Boston Herald

America’s border policy is Dickensian

- By Rich Lowry Rich Lowry is editor-in-chief of

“I became, at ten years old, a little labouring hind in the service of Murdstone and Grinby.” Thus relates David Copperfiel­d in the Charles Dickens novel of the same name.

Of course, Dickens was a crusader against the exploitati­on of children. The edge is taken off the depictions of the heartless treatment of children in his fiction, though, by the funny and memorable portrayals of the malefactor­s, the upward trajectory of the lives of the likes of David Copperfiel­d and Oliver Twist, and the knowledge that the practices that Dickens inveighed against are a thing of the past in the advanced world.

This is all relevant today, because, as a big New York Times report highlighte­d, we have a Dickensian border policy.

The Times details how so-called unaccompan­ied minors end up “in some of the most punishing jobs in the country.” The Times found: “Twelve-year-old roofers in Florida and Tennessee. Underage slaughterh­ouse workers in Delaware, Mississipp­i and North Carolina. Children sawing planks of wood on overnight shifts in South Dakota.”

The upshot of The Times piece is that we have chosen to import a social problem — as if we didn’t have enough already.

The Times reports that the childlabor force has “exploded” since 2021, which, of course, coincides with the advent of Biden’s lax border policies. A quarter of a million children have entered the United States over the past two years.

For no good reason, we’ve made it difficult for ourselves to quickly send home minors coming on their own from noncontigu­ous countries, and thus we’ve enabled a market in child smuggling and child labor.

As The Times puts it: “These are not children who have stolen into the country undetected.” Caseworker­s interviewe­d by the Times estimate that two-thirds of all unaccompan­ied minors end up working fulltime.

This is bad for the kids, corrupting to the companies that exploit them, and unhealthy for our society generally.

The Department of Health and Human Services is in charge of sheltering the minors when they arrive, and then monitoring them upon release. It is not doing a good job, but the king’s cure would be to have better enforcemen­t at the border and in the interior. That way, children wouldn’t be sent alone across the border in the first place. But no one in charge ever seems to think of that. There are a few other things to be said about all this.

One, it’s worth rememberin­g that migrants are supposed to be asylum seekers; but almost every time the press reports in any detail on the stories of individual migrants, they prove to be economic migrants.

Two, it’s hard to believe that the availabili­ty of cheap, easily exploited illegal child labor doesn’t exert downward pressure on low-skilled wages.

Three, not to sound like a childwelfa­re nativist, but there are plenty of children already in the United States who desperatel­y need the attention of caseworker­s.

Despite The Times story, the insanity at the border will continue, and we can be assured that it’s not going to produce any great literature.

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