Downtown San Diego residents say homeless problem is 'out of control'
SHOCKING VIDEO SHOWS WHAT THE NAFTA GLOBALIST DEMOCRATS HAVE DONE TO AMERICA
Largest Immigrant Groups in the United States
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IpxeomE9FTg&list=WL&index=1
Among Democratic voters, Zogby found that:
· 68% support "Medicare for all."
· 63% would repeal the Trump tax cuts.
· 53% back a ban on new oil and natural gas drilling on federal land.
· 49% support the Green New Deal.
· 43% support reparations for African Americans.
· 39% would decriminalize illegal border crossings.
· 38% want taxpayer-funded healthcare for illegal immigrants.
· 38% support unlimited abortion.
· 36% support the confiscation of legally owned firearms from those who have not committed a crime.
The U.S. is on track to import about 15 million new foreign-born voters in the next two decades should current legal immigration levels continue. Those 15 million new foreign-born voters include about eight million who will arrive in the country through chain migration, whereby newly naturalized citizens can bring an unlimited number of foreign relatives to the country.
ALARMING VIDEO ON MEXICO’S INVASION, OCCUPATION AND LOOTING OF JOBS AND WELFARE
(They really have absolutely no idea how many illegals are in the country as the Democrat Party, U.S. Chamber of Commerce, La Raza/ UnidoUS, Mexico and the Catholic Church thwart any effort to count them)
SHOCKING VIDEO SHOWS WHAT THE NAFTA GLOBALIST DEMOCRATS HAVE DONE TO AMERICA
Largest Immigrant Groups in the United States
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IpxeomE9FTg&list=WL&index=1
JAMES WALSH
THE OBAMA-BIDEN HISPANICAZATION of AMERICA… first ease millions of illegals over our borders and into our voting booths!
How the Democrat party surrendered America to Mexico:
http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2014/07/james-walsh-hispanicazation-of-america.html
“The watchdogs at Judicial Watch discovered documents that reveal how the Obama administration's close coordination with the Mexican government entices Mexicans to hop over the fence and on to the American dole.” Washington Times
"This is country belongs to Mexico" is said by the Mexican Militant. This is a common teaching that the U.S. is really AZTLAN, belonging to Mexicans, which is taught to Mexican kids in Arizona and California through a LA Raza educational program funded by American Tax Payers via President Obama, when he gave LA RAZA $800,000.00 in March of 2009!
The “zero tolerance” program was dismantled by Attorney General Erc Holder once it had successfully cut the transit of migrants by roughly 95 percent. Initially, officials made 140,000 arrests per year in the mid-2000s, but the northward flow dropped so much that officials only had to make 6,000 arrests in 2013, according to a 2014 letter by two pro-migration Senators, Sen. Jeff Flake and John McCain.
“The cost of the Dream Act is far bigger than the Democrats or their media allies admit. Instead of covering 690,000 younger illegals now enrolled in former President Barack Obama’s 2012 “DACA” amnesty, the Dream Act would legalize at least 3.3 million illegals, according to a pro-immigration group, the Migration Policy Institute.”
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Exclusive — Rep. Mo Brooks: Amnesty Would Add 100 Million People in 10-20 Years
23 Mar 202131
4:49
Democrats’ amnesty proposal would add 100 million citizens within ten to twenty years, said Rep. Mo Brooks (R-AL) on Tuesday’s edition of SiriusXM’s Breitbart News Daily with host Alex Marlow, author of Breaking the News: Exposing the Establishment Media’s Hidden Deals and Secret Corruption.
Brooks warned that amnesty incentivizes illegal immigration.
“What the socialists want to do is … push amnesty through the United States Congress, their argument being that that somehow fixes the problem,” Brooks said. “Any rational person knows that just makes it worse. It was the 1986 amnesty with Ronald Reagan and the Democrats where they promised to provide border security. That amnesty told the world, ‘Hey, break into the United States of America. We’re not going to enforce our laws.'”
Brooks stated, “What was a two or three million problem in 1986 has now become a 15 or 20 million problem today. We give amnesty today, it’ll be a hundred million problem in ten, twenty years.”
LISTEN:
Democrats and their political allies support illegal immigration and impose “open borders policies” to build a permanent cohort of welfare-dependent voters, Brooks remarked.
“The socialist Democrats want to import illegal aliens in massive numbers because the government’s welfare data has shown that families with illegal aliens in them are far more likely to be on welfare than regular American citizens, or even lawful immigrants,” he noted.
He continued, “What that means is, over time, if you can get those families to get amnesty and citizenship — which is a core promise of socialist President Joe Biden, you may remember the October 22nd presidential debate, [he said], ‘I’m going to give them all amnesty and citizenship’ — well, if you can give them citizenship and they have voting rights, then all of a sudden you’ve got a huge group of welfare recipients that are now going to start voting Democrat.”
“So it’s a power play — a very crass power play — on the part of the socialists as they try to consolidate their dictatorial efforts,” Brooks determined.
The blood of thousands of Americans killed every year by illegal aliens and overdosing on illicit drugs smuggled across the southern border is on the hands of Democrats who support an “open borders strategy,” Brooks held.
“When I say blood on their hands, I mean real blood,” he declared. “According to federal crime data, roughly 2,000 Americans each year are dead at the hands of illegal aliens killed on American soil. Those are real numbers. That’s big. Of course, the fake news media doesn’t publicize it, but you can find it in the federal crime data, roughly two thousand per year.”
He went on, “Then you’ve got another 30,000 Americans who are dead each year because of deadly narcotics that are smuggled through our porous southern border. That’s over 30,000 Americans that we’re talking about who are dead because of the open border strategy of the socialist Democrats.”
“In any rational world, when you’ve got over 2,000 dead Americans at the hands of illegal aliens — add to that the thirty-plus thousand per year who or dead because of drug overdoses — there would be a human outcry to try to secure our border to save American lives,” he said. “But in this world with the socialist Democrats and the fake news media backing them up, the general public does not understand the dangers.”
