THE DOCTRINE OF THE N.A.F.T.A. GLOBALIST DEMOCRATS IS TO SERVE THE BILLIONAIRE CLASS WITH ENDLESS WAVES OF INVADING 'CHEAP' LABOR SUBSIDIZED WITH WELFARE FUNDED BY TAXES ON MIDDLE AMERICA.
In many speeches, Mayorkas says he is building a mass migration system to deliver workers to wealthy employers and investors and “equity” to poor foreigners. The nation’s border laws are subordinate to elites’ opinion about “the values of our country,” Mayorkas claims.
Tuesday, April 14, 2020
TIME TO GET PRO-ACTIVE IN DEFENDING OUR BORDERS, CULTURE, LANGUAGE AND JOBS AGAINST MEXICO'S INVASION?
In the midst of an unprecedented shutdown of American life due to the Wuhan coronavirus, the anti-border forces are as active as ever.
Industries immediately began using the crisis as a pretext for demanding more foreign worker visas, in one case citing school closures that are preventing American employees from going to work. There was also a push to slip a big increase of EB-5 visas, which go overwhelmingly to wealthy Chinese investors, into the emergency stimulus bill. And well into March, refugees were still being resettled as the pandemic raged.
Drawing on our years of research into these programs, the Center has publicized the brazen efforts to increase immigration during the greatest economic dislocation of our lifetime. We’ve published reports, authored op-eds, and hosted online panel discussions. We brought the attempted increase in H-2B visas to Tucker Carlson’s attention, and his segment on it is the only reason the White House belatedly backed down.
Even as our staff all works from home, we remain one of the only organizations shining a light on the biased research of immigration expansionists. Throughout this quarantine, with your help, we will continue to do so.
As the economy grinds to a halt, the financial situation of nonprofits is tenuous. Please consider supporting our important work as we try to keep the immigration debate focused on the broad national interest.
What's Happening at the Center In a recent piece, Director of Research Steven Camarota dispels the media narrative that DACA workers are vital to the fight against the Wuhan coronavirus. The open-borders Center for American Progress (CAP) claims that 29,000 health care workers are DACA recipients. That number seems high based on a previous analysis by the Center, but even accepting it means that DACA recipients comprise only 0.2 percent of the nation's 14.8 million health-care workers. And the data shows an additional 352,000 unemployed health-care workers could replace them. In addition, many of the health-care occupations held by DACA workers do not require high levels of training and education. Nearly one-third of the DACA health-care workers identified by CAP are home health and personal care aides. Another seven percent identify as dental assistants. Other occupations that CAP included in its analysis are animal caretakers, massage therapists, optometrists, and veterinarians. The idea that these workers are all on the "frontlines of the coronavirus response" is ridiculous.
Featured Posts What Can Be Done on Immigration Now By Andrew R. Arthur This is an unusual time in U.S. immigration history. All non-essential immigration Mexico, Canada, China, and Europe is on hold. The number of migrants apprehended entering illegally is almost historically low, and those being detained are quickly processed and returned. Most non-detained immigration courts are closed. This means that there is much that immigration agencies and their employees can do to prepare for the future.
The Fungible Nature of Federal Relief Funds May Put Money in the Pockets of Illegal Aliens By Dan Cadman California Governor Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, is reportedly considering providing coronavirus relief aid to illegal aliens out of the state coffers. This is something that's also been suggested by House Democrats at the federal level, but appears to be gaining no traction, I'm happy to report. It's a particularly bizarre move when the Los Angeles Times is reporting that the economic damage caused by the virus may completely deplete the state's cash reserves.
JUDICIAL WATCH:
America builds the La Raza “The Race” Mexican welfare state
IT’S MEXICO SUCKING THE BLOOD OF AMERICA…. HUNDREDS OF BILLIONS FOR WELFARE, “FREE” HEALTHCARE, HEROIN SALES, CRIME COST AND THEN THEY SEND TENS OF BILLIONS BACK TO NARCOMEX
“In the U.S. the remittances that come of illegal immigration drive down U.S. wages, particularly of those on the lowest-skilled parts of the ladder, and as money flows out from local communities, leaves them underinvested and run-down. Nobody can live two places at once. Illegal immigrants live here but their money lives in Mexico. And it's often untaxed.” MONICA SHOWALTER
WE CAN’T REBUILD THE AMERICAN MIDDLE CLASS UNTIL WE PUSH MEXICO OUT OF OUR BORDERS AND PRO-AMENSTY POLITICIANS AND BILLIONAIRES OVER THE CLIFF!
