Albany Times Union

Stabilizin­g the world of disorder

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Since Republican­s have completely caved to President Donald Trump’s craven exploitati­on of immigratio­n as a wedge issue, the country, as usual, needs the Democrats to be the adults and put forward a realistic, comprehens­ive approach to immigratio­n, which now requires two parts.

The first is a way to think about the border and the second is a way to think about all the issues beyond the border — issues that are pushing migrants our way. You cannot think seriously about the first without thinking seriously about the second, and if you don’t, this week’s scenes of Customs and Border Protection officers firing tear gas to keep out desperate migrants near Tijuana will get a lot worse.

Regarding the border, the right place for Democrats to be is for a high wall with a big gate. Democrats won’t do as well as they can nationally without assuring Americans that they’re committed to securing our borders; people can’t just walk in. But the country won’t do as well as it can in the 21st century unless it remains committed to a very generous legal immigratio­n policy — and a realistic pathway to citizenshi­p for illegals already here — to attract both high-energy, low-skilled workers and high-iq risk takers.

They have been the renewable energy source of the American dream — and our secret advantage over China.

But thinking beyond the border is where Democrats can really distinguis­h themselves; it’s where Trump has been recklessly AWOL. This is how we got to where we are today: During the 19th and 20th centuries, the world shifted from being governed by large empires in many regions to being governed by independen­t nation-states. And the 50 years after World War II were a great time to be a weak little nation-state.

Why? Because there were two superpower­s competing for your affection by throwing foreign aid at you, building your army, buying your cheap goods and educating your college students; climate change was moderate; population­s were still under control in the developing world; no one had a cellphone to easily organize movements against your government; and China was not in the World Trade Organizati­on, so everyone could be in textiles and other lowwage industries.

All of that switched in the early 21st century: Climate-driven extreme weather — f loods, droughts, heat and cold — on top of man-made deforestat­ion began to hurt many countries, especially small-scale farmers. This happened right as developing­world population­s exploded. Africa went

from 140 million in 1900 to 1 billion in 2010 to a projected 2.5 billion by 2050.

A satellite map just released by University of Cincinnati geography researcher­s demonstrat­ed that nearly a quarter of the earth’s habitable surface changed between just 1992 and 2015, primarily from forests to agricultur­e, from grasslands to deserts and from wetlands to urban concrete.

Meanwhile, the internet has enabled citizens to easily compare their living standards with those in Paris or Phoenix — and find a human trafficker to take them there. Also, China joined the WTO, dominating low-wage industries.

So it’s now much harder to be an average little country. The most frail of them are hemorrhagi­ng people, like Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Sudan and most every nation in sub-saharan Africa. Others — Venezuela, Syria, Afghanista­n and Libya — have just fractured.

Together, they’re creating vast zones of disorder, and many people want to get out of them into any zone of order, particular­ly America or Europe, triggering nationalis­tpopulist

backlashes.

There are now more climate refugees, economic migrants searching for work and political refugees just searching for order than at any point since World War II — nearly 70 million people, according to the Internatio­nal Rescue Committee, and 135 million more in need of humanitari­an aid.

A responsibl­e presidenti­al candidate in 2020 needs a policy that rationally manages the flow of immigrants into our country and offers a strategy to help stabilize the world of disorder through climate change mitigation, birth control diffusion, reforestat­ion, governance assistance and support for small-scale farmers.

This is our biggest geopolitic­al problem today. Forget the “Space Corps”; I’d make the “Peace Corps” our fifth service. We should have an Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps and Peace Corps, to send Americans to help stabilize small farms and governance in the world of disorder.

And this has to be a global project, with the U.S., Europe, India, Korea, China, Russia, Japan all contributi­ng. Otherwise the world of order is going to be increasing­ly challenged by refugees from the world of disorder, and all rational discussion­s of immigratio­n will go out the window.

 ??  ?? thomas Friedman
thomas Friedman

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