Democrats’ pursuit of a permanent underclass of voters and efforts to suppress wages through an influx of low-skilled workers are the primary drivers of the status quo of illegal immigration, Brooks explained.
He remarked, “What’s going on is simple. The United States Chamber of Commerce is trying to buy cheap labor. The United States Chamber of Commerce and its members don’t want to pay what market conditions would demand in order to hire American workers, so they’re trying to artificially inflate the labor supply, which in turn will artificially depress the wages that struggling American families get. This is the number one priority of the United States Chamber of Commerce, to do great damage to American families.”
He concluded, “Unfortunately, what we’ve got is a double whammy. We’ve got the socialist Democrats on one hand who are doing it for pure crass political gain reasons, and on the other hand, you’ve got the United States Chamber of Commerce with all of its bankrolling money [funding] campaigns … because they want to make a greater profit, no matter the suffering of struggling American families.”
On Monday, Brooks announced his candidacy for the U.S. Senate seat from Alabama in 2022.
Breitbart News Daily broadcasts live on SiriusXM Patriot 125 weekdays from 6:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. Eastern.
Chamber of Commerce: ‘Critically Important’ for Senate to Pass Amnesty
Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images
22 Mar 20214
3:06
The United States Chamber of Commerce says it is “critically important” for the Senate to pass two amnesty bills that will pack the U.S. labor market with more foreign workers whom millions of jobless Americans will be forced to compete against.
Last week, the Democrat-controlled House — with support from 30 House Republicans — passed two amnesty bills. One of the amnesties would put about 4.4 million young illegal aliens on track for American citizenship while the other would provide green cards to up to 2.1 million illegal aliens claiming to have worked on U.S. farms.
The Chamber of Commerce praised the House Democrats’ passage of the amnesties. In a statement, the Chamber’s Vice President, Neil Bradley, called the amnesties “critically important” to big business and corporate interests.
“Both the American Dream and Promise Act and the Farm Workforce Modernization Act are critically important to the business community,” Bradley said:
For years, Washington has spent time bickering about immigration and letting huge problems go unaddressed. Today’s votes are steps in the right direction towards solving some of our nation’s pressing immigration challenges. The U.S. Chamber is committed to ensuring these proposals are passed in the U.S. Senate and signed into law. [Emphasis added]
In a letter to Congress, Chamber executives urged lawmakers to pass the amnesties, claiming “they provide bipartisan solutions to very important issues.”
The Chamber’s push to pass the amnesties is significant because of the campaign cash that the business group continues to funnel to lawmakers, mostly Republicans. In the 2020 election cycle, for instance, the Chamber donated more than $573,000 to Republicans and nearly $212,000 to Democrats.
The biggest campaign donations went to lawmakers such as Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), Rep. Ann Wagner (R-MO), Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME), Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX), and Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC).
The Chamber’s support for the amnesties comes as multinational corporations like Amazon, Google, Marriott International, Verizon, and Apple are driving the lobbying effort to pass the more expansive of the two amnesties in the Senate.
Annually, more than 1.2 million legal immigrants are awarded green cards, and another 1.4 million foreign nationals are given visas to take U.S. jobs. In addition, hundreds of thousands of illegal aliens are added to the U.S. population every year.
Flooding the U.S. labor market with more foreign competition, whom working and middle class Americans must compete against, is a boon to the corporate interests, Wall Street investors, and Big Tech as they seek to slash wages and widen profit margins.
John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Email him at jbinder@breitbart.com. Follow him on Twitter here.
Exclusive — GOP Memo: Democrats Introduce Amnesty Policies to Make Biden ‘Border Crisis Worse’
Photo: U.S. Border Patrol/Rio Grande Valley Sector
The Republican Study Committee (RSC) is publishing a new memo on Thursday that will expose several immigration proposals from their Democrat counterparts that the conservative bloc of House members says will make the burgeoning crisis at the U.S. border with Mexico even “worse” than President Joe Biden already has.
The one-page memo, obtained exclusively by Breitbart News ahead of its public release, details how Biden has unleashed a crisis on the border—and then how various Democrat proposals will make it worse. The memo is designed to arm up Republican lawmakers with talking points and information so they can fight the various immigration proposals from the Dream Act amnesty to the farm amnesty and more that Democrats are attempting to ram through Congress in the coming days and weeks. The RSC’s chairman, Rep. Jim Banks (R-IN), has made fighting illegal immigration and Biden’s and Democrats’ amnesty pushes a central part of the RSC’s agenda.
“DHS recently announced that officials should no longer use the terms ‘alien’ or ‘illegal’ to describe illegal aliens,” the memo opens. “There are now only ‘undocumented noncitizens,’ so illegal immigration can’t be a problem—that’s how their fantasy goes. The problem with acting as if illegal immigration is good, is that eventually you collide, headfirst, with reality: illegal immigration causes suffering. The Biden admin can ‘imagine there’s no borders,’ but that doesn’t change the fact that 73% of voters are concerned about the border crisis. Until Democrats are forced to confront political reality in 2022, they seem determined to ignore the humanitarian crisis and widespread suffering they created and sip margaritas in their alternate reality. RSC previously outlined how the crisis on our border can be 100% traced back to Joe Biden’s immigration executive orders.That is no longer the case. Joe Biden had to deploy FEMA to our border last week and House Democrats responded by introducing TWO am- nesty bills. As AP’s Julie Pace explained, the Biden administration claims that illegal immigrants don’t have an ‘open invitation’ to come to the U.S., but, ‘that’s not the message that’s actually being received,’ at our border.”
The memo argues that Biden’s actions, despite rhetoric saying the border is not open, indicate a willingness to accept migrants in droves despite them not coming to the United States legally. What’s more, Biden and his Democrat allies on Capitol Hill offering up multiple amnesties legislatively sends an even worse message to those who seek to illegally enter the United States.