THEY ASSAULT OUR BORDERS, JOBS, WELFARE LINES AND INSTITUTIONS.
He added, “Illegal immigration, in particular, drives down wages and inhibits job opportunities for legal residents, while bringing more low-skilled, low-wage workers to these states. In turn, this increases costs to state and local governments, and discourages investment by businesses seeking a skilled labor force and lower overhead.” PAUL BEDARD
Illegal immigrants cost taxpayers $6.5K a year each: Report
Illegal immigrants in growing numbers are flooding into so-called sanctuary cities and states where they are consuming up to $6,500 in taxpayer-funded services, according to a new review of costs in 10 small states.
The surge is having an outsized effect on smaller states and is cutting funds for services to veterans, children, and disabled Americans, according to the report provided exclusively to Secrets from the Federation for American Immigration Reform.
The report said illegal immigration costs the 10 states $454 million. “To put that figure into context, that $454 million expenditure is more than 200 times what the state of Montana budgets for its entire Veterans Affairs program, and it is 2.5 times the total sum that West Virginia invests in its state university,” said the report.
And, it added, illegal immigrants cost between $4,000 and $6,500 annually above any tax benefit they provide.
“In many ways, the influx of immigrants into less populous areas of the country has an even greater impact on long-time residents than it does in larger and more urban areas,” said Dan Stein, president of FAIR. “These areas have neither the tax base, nor the economic and social infrastructure to accommodate the needs of the growing numbers of immigrants taking up residence.”
The 10 states analyzed in the study, Small Migrant Populations, Huge Impacts, were New Hampshire, Mississippi, Alaska, Maine, North Dakota, West Virginia, South Dakota, Vermont, Montana, and Wyoming.
“Many local officials tout immigration, including illegal immigration, as a remedy to economic stagnation. However, as this report reveals, the reality is precisely the opposite,” said Stein.
He added, “Illegal immigration, in particular, drives down wages and inhibits job opportunities for legal residents, while bringing more low-skilled, low-wage workers to these states. In turn, this increases costs to state and local governments, and discourages investment by businesses seeking a skilled labor force and lower overhead.”
The report comes on the heels of a key U.S. Supreme Court decision to let the Trump administration block entry to immigrants who are likely to burden taxpayers.
FAIR’s report also showed that sanctuary cities are a growing attraction for illegal immigrants, especially in smaller states where the costs of living can be lower.
The key findings from the report to Secrets:
In each of these states, each illegal immigrant resident carried a net tax deficit of between $4,000 and $6,500 annually.
Some 415,000 foreign-born reside in these 10 states, of whom about 88,000 (or 21%) are illegal immigrants. Additionally, there are about 35,000 U.S.-born children of illegal immigrants in these states.
Collectively, these illegal immigrants and their U.S.-born children cost taxpayers in the 10 states about $454 million each year for the provision of essential services such as education and healthcare.
Local schools struggle to provide educators and cover the costs of instruction for 50,000 K-12 students classified as Limited English Proficient.
A growing number of sanctuary jurisdictions (29 and counting, including the entire state of Vermont), and lower living costs are a magnet for illegal immigrants.
The growing immigrant population competes with legal residents for jobs in economically depressed areas.
“This report highlights the fact that the adverse effects of unchecked mass immigration, combined with an immigration selection process that does not choose people based on individual merit, job skills and education, are now being felt in all parts of the country. Americans, in every part of the nation, are being affected by antiquated and unenforced immigration policies, which is why it is at the top of the list of voter concerns heading into the 2020 elections,” said Stein.
Poll: Majority of Democrats Want Bailout for Illegal Immigrant Poverty
Almost three-in-five Democrats want taxpayers to bail out the poverty-stricken communities of illegal immigrants whom they welcomed into the United States, according to an April poll by Ipsos.
The April poll asked “if the government should provide temporary financial help for undocumented immigrants who can’t work because of layoffs or illness: 40% in favor, 42% against, 18% ‘didn’t know.'” said a report by USA Today, which commissioned the April 9-10 poll of 1,005 adults.
“Sixty-eight percent of Republicans oppose the idea; 58% of Democrats support it,” USA Today reported.
“It is important for us to focus on getting American workers into American jobs and making sure that our own people are healthy and able to survive,” responded Rosemary Jenks, the policy director at Numbers USA.
“The fact that the left and the business community – the big business folks – decided they needed to encourage illegal immigration does not mean that American taxpayers now have to bail them out,” she added. “That’s a problem with illegal immigration — every time you reward it, you get more of it, and that’s exactly what the progressives want, and so does big business.”
