist, one of the
co-founders of the group, has been
quoted or interviewed on
Lou Dobbs Tonight 24
times. "I'm not going to promote
insurrection, but if it happens, it
will be on the conscience of the
members of Congress who are doing
this," Gilchrist told
The Orange County Register
in 2006. "I will not promote
violence in resolving this, but I
will not stop others who might
pursue that."79 Chris
Simcox, another Minuteman
co-founder, has been quoted orf
appeared on Dobbs' program a total
of 18 times. At the end of an
interview on March 31, 2005, Dobbs
told Simcox, "Outstanding. We wish
you all the success in the world."80
Gilchrist has appeared four times
on
Glenn Beck, and both he
and Simcox have appeared on
The O'Reilly Factor
(Gilchrist four times, Simcox three
times).
Although more extreme groups might
not get the kind of on-air
endorsement that Simcox got from
Dobbs, they express great
satisfaction in his crusade against
undocumented immigration. Dobbs may
or may not have known much about the
Council of Conservative Citizens
before he used its map of "Aztlan"
on his program, but the group
certainly knows about him. The CCC
posts links and video clips of
Dobbs' shows on its website, as do
some of its affiliate chapters. The
St. Louis chapter of the CCC, for
instance, regularly praises Dobbs on
its blog. One entry after the Fox
News Channel announced it would host
a debate with the Congressional
Black Caucus read, "Most of the
chatter on this issue is from
leftists and radical blacks, along
the lines of, 'CBC, How Could You?'
The pertinent and real question
should be from our people, 'FNC, How
Could You?' If Fox had a right wing
reputation once upon a time, they're
losing it. These days, the two most
conservative cable TV talking heads
are not on Fox. They are Lou Dobbs
(CNN) and Glenn Beck (CNN-HN)."81
When Dobbs used the CCC's "Aztlan"
map, the blog wrote, "Welcome Lou
Dobbs. I knew you were one of us all
along."82
The CCC is hardly the only extremist
group that counts itself among
Dobbs' fans. The right-wing John
Birch Society — which has a special
page on its website devoted to the
North American Union83 —
regularly posts articles relating
Dobbs' statements on immigration and
attacking those who criticize Dobbs.
When the Southern Poverty Law Center
took out a newspaper ad criticizing
Dobbs last May, the JBS wrote,
"Those who accept SPLC's alarmism
don't seem to realize that without
its incessant cries of rampant
racism and hatred, the money
wouldn't be flowing into the group's
coffers. And when there isn't any
credible reason to scream about
hatred and bigotry, attacking Lou
Dobbs with claims of inaccuracy seem
designed to accomplish the
money-raising goal."84
Decrying a
New Yorker article about
Dobbs as being too critical, the JBS
wrote, "If you start acting like an
honorary member of the John Birch
Society on national TV then, is it
any wonder that you are going to
have a smear campaign conducted
against you?"85
Of course, Dobbs has no control over
the statements others make about
him, whether praise or scorn (and he
has called the CCC "a reprehensible
organization based on its beliefs
and attitudes"86). But he
is hailed by the entire spectrum of
immigration opponents, from the
reasonable to the unreasonable. And
the degree to which extremist
elements see Dobbs as an ally
indicates at the very least that
they believe he is helping their
cause.
FEAR, ANGER, AND HATE
Whatever your views on the subject
of undocumented immigration, it
would be hard to argue that the
debate over the issue should not be
based on facts and conducted with
civility. Yet all too frequently,
prominent media figures discuss
undocumented immigration with
rhetoric that is both inaccurate and
inflammatory. Cable news
personalities like Glenn Beck, Bill
O'Reilly, and Pat Buchanan have over
the years brought down the level of
discourse and smeared immigrants
with irresponsible and divisive
language. Below is a sampling of
what has been said on cable news and
nationally syndicated conservative
talk radio in recent years.