“What kind of message does TWO amnesty bills send?” the memo continues. “When H.R. 6 hits the House floor, illegal immigration will rise even more, and the Border Crisis and Democrats’ amnesty push will become undistinguishable. Because: Biden’s Border Crisis IS AN AMNESTY CRISIS. Democrats haven’t just refused to reverse the policies that caused the border crisis—they are introducing new policies that are meant to make the Border Crisis worse. RSC’s job is to shake Democrats awake and convince them they have no choice but to end the Border Crisis. So, please, use the below fact sheet to explain to your constituents just how disastrous Biden’s amnesty bills will be.”
The memo then breaks out several specific pieces of what it calls “Biden’s immigration legislation.” The first, H.R. 6 or the “American Dream and Promise Act,” is an amnesty for millions of so-called “dreamers.”
“H.R. 6 would provide amnesty for so-called Dreamers, to recipients or potential recipients of Temporary Pro- tected Status (TPS) and Deferred Enforced Departure (DED), and children of certain nonimmigrant visa holders,” the memo says about this bill. “A total of roughly 2 million illegal immigrants would receive amnesty.”
The Democrat Dream Act would, according to the memo, “increase budget deficits by $26.3 billion over the 2020-2029 by allowing formerly illegal immigrants to receive federal assistance” and “allow the Secretary to waive inadmissibility grounds on health-related grounds (such as having a communicable disease of public health significance)” as well as “establish a difficult standard for denying green cards to criminal gang members, so much so that the individual Secretary of DHS himself or herself would have to issue denials.”
The second Biden and Democrat amnesty plan that the RSC memo exposes is H.R. 1603, the “Farm Workforce Modernization Act.” This bill, according to the RSC memo, would “grant amnesty to over 1 million unlawful illegal alien agricultural workers and their dependents.”
“Agricultural worker is defined as someone who’s worked 180 days over 2 years in agriculture,” the RSC memo says of the bill. “That’s equivalent to a 5.6-hour workday.”
Even criminal illegal aliens convicted of two misdemeanors, like two DUIs, would be eligible for amnesty under the farm amnesty plan according to the RSC memo.
The third Biden amnesty bill exposed in the RSC memo is the much broader amnesty for every illegal alien in America. That bill, the “U.S. Citizenship Act of 2021,” would according to the RSC “immediately” grant amnesty to all of the approximately 22 million illegal aliens in America. They would “become ‘Lawful Prospective Immigrants’ and be eligible for work authorization and SSNIs” right off the bat and then “after 5 years they’d receive a green card.”
The broader amnesty plan also includes a fast-track for some illegal aliens in specialized groups.
“So-called Dreamers, TPS holders, and immigrant farmworkers who performed 400 workdays of agricultural labor over the past 5 years, as well as their spouses and children, would be eligible to receive green cards immediately under the legislation, then citizenship after 3 years,” the RSC memo says.
It also allows previously deported illegal aliens a chance to come back and get amnesty.
“Illegal aliens that were deported during the Trump administration that lived in the U.S. for three years prior to their deportation could return to the United States,” the RSC memo says of the broader Biden amnesty plan, adding that it also “reduces immigration restrictions on criminals by shrinking the types of adjudications that would constitute a ‘conviction’ under the Immigration and Nationality Act.”
The bill also “eliminates per-country employment visa caps,” and “over the next 10 years, Biden’s immigration bill would double our legal immigration levels and lead to an extra 37 million immigrants moving to the U.S.”
“That’s more than the entire population of California,” the memo concludes.
Read the memo here:
Census: Number of ‘majority Hispanic’ US counties doubles
by Paul Bedard
November 21, 2019
In the latest evidence of the effect Latin American immigrants are having on the United States, the number of U.S. counties that have turned majority Hispanic has doubled.
New Census Bureau data analyzed by the Pew Research Center found that from 2000 to 2018, the number of majority Hispanic counties jumped from 34 to 69.
What’s more, the overall number of U.S. counties that turned majority minority-based, mostly Hispanic or African American, also surged to 151 from 110 in 2000. Most of those counties are in Southern California and along the Mexico-U.S. border.
“Overall, 69 counties were majority Hispanic in 2018, 72 were majority black and 10 were majority American Indian or Alaska Native. The majority American Indian or Alaska Native counties are unique in that most have experienced overall population declines since 2000, even as the share of American Indian or Alaska Native residents in these counties remained fairly flat,” said the Pew analysis.
Pewone.png
Other reports have shown that the share of
immigrants, mostly Hispanic, have continued to
break records due to legal and illegal immigration
and the baby boom among new arrivals.
The majority black counties are also in the South, though mostly from Louisiana and to the east.
“While the black share of the total U.S. population has not changed substantially over the last two decades, the number of majority black counties in the U.S. grew from 65 to 72 between 2000 and 2018. One contributing factor may be migration of black Americans from the North to the South and from cities into suburbs,” said Pew.
Census Bureau: Immigration Driving Half of U.S. Population Growth
JOHN BINDER
Immigration to the United States is now driving nearly half of all population growth in the country instead of increased birth rates, the U.S. Census Bureau finds.
The latest Census Bureau estimates on the U.S. population reveal that about 48.5 percent of all population growth is driven by the country’s mass illegal and legal immigration policy, where more than 1.5 million foreign nationals are admitted to the country every year.
(Axios)
Axios analysis by Stef Knight details the growing share to which immigration is increasingly driving population growth across the U.S. Since 2011, for example, the level to which immigration has accounted for overall population growth has increased more than 13 percent.
According to the Wall Street Journal analysis, about nine percent of U.S. counties are growing solely because of immigration. This concludes that about nine percent of counties have regional birth rates that do not exceed the annual number of deaths in the area.
Similarly, the Wall Street Journal notes, more than half of all population growth in states like Florida, Ohio, Virginia, Kansas, and Michigan, among others, is because of immigration.
Though pundits have claimed that the country’s admittance of 1.2 million legal immigrants a year is necessary to increase birth rates, researchers have found that the growth of the immigrant population has little impact on birth rates.
