opinterph
The other side of fear is freedom.
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You are quite mistaken. This thread is about the economic effect of immigration on the country and upon existing Americans.
No. This thread is about the philosophy of Citizenism as it relates to immigration to the United States. Economic considerations are an important part of the discussion, but social and cultural elements also form a pivotal significance to the deliberation.
As I have repeatedly pointed out, immigration hurts American blacks, Hispanics and other minorities hardest.
Anyone who honestly researches this issue will find a plethora of evidence suggesting that immigration is not a primary cause of hurt experienced by “American blacks, Hispanics and other minorities.” I would expect anyone advocating concern for those populations to also be eager to explore the myriad of forces that continue to influence the efforts of those populations to find social, political, and economic success. I suggest interested members review a recent paper by Harry J. Holzer, published by the Migration Policy Institute (linked below).
Dr. Holzer acknowledges the widespread agreement that highly educated immigrants contribute much to the US economy, but the emphasis of his study is the less-skilled workers. He implicates a range of social and political concerns, but notes that economic issues deserve to be among our top concerns when considering immigration reform legislation. He points out how relevant literature suggests quite modest negative economic impacts to native-born US citizens by less-educated immigrants and concludes that it is hard to make the case that the current volume of unskilled immigrants is too high. To the contrary – a sudden curtailment of less-educated immigrants would actually cause disruptions in many industries and could also raise costs in the long term.

