Glenn Beck
"Every undocumented worker is an
undocumented immigrant, a criminal
and a drain on our dwindling
resources." — Glenn Beck,
September 4, 2007
"I've got a quick message for
undocumented aliens if you happen to
be watching. You better start
packing your bags. And to the
politicians in Washington who are
soft on undocumented immigration,
start packing up your office,
because when the terrorists strike,
which they will, and we find out
that they're here undocumentedly
from some other country, we will be
telling all of you to get the hell
out."
—
Glenn Beck, May 9, 2007
"America's border crisis. Rape,
drugs, kidnapping, even murder. It
is beginning to look a lot more like
a border war." — Glenn Beck,
November 8, 2007
"It's time we wake up in this
country. We are dealing with an
undocumented alien crime wave, and
drug smuggling is just the
beginning."
— Glenn Beck, January 12, 2007
"Earlier this week, I told you about
the five-part plan that I believe
may lead to the end of the West as
we know it. I called it my 'Perfect
Storm.' One of the elements of that
perfect storm is undocumented
immigration. It is still a great way
for terrorists to come here and mess
with us. But even if that doesn't
happen — at the very least,
undocumented immigrants are
attacking our culture, and our way
of life. They are not melting into
our melting pot. They're here for
the cash." — Glenn Beck,
August 4, 2006
"So, welcome to Cinco de Flag
amusement park.
So, bienvenidos a Cinco de Flag
amusement park.
Come see our new line-up of thrill
rides, like the biggest
rollercoaster in Me-hee-ho, El Nino.
Standing a whopping 32 feet tall, it
drops an amazing 10 feet in 15
seconds! Run for the border in the
terrifying tractor-trailer run. We
simulate an 18-wheeler full of
undocumented immigrants trying to
cross the border when the INS breaks
in. See if you can make it!" — Mock commercial, The Glenn
Beck Program, May 5,
2006
"I also know our country is on fire,
and the fuel is undocumented
immigration. There are about 12 to
15 million undocumenteds in this
country, and that number is growing
by 500,000 every year. Recent
investigations showed that in Los
Angeles 95 percent of all warrants
for homicide targeted undocumented
aliens. They put a strain on our
Social Security, our education, our
health care and, yes, national
security."
—
Glenn Beck, January 30,
2007
"Somebody comes across the border in
the middle of the night, why are
they doing that? Really, three
reasons: One, they're terrorists;
two, they're escaping the law; or
three, they're hungry. They can't
make a living in their own dirtbag
country."
— The Glenn Beck Program, April 27, 2006
Bill O'Reilly
"The most extreme elements in this
country want open borders, blanket
amnesty, and entitlement for foreign
nationals who have come here
undocumentedly, and generally want
to change the demographics in the
USA so political power can be
assumed by the left. That is the end
game."
— The O'Reilly Factor, October 30, 2007
"Number one, the undocumented aliens
shouldn't be here. And number two,
the culture from which they come is
a lot more violent than the USA."
— The O'Reilly Factor, January 15, 2007
Pat Buchanan
"You've got a wholesale invasion,
the greatest invasion in human
history, coming across your southern
border, changing the composition and
character of your country."
— Hannity & Colmes, November 26, 2007
"Twelve million people in the
country is more than all the Irish,
Jewish, and English folks who ever
came. And more than that, every 20
months, we add a new Mexico in the
Third World. You're going to add 30
new Mexicos by 2050, and they all
know the door is open. If you grant
amnesty — and there's nothing in
this bill that stops the invasion —
I think you lose the American
Southwest." — Tucker, June 25, 2007
"It's not immigration. There is an
invasion of the United States of
America. And until you put a
security fence now along 2,000 miles
of border, you are not going to stop
this invasion. And it's coming not
only from Mexico, it's coming from
the whole world."
—
Hardball with Chris Matthews,
May 15, 2006
Michelle Malkin
"The never-ending criminal alien
revolving door — that's the subject
of this evening's 'Talking Points
Memo.' Here we go again — another
heinous crime, another undocumented
alien suspect with a mile-long rap
sheet, another bloody tragedy
wrought by open borders."