Center for Immigration Studies Director of Research Steven Camarota discovered in his latest study this year that “immigrant fertility has only a small impact on the nation’s overall birth rate,” citing that immigrants in the U.S. raise the nation’s birth rate for all women by two births per 1,000 women.
“Immigration has a minor impact because the difference between immigrant and native fertility is too small to significantly change the nation’s overall birth rate,” Camarota noted in the study.
At current legal immigration levels, the U.S. population is set to hit an unprecedented 404 million residents by 2060 — including a foreign-born population of 69 million.
The U.S. does not have to rapidly increase its total resident population and foreign-born population, as legal immigration moratoriums have been implemented in the past to give time for new arrivals to properly assimilate to American life. Halting all immigration to the country would stabilize the population to a comfortable 329 million residents in the next four decades.
John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Follow him on Twitter at @JxhnBinder
In a rising number of U.S. counties, Hispanic and black Americans are the majority
https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2019/11/20/in-a-rising-number-of-u-s-counties-hispanic-and-black-americans-are-the-majority/?utm_source=Pew+Research+Center&utm_campaign=bb8a7c1149-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2019_11_21_09_01&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_3e953b9b70-bb8a7c1149-399895865
Non-Hispanic white Americans account for 60% of the U.S. population, but in a growing number of counties, a majority of residents are Hispanic or black, reflecting the nation’s changing demographics and shifting migration patterns.
In 2018, there were 151 U.S. counties where Hispanics, blacks or two much smaller racial and ethnic groups – American Indians and Alaska Natives – made up a majority of the population, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data. That was an increase from 110 such counties in 2000. The 41 counties that joined the list between 2000 and 2018 are all majority Hispanic or majority black. (For a full list of these counties, see the sortable table at the end of the post.)
Overall, 69 counties were majority Hispanic in 2018, 72 were majority black and 10 were majority American Indian or Alaska Native. The majority American Indian or Alaska Native counties are unique in that most have experienced overall population declines since 2000, even as the share of American Indian or Alaska Native residents in these counties remained fairly flat.
There were no U.S. counties where Asians accounted for more than half of the population, but in Honolulu County, Hawaii, the population was 42% Asian and 9% Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander.
The South and Southwest of the United States hold most of the counties where Hispanic, black or indigenous people make up a majority of residents. These counties represent just 5% of the 3,142 counties in the U.S. and about half of the country’s 293 majority nonwhite counties (a figure that includes counties where multiple racial and ethnic groups combine to account for a majority).
About this analysis
Rapid growth in majority Hispanic counties
The number of majority Hispanic counties doubled between 2000 and 2018, from 34 to 69 – mostly in the South and West. In all but four of these 69 counties, the Hispanic share of the population grew during that period. The few counties that experienced declines saw only slight decreases, and no county that was majority Hispanic in 2000 fell below 50% Hispanic by 2018.
These trends are in line with the growth of the U.S. Hispanic population as a whole, which reached a new high in 2018 even as its rate of growth slowed. The Latino population grew at a faster rate than most other racial or ethnic groups during the 2000s, due to relatively high birth rates among Hispanic women and immigration from Latin America.
Related: See Pew Research Center’s U.S. population projections through 2065, which provide a look at immigration’s impact on population growth and on racial and ethnic change.
In 2018, Texas was home to the 10 counties in the U.S. with the largest shares of Hispanic residents. Starr County, home to about 65,000 people overall, had the largest concentration of Hispanic residents, at 96% of the population. Other counties where Hispanics accounted for an especially large share of residents included Webb (95%), Hidalgo (92%) and Cameron counties (90%) – all in Texas.
The Hispanic populations of some larger U.S. counties also grew between 2000 and 2018. San Bernardino County, California (population 2.2 million) was the most populous county to become majority Hispanic during this span. Osceola County, Florida (home to about 370,000) saw the largest percentage point increase in Hispanic residents during this time (26 points, rising from 29% to 55%).
The migrating U.S. black population
While the black share of the total U.S. population has not changed substantially over the last two decades, the number of majority black counties in the U.S. grew from 65 to 72 between 2000 and 2018. One contributing factor may be migration of black Americans from the North to the South and from cities into suburbs.
There are now 15 majority black counties that were not majority black in 2000. Among them, Rockdale County, Georgia, located about half an hour outside Atlanta, had the largest percentage point increase in the share of black residents (from 18% in 2000 to 55% in 2018). With about 930,000 residents, Shelby County, Tennessee, which contains Memphis, was the county with the largest population to become majority black.
The 10 counties with the highest shares of black residents in 2018 were in Mississippi (seven counties) Alabama (two) and Virginia (one). In these 10 counties, about 70% or more residents were black.
Meanwhile, eight counties that were majority black in 2000 are no longer. Three of these are large U.S. cities that the Census Bureau includes in its county estimates: Washington, D.C.; Richmond, Virginia; and St. Louis, Missouri. Washington (home to roughly 702,000 residents in 2018) saw a 19% increase in total population during that period, while its black population decreased by 9%. The city’s share of black residents declined by 15 percentage points, from 60% to 45%.
Majority American Indian or Alaska Native counties
In 2018, there were eight U.S. counties where more than half of the population was American Indian; two other counties were majority Alaska Native.
While majority Hispanic and black counties are growing in number, these predominantly American Indian or Alaska Native counties have experienced net population loss from 2000 to 2018. And one county that was majority American Indian or Alaska Native in 2000 is no longer: San Juan County, Utah, where the share of American Indian residents fell 8 percentage points, from 55% to 47%.
All 10 majority American Indian counties are located on or near reservation land in the Midwest and the West, and most have populations of fewer than 20,000 people. The exceptions are McKinley County, New Mexico, and Apache County, Arizona, both of which are home to about 72,000 people.
The two counties where the majority of residents were Alaska Native are both in rural Alaska: Bethel Census Area (population of roughly 18,000) and Nome Census Area (population of about 10,000).
