…different folks.
Background: a little while ago, this happened:
Chinese and other foreign citizens could soon be barred from purchasing homes in Texas under a bill greenlit by the Texas House on Thursday [and since signed into law by TxGov Abbot].
The measure, which passed the Republican-led chamber in a largely party-line vote, was significantly narrowed-down from the original version. Lawmakers voted to add exemptions for individuals residing in the United States legally on temporary work or student visas. Dual citizens and permanent residents are also not included in the ban.
The legislation would block any other citizens of China, Russia, North Korea and Iran from purchasing homes, buying land or leasing apartments in Texas, and give the governor power to add other countries to the list.
Now, via Insty, this little development:
A pair of Chinese citizens asked a federal judge to block a new law banning Chinese nationals and people from a select number of other countries from buying or leasing property in Texas.
In a lawsuit filed July 3, Peng Wang and Qinlin Li, two Chinese citizens currently in the United States with visas, called Senate Bill 17 unconstitutional and racist.
Because of course.
Both plaintiffs said that while they plan to stay in the United States legally, they have no clear path to permanent residency and would be hurt by the law.
In its initial response to the lawsuit, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s office argued the state was using its “police powers” to prevent foreign governments from gaining a foothold in Texas. The attorney general’s office argued that Wang and Li won’t be affected by the law because they are already in Texas lawfully and wouldn’t be prohibited from real estate transactions.
The complaint, however, argues that the law is centered around where people claim their domicile, or permanent home. People in the U.S. on student or work visas, like Li and Wang, can’t claim their home is in Texas, attorneys wrote.
That’s not the part which get up my nose, however; it’s all legal stuff and whatever happens, happens.
Because this is the Houston Chronicle, the reported decided to provide a little “balance”, or what we conservatives would call “whataboutism”:
As of 2023, Chinese investors owned or leased about 277,336 acres of U.S. agricultural land, according to the USDA. Of that, 123,078 acres were in Texas. Most of the land was associated with wind energy investments, the agency said.
Other foreign countries own far more land in the U.S.
Canadians own or lease about 15.3 million acres of U.S. land, according to the USDA. The Netherlands, Italy, United Kingdom and Germany hold a combined 13 million acres.
Yeah. The difference, however, is that unlike the Chinese, Iranians et al., the Canadians, Dutch, Italians, Brits, and Germans aren’t likely to use the land they purchase as a springboard to cause mischief.
And a huge percentage of the land already owned by the Chinese coincidentally(?) happens to be adjoining U.S. military bases. What are we to deduce from this little factoid?
One last thought. Both the plaintiffs aren’t exactly wealthy: one is a salaried employee and the other a recently-graduated student.
So I’d like to know who, exactly, is paying the costs of this lawsuit. Let me go out on a limb here, and suggest that once you peel away all the shell organizations or individuals who purport to be paying the legal costs, the thing is being funded by the fucking Chinese government. I may be wrong, but somehow I doubt it.
Which is the precise reason for the law in the first place.
I THINK Lenin had a phrase, “When we go to hang the Capitalists, they will sell us the rope.”
You can always find a Proggy asshole who will do precisely the same thing.
Why not allow foreigners to own land but impose a foreign ownership tax?
The US is sovereign and can take the land back whenever it wants. What are the Chinese and/or Russians and/or the worst of them all, Canadian Snowbirds, going to do? Load a trillion tons of dirt onto some crappy leaky Chinesium ship or an Ontario trailer and take it home?
Please Kim, let an American farmer sell a thousand acres of cornfield to some silly Frog for 10 million USD. The Frog gets a highly taxed revocable title, the farmer gets the finest cellar of cheese and utterly gorgeous red wines of which I can only dream. Plus baguettes, but they don’t keep.
Have a look at what those sneaky New Yorkers did to the Japs when they sold them Rockefeller Center.
It seems the major reason for most foreign purchases of US property is to convert money from their country to a home or business property here that won’t turn into vaporware when (not if) things go bad at home. We are a savings deposit account for the rest of the world. This is especially true in CA, where huge percentages of the towns are collections of various Asian groups.