—
The O'Reilly Factor,
August 10, 2007
"It was the far left, the
open-borders activists, who were the
ones who are the extremists, who
were the ones advocating militant
ethnic separatism. This is our
stolen land. Chicano power. You had
folks with Aztlan T-shirts mugging
for the cameras in front of city
hall. These are people who believe
that the American southwest belongs
to Mexico, that we don't have a
right to enforce our borders, and
who do nothing more than try to
sabotage our sovereignty." — The O'Reilly
Factor, March 30, 2006
Michael Savage
"I would say, let them fast until
they starve to death, then that
solves the problem. Because then we
won't have a problem about giving
them green cards because they're
undocumented aliens; they don't
belong here to begin with."
— The Savage Nation, July 5, 2007
"I'm not allowed to raise the issue
or the specter of brown supremacists
behind these protests. Don't tell me
this is all about compassion for
immigrants, because it is not at all
only about compassion for
immigrants. They are trying to
provoke the takeover of the United
States of America."
— The Savage Nation, April 11, 2007
Neal Boortz
"This person sent me an email, said
when — when we defeat this
undocumented alien amnesty bill and
when we yank out the welcome mat and
they all start going back to Mexico,
as a going-away gift let's all give
them a box of nuclear waste. Give 'em
all a little nuclear waste and let 'em
take it on down there to Mexico.
Tell 'em it can — it'll heat
tortillas ... I love it."
— The Neal Boortz Show, June 21, 2007
"There is no intent to shut the
border down. None. If there was,
they [Congress] would do what the
American people want them to do:
pass a law, appropriate the money,
and fund it — to build a double
fence along the Mexican border, and
stop the damn invasion. I don't care
if Mexicans pile up against that
fence like tumbleweeds in the Santa
Ana winds in Southern California.
Let 'em. You know, then just run a
couple of taco trucks up and down
the line, and somebody's gonna be a
millionaire out of that." — The Neal Boortz
Show, June 18, 2007
John Gibson
"Now, it's time for 'My Word.' Do
your duty. Make more babies. That's
a lesson drawn out of two
interesting stories over the last
couple of days.
First, a story yesterday that half
of the kids in this country under
five years old are minorities. By
far, the greatest number are
Hispanic. You know what that means?
Twenty-five years and the majority
of the population is Hispanic. Why
is that? Well, Hispanics are having
more kids than others. Notably, the
ones Hispanics call 'gabachos' —
white people — are having fewer."
— The Big Story with John Gibson, May 11, 2006
METHODOLOGY
The quantitative portion of this
study covered two immigration myths,
that undocumented immigrants are
responsible for a disproportionate
degree of crime, and that
undocumented immigrants strain
social services and/or do not pay
taxes.
In order to make the analysis as
straightforward as possible, we did
not evaluate the accuracy of every
particular claim made on these
topics. Instead, we sought merely to
assess how often the claims were
made. It is possible to leave a
mistaken impression while avoiding
specific falsehoods. For instance,
doing story after story on a single
case of an undocumented immigrant
responsible for two deaths in a
drunken driving incident — and
focusing all the attention on the
perpetrator's immigration status —
will encourage viewers to conclude
that there is a large problem of
undocumented immigrants driving
drunk, when in fact there is no
evidence to suggest that is the
case.
For these two myths, the following
search queries were employed in
LexisNexis:
Crime
(SHOW(Lou Dobbs Tonight) OR
SHOW(O'Reilly Factor) OR SHOW(Glenn
Beck)) AND ((Undocumented
Immigration OR Undocumented
Immigrants OR Undocumented Aliens OR
Undocumented OR PLURAL(Undocumenteds))
W/50 (Crime OR Criminal OR Homicide
OR Murder OR Rape OR Robbery))
Social Services & Taxes
(SHOW(Lou Dobbs Tonight) OR
SHOW(O'Reilly Factor) OR SHOW(Glenn
Beck)) AND ((Undocumented
Immigration OR Undocumented
Immigrants OR Undocumented Aliens OR
Undocumented OR PLURAL(Undocumenteds))
W/50 (Social Services OR (Social
Security NOT W/2 (Number OR Record
OR Card OR Administration)) OR
Medicaid OR Medicare OR (Welfare NOT
W/2 Reform) OR Food Stamps OR
Emergency Medical OR Emergency
Room))
(SHOW(Lou Dobbs Tonight) OR
SHOW(O'Reilly Factor) OR SHOW(Glenn
Beck)) AND ((Undocumented
Immigration OR Undocumented
Immigrants OR Undocumented Aliens OR
Undocumented OR PLURAL(Undocumenteds))
W/50 ((Taxes NOT W/2 (Income OR
Cuts)) OR Taxpayers OR Taxation OR
Public Funding))
These searches were limited to 2007.