Population in U.S. counties where Hispanic, black or indigenous people are a large share of residents
State | County | % of population that was one racial/ethnic group other than white in 2000 | % of population that was one racial/ethnic group other than white in 2018 | Largest racial/ethnic group, 2018 |
Alabama | Bullock County | 72.6% | 69.5% | Black |
Alabama | Dallas County | 63.0% | 70.0% | Black |
Alabama | Hale County | 59.2% | 57.8% | Black |
Alabama | Macon County | 84.3% | 80.0% | Black |
Alabama | Marengo County | 51.4% | 51.1% | Black |
Alabama | Montgomery County | 48.5% | 58.5% | Black |
Alabama | Sumter County | 72.4% | 71.4% | Black |
Alabama | Wilcox County | 71.4% | 70.7% | Black |
Alaska | Bethel Census Area | 81.7% | 82.3% | American Indian/Alaska Native |
Alaska | Nome Census Area | 75.0% | 74.1% | American Indian/Alaska Native |
Arizona | Apache County | 76.5% | 73.2% | American Indian/Alaska Native |
Arizona | Santa Cruz County | 80.8% | 83.4% | Hispanic |
Arizona | Yuma County | 50.5% | 64.3% | Hispanic |
Arkansas | Chicot County | 53.5% | 53.4% | Black |
Arkansas | Crittenden County | 46.9% | 53.7% | Black |
Arkansas | Jefferson County | 49.4% | 56.8% | Black |
Arkansas | Phillips County | 58.6% | 61.4% | Black |
Arkansas | St. Francis County | 48.7% | 52.3% | Black |
California | Colusa County | 46.5% | 60.3% | Hispanic |
California | Fresno County | 44.0% | 53.5% | Hispanic |
California | Imperial County | 72.2% | 84.6% | Hispanic |
California | Kern County | 38.4% | 54.0% | Hispanic |
California | Kings County | 43.6% | 55.0% | Hispanic |
California | Madera County | 44.3% | 58.3% | Hispanic |
California | Merced County | 45.3% | 60.2% | Hispanic |
California | Monterey County | 46.8% | 59.1% | Hispanic |
California | San Benito County | 47.9% | 60.6% | Hispanic |
California | San Bernardino County | 39.2% | 54.0% | Hispanic |
California | Tulare County | 50.8% | 65.2% | Hispanic |
District of Columbia | District of Columbia | 59.9% | 44.9% | Black |
Florida | Gadsden County | 57.0% | 55.1% | Black |
Florida | Hendry County | 39.6% | 54.3% | Hispanic |
Florida | Miami-Dade County | 57.3% | 69.1% | Hispanic |
Florida | Osceola County | 29.4% | 55.3% | Hispanic |
Georgia | Bibb County | 47.2% | 55.0% | Black |
Georgia | Burke County | 50.8% | 46.9% | Black |
Georgia | Clayton County | 51.4% | 69.9% | Black |
Georgia | DeKalb County | 54.3% | 53.7% | Black |
Georgia | Dougherty County | 60.0% | 70.3% | Black |
Georgia | Early County | 47.8% | 51.0% | Black |
Georgia | Jefferson County | 56.0% | 52.4% | Black |
Georgia | Macon County | 59.2% | 59.8% | Black |
Georgia | Richmond County | 49.5% | 56.0% | Black |
Georgia | Rockdale County | 18.1% | 55.4% | Black |
Georgia | Sumter County | 48.8% | 52.4% | Black |
Georgia | Washington County | 53.1% | 53.3% | Black |
Kansas | Finney County | 43.3% | 50.5% | Hispanic |
Kansas | Ford County | 37.7% | 55.5% | Hispanic |
Kansas | Seward County | 42.1% | 62.0% | Hispanic |
Louisiana | Claiborne Parish | 47.1% | 51.6% | Black |
Louisiana | Madison Parish | 60.2% | 62.4% | Black |
Louisiana | Orleans Parish | 66.9% | 59.1% | Black |
Louisiana | St. Helena Parish | 51.9% | 51.9% | Black |
Louisiana | St. John the Baptist Parish | 44.6% | 57.0% | Black |
Louisiana | West Feliciana Parish | 50.1% | 44.3% | Black |
Maryland | Baltimore city | 64.2% | 61.9% | Black |
Maryland | Prince George’s County | 62.6% | 61.9% | Black |
Mississippi | Adams County | 52.5% | 52.4% | Black |
Mississippi | Bolivar County | 64.8% | 63.6% | Black |
Mississippi | Clay County | 56.1% | 58.5% | Black |
Mississippi | Coahoma County | 68.9% | 76.6% | Black |
Mississippi | Copiah County | 50.7% | 51.2% | Black |
Mississippi | Hinds County | 60.9% | 72.4% | Black |
Mississippi | Holmes County | 78.0% | 82.0% | Black |
Mississippi | Jasper County | 52.7% | 53.0% | Black |
Mississippi | Jefferson Davis County | 57.1% | 59.6% | Black |
Mississippi | Kemper County | 57.7% | 60.7% | Black |
Mississippi | Leflore County | 67.3% | 74.0% | Black |
Mississippi | Marshall County | 50.1% | 47.0% | Black |
Mississippi | Noxubee County | 68.9% | 71.8% | Black |
Mississippi | Pike County | 47.3% | 53.1% | Black |
Mississippi | Sunflower County | 69.5% | 73.2% | Black |
Mississippi | Tallahatchie County | 59.0% | 56.7% | Black |
Mississippi | Washington County | 64.3% | 71.9% | Black |
Mississippi | Yazoo County | 53.6% | 56.7% | Black |
Missouri | St. Louis city | 51.1% | 45.6% | Black |
Montana | Big Horn County | 58.4% | 62.6% | American Indian/Alaska Native |
Montana | Glacier County | 61.0% | 63.0% | American Indian/Alaska Native |
Montana | Roosevelt County | 55.0% | 58.0% | American Indian/Alaska Native |