Nationwide, the flood of at least eight million illegal migrants has forced down blue-collar wages, nudged up rents in blue-collar neighborhoods, and crowded the K-12 classrooms needed by American children.
Some illegal immigrants are university-trained migrants who overstay their legal visas and work off-the-books in well-paid, white-collar jobs. But most illegal migrants were poor in their own countries when they rationally walked through President Barack Obama’s weak border defenses.
In the United States, most illegal migrants have few connections to American communities around them. They earn little money, and they have almost no savings or social support amid the disastrous coronavirus epidemic and economic crash.
The Washington Postsketched out extreme poverty and the spreading disease in the imported workforce in Langley Park, MD. Roughly 70 percent of the adults in the neighborhood north of wealthy Washington, DC, are not citizens, including “Marco,” a diabetic migrant who has a valid “Temporary Protected Status” document:
The 55-year-old Honduran immigrant is one of the few in his apartment building to still have a job.
Yet with each day on his construction site came the risk of bringing the novel coronavirus home with him: home to his daughter with disabilities and a feeding tube in her stomach; home to a 7-year-old son with asthma; home to a wife without legal status and a household where the adults lack health insurance in a neighborhood packed with other vulnerable families.
…
As densely populated as parts of New York City, Langley Park is a maze of aging apartment complexes where neighbors from rural Guatemala now found themselves sharing a laundry room or a ride to a construction site or even a bedroom partitioned with sheets. But in a pandemic, that proximity could be deadly. “This distancing that they are talking about doesn’t apply here,” said Jorge Sactic, a local business leader and bakery owner.
Many of the migrants lost their jobs and transport when the Maryland government imposed a shutdown. Other migrants have been fired by their prosperous, often progressive, employers:
“They don’t want us going to their houses because they say we can bring them the virus,” said a 30-year-old woman from El Salvador. She hadn’t worked in a month, yet her $1,100 rent was still due. She had heard landlords weren’t supposed to evict anyone during the crisis, but, as with so many things, she feared there were other rules for undocumented people. Asked if she had enough in her savings to get by, she scoffed. “I don’t have a bank account,” she said.
Diabetic Marco protects himself from the Chinese coronavirus with his own remedies:
Marco had developed a recipe he believed would keep him healthy, which he prescribed to anyone who would listen with the confidence of a pharmacist.
“What I do before work is make myself a cup of coffee, nice and strong and black,” he had told Santos two days earlier. “The caffeine is good against any virus. And then a bit of Vicks under your nose. Vicks is good against any allergy, virus, whatever. Any bad air that passes under your nose, the Vicks attacks it and doesn’t let it pass.”
New York elites used mass migration to impoverish the city's working-class. Not enough; Now they want more taxpayer funding so that once-independent Americans will recognize the benevolence of their progressive clerisy. A tight labor market is better.https://bit.ly/33PCBI0
USA Today reported April 7 on an unemployed, illegal migrant couple with five children in Palisades Park, NJ:
Duarte, 38, who was born in Guatemala, said she stopped cleaning houses the day she found out her five children, ranging from 4 to 14 years old, would have to stay at home from school
…
The first week, it was her choice to stay home, she said, but the following week, the homeowners she worked for canceled after shutdowns went into effect. Duarte said she would normally make $300 to $400 a week cleaning houses.
Duarte’s partner, Walfre Corado, works as a painter at construction sites. He stopped working around the same time, also afraid of bringing the virus home. One of the couple’s daughters had lung surgery three years ago and is susceptible to bronchitis and other respiratory illnesses, Duarte said.
…
The couple have not left their home, but as each day passes, they worry more about how they will pay the $1,200 rent for the house they share with her sister’s family. Her sister’s husband lost his job, Duarte said.
“Illegal immigrants are living in bad conditions in the United States,” said Jenks, adding:
But they made that choice. They are here illegally. There’s no reason at all that U.S. taxpayers should pay even more — we’re already paying for education, emergency healthcare, and other programs they access. To give them a bailout because they are unemployed from jobs they took illegally is ridiculous … It would be nice for people to follow the country’s immigration laws.
Business groups should be required to verify that their workers are legal, she said.
“The first thing that needs to be done is mandatory -E-Verify — there comes a point where if you can’t get a job here, you will go somewhere where you can get a job,” she said.
Progressives cheer the illegal travel of poor migrants into low wage USA.
Then Wuhan eco-crash exposes the vulnerability of the diverse migrants.
So progressives say citizens must fund a bailout of their migration policy.
But they won't admit any fault.https://bit.ly/2RnGlf8
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