Each incidence was then read, and
only those cases in which the host,
a correspondent, or a guest actually
made a claim about the myth in
question (e.g., "We are dealing with
an undocumented alien crime wave")
was counted. The unit of analysis
was the program episode; if the
claim was made in an episode, it was
counted once, regardless of how many
times it might have been restated or
repeated on that episode.
It is important to note that because
we strictly adhered to the 50-word
rule — meaning the terms referring
to crime or social services/taxes
had to appear within 50 words of
"undocumented immigration" and its
variants — the figures reported here
actually understate the prevalence
of these topics on these programs.
This report was researched and
written by Paul Waldman, Elbert
Ventura, Robert Savillo, Susan Lin,
and Greg Lewis.
[1]
An article on Paul's website,
written under the candidate's
byline, reads, "The ultimate goal is
not simply a superhighway, but an
integrated North American Union —
complete with a currency, a
cross-national bureaucracy, and
virtually borderless travel within
the Union. Like the European Union,
a North American Union would
represent another step toward the
abolition of national sovereignty
altogether." Available at
http://www.ronpaul2008.com/articles/701/the-nafta-superhighway/.
[2]
Note that since virtually none of
the data gathered either by
academics or the government (for
instance, the U.S. Census) is able
to distinguish between documented
and undocumented immigrants, the
evidence in this area — including
that cited by both immigration
advocates and opponents — usually
applies to immigrants generally.
[5]
Public Policy Institute of
California, "Crime, Corrections, and
California," February 2008.
Available at
http://www.ppic.org/content/pubs/cacounts/CC_208KBCC.pdf.
The latter statistic (one-tenth as
high among men age 18-40) includes
all institutions related to criminal
activity, including prisons, jails,
and halfway houses.
[8]
According to the Bureau of Justice
Statistics, at the end of 2006,
there were 2.26 million inmates in
custody in state and federal prisons
and in local jails, of which
190,844, or 8.4 percent, were in
federal prisons. See table, "Inmates
in custody in State or Federal
prisons or in local jails at yearend
2006," in "Prisoners in 2006,"
Bureau of Justice Statistics,
December 2007. Available at
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/pdf/p06.pdf.
[9]
"Prison and Jail Inmates at Midyear
2006," Bureau of Justice Statistics
Bulletin, June 2007. Available at
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/pdf/pjim06.pdf.
According to the report, in the
12-month period ending June 30,
2006, there were 1,556,518 federal
and state prisoners, of which
91,426, or 5.87 percent were
noncitizens. Figures on noncitizens
were not included in the year-end
report.
[11]
Lou Dobbs Tonight,
October 5, 2006. On the December 4,
2007, edition of
Democracy Now!, a daily
TV and radio news program, Dobbs
admitted that he "misspoke" and
acknowledged that the number he was
referring to was "26% in federal
prisons." When pressed by host Amy
Goodman about whether he corrected
the misstatement on his show, Dobbs
said, "I'm sure we have." Goodman
pointed out that she could not find
the correction.
Media Matters could not
find a correction of Dobbs'
statement either.
[17]
During 2007, the only times O'Reilly
brought up drunken driving in a
context other than undocumented
immigration was when he played a
dramatic 911 call of a girl calling
from a car, begging her drunken
father to slow down, and some
discussion of Lindsay Lohan's
drunken driving arrest.