New Mexico | Bernalillo County | 42.0% | 50.3% | Hispanic |
New Mexico | Chaves County | 43.8% | 57.2% | Hispanic |
New Mexico | Doña Ana County | 63.4% | 68.6% | Hispanic |
New Mexico | Grant County | 48.8% | 50.7% | Hispanic |
New Mexico | Lea County | 39.7% | 59.4% | Hispanic |
New Mexico | Luna County | 57.8% | 67.6% | Hispanic |
New Mexico | McKinley County | 73.4% | 73.9% | American Indian/Alaska Native |
New Mexico | Rio Arriba County | 72.9% | 71.2% | Hispanic |
New Mexico | San Miguel County | 78.0% | 77.5% | Hispanic |
New Mexico | Santa Fe County | 49.0% | 51.1% | Hispanic |
New Mexico | Taos County | 58.0% | 56.9% | Hispanic |
New Mexico | Valencia County | 54.9% | 61.0% | Hispanic |
New York | Bronx County | 48.4% | 56.4% | Hispanic |
North Carolina | Bertie County | 62.1% | 60.7% | Black |
North Carolina | Edgecombe County | 57.2% | 57.2% | Black |
North Carolina | Halifax County | 52.3% | 53.1% | Black |
North Carolina | Hertford County | 59.3% | 60.3% | Black |
North Carolina | Northampton County | 59.4% | 56.9% | Black |
North Carolina | Vance County | 48.0% | 50.5% | Black |
North Carolina | Warren County | 54.4% | 50.6% | Black |
North Dakota | Rolette County | 72.5% | 76.6% | American Indian/Alaska Native |
South Carolina | Bamberg County | 62.2% | 59.8% | Black |
South Carolina | Clarendon County | 53.0% | 46.9% | Black |
South Carolina | Fairfield County | 58.9% | 57.0% | Black |
South Carolina | Hampton County | 55.4% | 52.7% | Black |
South Carolina | Jasper County | 52.5% | 41.0% | Black |
South Carolina | Lee County | 63.4% | 63.6% | Black |
South Carolina | Marion County | 56.1% | 56.3% | Black |
South Carolina | Marlboro County | 50.6% | 50.6% | Black |
South Carolina | Orangeburg County | 60.7% | 61.6% | Black |
South Carolina | Williamsburg County | 66.0% | 64.4% | Black |
South Dakota | Oglala Lakota County | 93.2% | 89.5% | American Indian/Alaska Native |
South Dakota | Todd County | 84.5% | 82.6% | American Indian/Alaska Native |
Tennessee | Haywood County | 50.9% | 50.2% | Black |
Tennessee | Shelby County | 48.5% | 53.6% | Black |
Texas | Andrews County | 40.0% | 56.6% | Hispanic |
Texas | Atascosa County | 58.6% | 64.7% | Hispanic |
Texas | Bee County | 53.9% | 59.3% | Hispanic |
Texas | Bexar County | 54.3% | 60.5% | Hispanic |
Texas | Caldwell County | 40.4% | 53.0% | Hispanic |
Texas | Cameron County | 84.4% | 89.8% | Hispanic |
Texas | Dawson County | 48.2% | 58.1% | Hispanic |
Texas | Deaf Smith County | 57.4% | 73.5% | Hispanic |
Texas | Dimmit County | 85.0% | 87.4% | Hispanic |
Texas | Duval County | 88.0% | 89.1% | Hispanic |
Texas | Ector County | 42.4% | 61.3% | Hispanic |
Texas | El Paso County | 78.2% | 83.0% | Hispanic |
Texas | Frio County | 73.8% | 79.3% | Hispanic |
Texas | Gonzales County | 39.6% | 51.5% | Hispanic |
Texas | Hale County | 47.9% | 59.7% | Hispanic |
Texas | Hidalgo County | 88.4% | 92.4% | Hispanic |
Texas | Jim Wells County | 75.7% | 80.4% | Hispanic |
Texas | Karnes County | 47.4% | 55.3% | Hispanic |
Texas | Kleberg County | 65.4% | 73.4% | Hispanic |
Texas | Lamb County | 43.5% | 55.9% | Hispanic |
Texas | Maverick County | 95.0% | 95.2% | Hispanic |
Texas | Medina County | 45.5% | 52.4% | Hispanic |
Texas | Moore County | 47.5% | 56.3% | Hispanic |
Texas | Nueces County | 55.8% | 64.2% | Hispanic |
Texas | Pecos County | 61.0% | 68.8% | Hispanic |
Texas | Reeves County | 73.4% | 75.0% | Hispanic |
Texas | San Patricio County | 49.4% | 58.4% | Hispanic |
Texas | Starr County | 97.5% | 96.4% | Hispanic |
Texas | Terry County | 44.1% | 55.9% | Hispanic |
Texas | Uvalde County | 65.9% | 72.1% | Hispanic |
Texas | Val Verde County | 75.5% | 82.5% | Hispanic |
Texas | Ward County | 42.0% | 54.3% | Hispanic |
Texas | Webb County | 94.3% | 95.5% | Hispanic |
Texas | Willacy County | 85.7% | 88.4% | Hispanic |
Texas | Zapata County | 85.4% | 94.6% | Hispanic |
Texas | Zavala County | 91.2% | 93.9% | Hispanic |
Utah | San Juan County | 55.2% | 47.4% | American Indian/Alaska Native |
Virginia | Brunswick County | 56.7% | 54.6% | Black |
Virginia | Danville city | 44.0% | 50.5% | Black |
Virginia | Greensville County | 59.7% | 59.0% | Black |
Virginia | Petersburg city | 78.7% | 76.3% | Black |
Virginia | Portsmouth city | 50.4% | 53.3% | Black |
Virginia | Richmond city | 57.2% | 46.8% | Black |
Virginia | Sussex County | 62.0% | 56.1% | Black |
Washington | Adams County | 47.1% | 64.3% | Hispanic |
Washington | Franklin County | 46.6% | 53.5% | Hispanic |
Note: This analysis includes only counties with 10,000 or more residents in 2018. These counties account for 77% of the nation’s 3,142 counties and 99% of the U.S. population.
