Thursday, January 21, 2021

AMERICA - THE ONE PARTY NATION SERVING THE RICH, BANKSTERS FOR BAILOUTS AND BILLIONAIRES FOR WIDER OPEN BORDERS - Sounds like Mexifornia!

 

Biden Amnesty Seeks Indefinite Democrat Majority with Quick U.S. Citizenship for Illegal Aliens

NEW YORK, NY - MARCH 12: A volunteer (R), assists an immigrant with her U.S. citizenship application at a Citizenship Now! event held by the City University of New York (CUNY), on March 12, 2016 in the Bronx borough of New York City. Many immigrants are rushing to process their …
John Moore/Getty Images
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President Joe Biden’s amnesty plan seeks to retain a permanent Democrat majority in future elections by fast-tracking illegal aliens into United States citizenship.

The amnesty, fittingly titled The U.S. Citizenship Act of 2021, includes a series of ways that illegal aliens living in the U.S. can secure green cards and be put on a fast-track to gaining citizenship.

For instance, illegal aliens claiming to have worked on a farm, those enrolled in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program — which Biden has restarted — and those with Temporary Protected Status (TPS) would be able to immediately secure green cards, otherwise known as permanent legal residency.

Then, those three subgroups of illegal aliens would be allowed to begin applying for citizenship after just three years so long as they pass “criminal and national security background checks and pay their taxes,” according to the Biden administration’s fact sheet on the amnesty.

There are roughly 2.08 million illegal aliens working on U.S. farms, about 800,000 DACA-enrolled illegal aliens, and approximately 411,000 foreign nationals on TPS. These population totals indicate that up to 3.3 million illegal aliens could be able to vote in time for the November 5, 2024 presidential election if all are approved for green cards and citizenship.

Similarly, the amnesty allows the remaining 11 to 22 million illegal aliens who are not TPS beneficiaries, DACA recipients, or considered farmworkers to secure green cards after five years of having TPS status, which they would be able to apply for immediately.

Then, after having green cards for three years, these illegal aliens would be able to apply for citizenship. This trajectory puts voting-age illegal aliens on a path to vote for midterm and presidential elections after 2029.

In the 2020 presidential election, multiple states were decided by margins of a few hundred thousand votes or less. In Pennsylvania, for example, Biden won the state by less than 81,000 votes.

Such a dramatic change to the U.S. electorate through the amnesty would be a boon for Democrats who have successfully flipped to blue former red states like Virginia and, most recently, Georgia.

Democrats are looking to battleground states such as Texas, North Carolina, Florida, Arizona, and Nevada to flip them permanently blue. Their chances are hugely boosted by an increased foreign-born voting population, research and the mainstream media has admitted.

“If legal immigration levels remain at the current levels of over one million a year, it will likely continue to undermine Republicans’ political prospects moving forward … survey data show a two-to-one party identification with Democrats over Republicans,” University of Maryland, College Park professor James Gimpel has noted.

In Georgia, a decades-long surge in immigration helped two Democrats to unseat Sens. Kelly Loeffler (R-GA) and David Perdue (R-GA).

The number of foreign-born voters and their voting-age children in Georgia has boomed by 337 percent since 2000, while the native-born voting-age population in Georgia has increased just 22 percent over that same period.

Already, without the amnesty, legal immigration levels at their current rate are expected to bring in 15 million new foreign-born voters by 2041. About eight million of those voters will have arrived entirely due to the process known as “chain migration” wherby newly naturalized citizens can bring an unlimited number of foreign relatives to the U.S.

John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Follow him on Twitter at @JxhnBinder

oe Biden’s Amnesty Bill Elevates Fortune 500, Migrants, but Sidelines Americans

US President Joe Biden speaks after being sworn in as the 46th President of the US during the 59th Presidential Inauguration at the US Capitol in Washington, January 20, 2021. (Photo by Patrick Semansky / POOL / AFP) (Photo by PATRICK SEMANSKY/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)
PATRICK SEMANSKY/POOL/AFP via Getty Images
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The amnesty plan pushed January 20 by President Joe Biden includes a few cursory mentions of American families while championing the demands of migrants, employers, and investors.

“The U.S. Citizenship Act of 2021 establishes a new system to responsibly manage and secure our border, keep our [migrant] families and [border] communities safe, and better manage migration across the Hemisphere,” says the statement introducing the plan.

The plan mentions families 15 times, nearly all of which refer to foreign families:

Keep families together. The bill reforms the family-based immigration system by clearing backlogs, recapturing unused visas, eliminating lengthy wait times, and increasing per-country visa caps.  It also eliminates the so-called “3 and 10-year bars,” and other provisions that keep families apart. The bill further supports families by more explicitly including permanent partnerships and eliminating discrimination facing LGBTQ+ families. It also provides protections for orphans, widows, children, and Filipino veterans who fought alongside the United States in World War II. Lastly, the bill allows immigrants with approved family-sponsorship petitions to join family in the United States on a temporary basis while they wait for green cards to become available.