[25]
Under federal law, hospitals that
accept Medicaid are prohibited from
turning away anyone requiring
emergency care, regardless of their
immigration status. The federal
government does reimburse hospitals
for a portion of what they spend on
emergency care for undocumented
immigrants, under a program called
Federal Reimbursement of Emergency
Health Services Furnished to
Undocumented Aliens.
[28]
When the Social Security
Administration is unable to match a
worker's name and number, the wages
are recorded in the SSA's Earnings
Suspense File. A 2002 report from
the SSA revealed that in Tax Year
2000 alone, $49 billion was placed
in this file, with the figure
growing rapidly. Social Security
Administration, "Status of the
Social Security Administration's
Earnings Suspense File," document
A-03-03-23038. Available at
http://www.ssa.gov/oig/ADOBEPDF/A-03-03-23038.pdf.
[30]
While many hospitals are greatly
strained by the cost of treating
those without insurance,
undocumented immigrants make up a
small portion of the uninsured, and
thus a small portion of the overall
uncompensated care for which
hospitals pay. See Congressional
Budget Office, "The Impact of
Unauthorized Immigrants on the
Budgets of State and Local
Governments," December 2007.
Available at
http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/87xx/doc8711/12-6-Immigration.pdf.
[34]
The O'Reilly Factor. May
17, 2007. O'Reilly didn't say where
he obtained his "rock-solid stats,"
but they appear to have come from a
paper issued by the conservative
Heritage Foundation and authored by
Robert E. Rector and Christine Kim
(available at
http://www.heritage.org/Research/Immigration/sr14.cfm).
There is insufficient space here to
refute all of Rector and Kim's
claims, but suffice to say that they
use highly selective means of
choosing what counts as a cost and
what counts as a payment.
[40]
The count includes two episodes of
Lou Dobbs This Week. For
both shows, we also counted
separately rebroadcasts of segments
mentioning "NAFTA Superhighway" on
later episodes that were not repeats
of the entire show. (For instance, a
segment discussing the "NAFTA
Superhighway" on the February 27,
2007, edition of
The Glenn Beck Show was
reused for the March 2, 2007,
edition of the show; both editions
were included in our count.)
[66]
The CCC's history gained exposure
when Sen. Trent Lott was revealed to
have spoken before them; see, for
instance, Cragg Hines, "Lott of
Explaining Can't Change Record,"
Houston Chronicle,
December 15, 2002, Outlook p. 2.
[67]
In recent years, conservatives have
argued that fraud at polling places,
such as voter impersonation, is a
widespread problem. Though they have
been unable to provide any evidence
that such cases occur in anything
more than comically small numbers,
they have succeeded in passing laws
in a number of states requiring
voters to show photo identification.
Opponents of such laws point out
that many people, particularly among
the elderly, do not have photo IDs;
the Supreme Court is currently
considering the validity of such
laws.
[69]
Gary Scharrer, "Lawmakers Look Into
a Problem That May Not Exist,"
Houston Chronicle,
January 26, 2008, p. 4.
[70]
Lou Dobbs Tonight,
January 16, 2008; Kathleen
Hennessey, "Presidential candidates
to woo powerful union in Las Vegas,"
Associated Press, March 23, 2007.
[75]
The total includes two segments on
Lou Dobbs This Week that
previously aired on
Lou Dobbs Tonight and a
May 18, 2007, viewer email read by
Dobbs on the air alleging that a
rise in leprosy in the U.S. can be
traced to Mexican immigrants.
Hispanic
News
is
ranked number 1 at Google, Yahoo and MSN
and
is the largest news website on the
Internet for American Hispanics and
Hispanics providing daily news,
editorials, plus home to the Hispanic
News National Diabetes Center and the
Hispanic News National Election Center.
-
•
Latin
America News
is the largest website on the Internet
covering Mexico, the Caribbean, Central
and South America. Latin America News is
the premier business website of Latin
America.
-
•
Latina
The Latina Community for
Today's Business and Professional Woman
•
Mujer
The National Magazine for the
Hispanic/Latina Woman