Source: Pew Research Center analysis of 2000 decennial census and 2018 Census Bureau population estimates.
Share of counties where whites are a minority has doubled since 1980
https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2015/07/01/share-of-counties-where-whites-are-a-minority-has-doubled-since-1980/
Last week’s Census Bureau release of 2014 population estimates confirms that the U.S. is becoming ever more diverse, at the local level as well as nationally. As of last summer, according to a Fact Tank analysis, 364 counties, independent cities and other county-level equivalents (11.6% of the total) did not have non-Hispanic white majorities – the most in modern history, and more than twice the level in 1980.
That year – the first decennial enumeration in which the nation’s Hispanic population was comprehensively counted – non-Hispanic whites were majorities in all but 171 out of 3,141 counties (5.4%), according to our analysis. The 1990 census was the first to break out non-Hispanic whites as a separate category; that year, they made up the majority in all but 186 counties, or 5.9% of the total. (The Census Bureau considers Hispanic to be an ethnicity rather than a race; accordingly, Hispanics can be of any race.)
Since then, the nation’s Hispanic population has more than doubled, from 22.4 million to 55.4 million, powering the increase in majority-minority counties. Last year, 94 counties had Hispanic majorities – just over twice the number of majority-Hispanic counties in 1990 (45), and one more than the number of counties last year with non-Hispanic black majorities.
Another telling indicator of greater diversity: In 1990, there were only 29 counties where no single racial or ethnic group made up a majority of the population. Last year, 151 counties had no racial or ethnic majority.
While the single biggest Hispanic-majority county is in Florida (Miami-Dade, 66% of whose 2.7 million people are Hispanic), most are concentrated in the Southwest: 60 are in Texas, 12 are in New Mexico and 11 are in California. All but two of the 93 black-majority counties are in states of the old Confederacy (with 25 in Mississippi, 17 in Georgia and 11 in Alabama). In 26 counties, Native Americans or Alaska Natives (who are combined into one group for census purposes) comprise the majority; aside from eight lightly populated boroughs and census areas in Alaska, most of the other counties overlap with reservations in the Southwest and Great Plains.
All in all, non-Hispanic whites are less than a majority in four states – California, Texas, New Mexico and Hawaii – as well as the District of Columbia. In fact, in none of those places does a single racial or ethnic group have a majority: California has almost equal shares of Hispanics (38.6%) and non-Hispanic whites (38.5%); non-Hispanic whites are the plurality in Texas (43.5%); Hispanics in New Mexico (47.7%); blacks in D.C. (47.4%); and Asians in Hawaii (36.4%).
"How can we help the Third World in any meaningful way if we’re bankrupt and coming apart at the seams, if we become a Second or Third World country ourselves?"
Is America Too Crowded?
Scott MorefieldScott Morefield
The Unspoken Truth: What Impeachment Exposed About Trump and 2020
Do you like crowds? When you take the kids to Disney World or Six Flags in the middle of summer, do you relish the idea of not being able to lift your arms without touching another person? Do you enjoy waiting two hours just to ride a two-minute ride? When you pull into the DMV, the doctor’s office, or your favorite restaurant, does your heart quietly skip a beat when there’s a line out the door? Does being stuck for hours in rush hour traffic in Los Angeles or any other major American city excite you? When you take your family on a picnic at the park, do you hope to see dozens or even hundreds of your fellow humans camped out by the lake, river, or woods? I mean, the more the merrier, right? Isn’t that the saying?
Sure, there are instances where crowds can be good, fun even, for a short time. A football game, a concert, a political rally, and even church are a few things that come to mind. Without a healthy number of people in a given city or town, things would dry up pretty quickly. We need each other in ways we can’t always define, and life lived alone would be a pretty dull life indeed. However, I think anyone with a lick of common sense can understand the difference between ‘enough’ people and, well, ‘too many damn people,’ and there are places in the world, and even in America, where the latter applies.
The United States, at over 330,000,000 people, has a population density of around 87 people per square mile. If that seems small, remember that the federal government actually owns about a third of this country’s land mass. Here are a few key comparisons: Mexico 166, Afghanistan 127, Brazil 64, Somalia 62, Sweden 59, Sudan 57, Russia 23, China 376, India 1,068, Bangladesh 3,015, Guatemala 420, Uganda 430, Canada 10. The world’s population density, excluding oceans and Antarctica but counting deserts, mountains, and other uninhabitable places, sits at around 142 people per square mile.
Some are higher than ours, some are lower. And yet, regardless of population density, migration patterns that would unsustainably grow nations are squarely aimed at us, and the rest of the West. In fact, a recent Gallup survey found that over 750 million people - 15 percent of the world’s adults - would like to migrate to another country if they could. Their top destination? The United States, at 158 million adults. Other would-be destinations include, in order, Canada, Germany, France, Australia, and the United Kingdom. Assuming just as many children as adults made the journey (it would likely be more), such a migration surge to the U.S. would almost double the size of our country.
Do you look at the sprawling poverty on the outskirts of major cities in India, or Bangladesh, or Mexico City, and wish there were more places in the United States like that? Unlimited migration, if allowed, would generally result in unsustainable waves of Third World residents moving to First World nations. As an example, Liberia has 4.5 million people and a manageable density of 119, yet 66 percent of that country’s adults would move if they could. Other countries half or more of its residents would ditch include Sierra Leone, Haiti, Albania, El Salvador, Congo, Ghana, Dominican Republic, Nigeria, Armenia, Honduras, Syria, and Kosovo.
Notwithstanding illegal immigration, which by and large remains unchecked, the United States admits well over one million legal immigrants every year. That’s larger than cities like San Jose, California, Austin, Texas, or Jacksonville, Florida. At the rate we allow for legal immigration, we could add a city the size of Los Angeles every three to four years.