The plan mentions work and workers 16 times, nearly all of which refer to foreign workers:

Protect workers from exploitation and improve the employment verification process. The bill requires that DHS and the Department of Labor establish a commission involving labor, employer, and civil rights organizations to make recommendations for improving the employment verification process. Workers who suffer serious labor violations and cooperate with worker protection agencies will be granted greater access to U visa relief. The bill protects workers who are victims of workplace retaliation from deportation in order to allow labor agencies to interview these workers. It also protects migrant and seasonal workers, and increases penalties for employers who violate labor laws.

The statement repeatedly praises the economic migrants who have illegally taken jobs and wages from many millions of Americans, including mother of young children, disabled Americans, ex-convicts, blacks, untrained Americans, and isolated Americans:

The bill provides hardworking people who enrich our communities every day and who have lived here for years, in some cases for decades, an opportunity to earn citizenship … The bill creates an earned path to citizenship for our immigrant neighbors, colleagues, parishioners, community leaders, friends, and loved ones—including Dreamers and the essential workers who have risked their lives to serve and protect American communities.

The plan does not mention “jobs” — but it does include one reference to Americans’ wages.

The statement says the amnesty will allow — but not require — federal agencies to set policies that raise wages for foreign workers “to prevent unfair competition with American workers.”

But those protection policies have already been established by President Donald Trump’s regulations — and the Biden team is expected to discard the regulatory protections.

Moreover, the amnesty bill would cut Americans’ wages by dramatically increasing foreign competition. For example, the bill would spike competition for Fortune 500 jobs by allowing all foreigners with “STEM” PhDs to get citizenship.

Overall, the bill offers to dramatically expand corporate revenues, real-estate values, and Wall Street stocks by supercharging the chaotic flow of foreign consumers and workers into American’ jobs, home, and communities:

Grow our economy. This bill clears employment-based visa backlogs, recaptures unused visas, reduces lengthy wait times, and eliminates per-country visa caps. The bill makes it easier for graduates of U.S. universities with advanced STEM degrees to stay in the United States; improves access to green cards for workers in lower-wage sectors; and eliminates other unnecessary hurdles for employment-based green cards. The bill provides dependents of H-1B visa holders work authorization, and children are prevented from “aging out” of the system. The bill also creates a pilot program to stimulate regional economic development, gives DHS the authority to adjust green cards based on macroeconomic conditions.

In contrast to Biden and his business-backed policies, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) said on January 19 that Americans and their job should get a higher priority than immigration changes. “Before we deal with immigration, we need to deal with COVID, make sure everyone has the chance to find a good job, and confront the threat from China,” Rubio said in his statement.

Amnesty advocates respond to the criticism by insisting that Americans will gain some moral benefit as their jobs and wages are diverted to blue-collar migrants, foreign graduates, and Wall Street.

For example, Mark Zuckerberg’ FWD.us group declared that the Biden amnesty is “Vital to Restoring the U.S.’ Moral Leadership.” The statement from the investor group continued:

At the end of the day, the success of our country comes in large part from our longstanding tradition of encouraging families seeking a better life to leave behind everything they know to begin contributing to the United States. They deserve the opportunity to live a dignified life. Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle must act expeditiously to bring this legislation to the floor for a vote to create the modern, compassionate and humane immigration system that our nation deserves.

The vast majority of Americans tell pollsters that the federal government should ensure Americans have decent jobs before allowing companies to import more foreign workers.

The polls show Americans’ deep and broad opposition to cheap labor migration and the inflow of temporary contract workers into the jobs needed by young and old Americans.

The multi-racialcross-sexnon-racistclass-based opposition to cheap labor migration co-exists with generally favorable personal feelings toward legal immigrants and toward immigration in theory — despite the media magnification of many skewed polls and articles that still push the 1950’s “Nation of Immigrants” claim.

In December, the Washington Post reported on the economic free-fall faced by Flaviana Decker in Rubio’s Florida:

Her job waiting tables at Disney’s Polynesian Village Resort had sustained her through the painful end of her marriage and the struggles of being a single parent to two teenage girls, one of whom is autistic and struggles with basic motor skills and speaking. Throughout the summer and fall as lawmakers were fighting over an economic relief bill and the number of coronavirus cases was climbing, Flaviana was scouring the Disney fan blogs for glimmers of hope that the tourists might be returning. But the once famously long lines at Disney World remained short even as Orlando’s free food lines, packed with laid-off hotel and theme park workers, grew longer. All the while Flaviana’s unemployment checks shrank from more than $800 a week in July to $247 a week in October, which didn’t even cover her rent.

The hardest parts for Flaviana were accepting the reality that her Disney job was gone; that the modest middle-class life that she had built was no longer sustainable; that she wouldn’t be able to provide Victoria, a bright and imaginative teenager whose autism made everyday tasks difficult, with the classes and therapists that enabled her to learn and share her thoughts and feelings.

As Trump’s prospects dimmed in the days after Election Day, Flaviana held on to the faint chance that he might somehow prevail. Her hopes were dashed on Nov. 7 when she glanced at her phone and saw the election was being called for Biden. She took a deep breath and then swallowed hard. A tear streaked her cheek.

The public’s preference for civic solidarity is decent and rational. Migration moves money from employees to employers, from families to investors, from young to old, from children to their parents, from homebuyers to real estate investors, and from the central states to the coastal states.

 

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