When my colleague, Rick Oltman, recently appeared on the Glenn Beck show to discuss illegal immigration, I noticed that Beck opened up by indulging what is now a time-honored disclaimer that is faithfully uttered by conservatives, liberals and every other variant along the political spectrum virtually anytime they are about to discuss immigration.

Mark Cromer

Mark Cromer

“Are you just anti-illegal immigrant,” the cable show host asked at the start of the segment. “Or are you anti-immigrant?”

Although Oltman was invited on the show to talk about President Obama’s aunt from Kenya who overstayed her visa in 2000 and has since ignored two deportation orders, Beck first had to make sure that Californians for Population Stabilization supports legal immigration.

When Oltman confirmed that CAPS obviously supports a legal pathway for people to emigrate to the United States, Beck declared with relief, “You are for legal immigration! OK, good.”

But just why is that “good” on the face of it?

Just what is it about mass immigration that makes it an intrinsic necessity for advancing our national interest? While the media is filled with voices that vow fidelity to the notion that all legal immigration is apparently a godsend, rarely if ever are they called upon to elaborate on just why that is — as if it is somehow a self-evident truth.

But this is not an unassailable truth and critical questions remain.

Should our willingness to accept virtually anyone be extrapolated into an invitation to everyone? Because that’s increasingly how it is being framed in the media.

America’s open character has inspired like-minded people to come to our shores for freedom and opportunity — there is indeed that thread of golden truth that runs throughout our national myth. But when was the last time that someone waxing eloquent about legal immigrants and legal immigration was asked just how many people — period — should be allowed into the United States, particularly as the country struggles through the most dangerous economic crisis since the Great Depression?

The prevalence of the intellectually simplistic (and dishonest) premise that legal immigration is good by definition alone is a tribute to the success of the open border lobby — spearheaded by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Council of La Raza — in framing any opposition to illegal immigration as a racist conspiracy. In reaction, opponents of illegal immigration up and down the political aisle have been conditioned to reflexively announce their support for legal immigration.

And that’s exactly what the open-border lobby wants: a defensive discussion about illegal immigration that leaves massive waves of legal immigration sacrosanct. This dynamic leaves unchallenged the absurd claim that America’s immigration system is “broken” and that “fixing” it means legalization, not enforcement of our laws.

The fact is that the United States has the most permissive immigration policy among the industrial democracies and grants admission to more legal immigrants every year than any other nation on the planet — more than 1 million annually. As many as three times that number come into the country illegally each year as well.

Those who favor unrestricted immigration into the United States cynically use the fact that millions of people snuck into the nation or overstayed their visa as a sign that our system must be broken.

But it is not broken — it has been overrun.

It’s time America got serious about having an honest, open and civil discussion about immigration: the central question of which is how much immigration is too much to be in the interest of the American people?

It must no longer be heresy to challenge the notion of continued mass legal immigration. The benefits of curtailing immigration are as clear as they are compelling, not the least of which would be relief to unemployed Americans seeking jobs and American workers now facing even greater competition in the workplace. Seriously reduced immigration levels would also promote assimilation of new arrivals into American culture and give shared values time to work, which in turn would strengthen the common threads that bind us as a nation.

That is why CAPS, in fact, does want to see serious reductions in all immigration into the United States — including legal immigration — to levels that would effectively bring a halt to our country’s surging population growth. Since immigration and births to immigrants account for the vast majority of our population growth, a rethinking of policy preceded by a lengthy “timeout” is the only thoughtful way forward.

There’s nothing un-American about that.

To the contrary, it’s a long overdue dose of good old American common sense.

— Mark Cromer is a senior writing fellow at Californians for Population Stabilization.

Investigative journalist Mark Cromer has been writing about the impacts of mass migration into the United States for more than three decades. His work has been published by Noozhawk and major newspapers and public policy groups across the nation. His book, “California Twilight: Essays and Memories of The End of The Golden State,” is available from WildBlue Press. The opinions expressed are his own.