Not only does such immigration strain America’s already crumbling infrastructure, debt levels, and social fabric, it also deteriorates our country’s natural resources and, quite frankly, its natural beauty. Fox News host Tucker Carlson noted as much in a segment that predictably triggered the ire of Media Matters last week. “Crowded countries are never beautiful countries,” Carlson observed. “The old environmental movement understood that, and [it] was why they campaigned for lower immigration levels … But the modern left and modern environmentalists care much more about identity politics than the actual physical environment, so they're pushing for open borders, because their donors want it.”
They want it for obvious reasons - to obtain and hold on to leftist power. They pretend to care about the environment - obviously a con game to, again, grab power - yet they want to import millions upon millions of people who currently produce a low carbon footprint into a country where they will have the means to produce an exponentially higher one. Some leftists, like Bernie Sanders, even have an uber-ironic term for it - “climate migrants.”
“The most bizarre part of all of this is that I thought that human beings are causing climate change,” Justin Haskins told Tucker Carlson during a discussion on the topic last week. “Well if that’s true, why are we bringing people from all over the world, where they produce CO2 emissions less per person in places like Mexico and Guatemala, why are we bringing them to the United States, where we produce CO2 emissions per person at a much higher rate? It doesn’t make any sense.”
Kevin Lynn, of a group called Progressives For Immigration Reform, contended that America’s general good-heartedness makes it difficult to tell people no when we feel so fortunate to be here ourselves. “But we have to,” he said, “because a billion people would move to the United States if they could.” It’s a number higher than the Gallup poll I cited above indicates, but my gut tells me that it’s probably right. After all, when you compare the state of affairs in America with most of the rest of the world, well, there’s no comparison.
But when is enough enough? A leftist will never give you a number. They’ll just say we need to admit “more.” Always “more.” Then they rely on the almost pathological altruism shared by most of America’s good-hearted citizens to slowly but surely shift the electorate in a way that guarantees leftist power for the foreseeable future.
But shouldn’t we care about the rest of the world, much if not most of which is mired in soul-crushing poverty? Of course, but no more than a lifeboat should take in more than its capacity to stay afloat. How can we help the Third World in any meaningful way if we’re bankrupt and coming apart at the seams, if we become a Second or Third World country ourselves?
CNN, Fox News Fixate On Iran—Ignore Mexican Invasion
By Ann Coulter
VDare.com, January 8, 2020
. . .
https://vdare.com/articles/ann-coulter-cnn-fox-news-fixate-on-iran-ignore-mexican-invasion
4.3M Migrants Caught at SW Border in Decade — More Than Los Angeles Population
Moises Castillo/AP Photo, File
30 Dec 2019588
5:00
Border Patrol agents apprehended more than four million migrants who illegally crossed the southwest border with Mexico during the past 10 fiscal years. If these migrants were placed into a single city, it would be larger than Los Angeles by population.
During the past 10 fiscal years, October 1, 2009, through September 30, 2019, U.S. Border Patrol agents assigned to the nine sectors that make up the United States’ southwest border with Mexico apprehended 4,318,200 migrants. The highest year during that decade for apprehensions occurred during Fiscal Year 2019 when agents apprehended 851,553 — including 76,020 Unaccompanied Alien Children (UAC) and 473,682 Family Unit Aliens (FMUA), according to reports obtained from U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
Apprehensions by Fiscal Year:
· FY2019 — 851,553
· FY2018 — 396,579
· FY2017 — 303,916
· FY2016 — 408,870
· FY2015 — 331,333
· FY2014 — 479,371
· FY2013 — 414,397
· FY2012 — 356,873
· FY2011 — 327,577
· FY2010 — 447,731
During the past decade, Rio Grande Valley (RGV) Sector Border Patrol agents apprehended the largest numbers of migrants. Between fiscal years 2010 and 2019, RGV Sector agents apprehended 1,600,663 migrants who illegally crossed the border into South Texas, the reports state.
Agents assigned to the Tucson Sector had the second-highest number of total apprehensions — 946,948. The Big Bend Sector in West Texas had the lowest number of total apprehensions — 56,149.
The report shows a shifting in migration traffic during the past decade. In FY2010, the Tucson Sector reported the highest number of apprehensions — 212,202. This changed in FY2013 when the largest apprehension numbers shifted to the RGV Sector.
In Fiscal Year 2019, RGV agents apprehended 339,135 migrants including 34,523 UACs and 211,631 FMUAs.
During the past 10 fiscal years, Border Patrol agents apprehended a total of 433,216 unaccompanied minors. Officials reported that more than half of those apprehensions, 235,050 took place in the RGV Sector.
FMUA apprehension numbers for the decade were not readily available. U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials provided statistics for Fiscal Years 2013 through 2019. During that period, Border Patrol agents apprehended 857,328 family units. More than half of these, 463,811, occurred in the RGV Sector.
FMUA apprehensions represent the largest increase in migrant demographics. The number of apprehensions jumped from 14,855 in FY2013 to 473,682 in FY2019 — an increase of more than 3,000 percent. Again, more than half of the FMUA apprehensions occurred in the RGV Sector — 463,811.
With three fiscal years missing from the FMUA report, FMUA and UAC apprehensions account for 1.3 million of the total 4.3 million apprehensions. These demographics also represent the highest cost to U.S. taxpayers in terms of processing, transporting, feeding, and providing healthcare, Border Patrol officials repeatedly state.
Bob Price serves as associate editor and senior political news contributor for the Breitbart Texas-Border team. He is an original member of the Breitbart Texas team. Follow him on Twitter @BobPriceBBTX and Facebook.
Migrants Flooded the Border in 2019 — Census Bureau Claims the Inflow Dropped
Guillermo Arias / AFP / Getty Images
31 Dec 2019196
8:53
The Census Bureau claims that immigration dropped to just 595,000 people in the 12 months up to mid-2019, but the estimate is built on conflicting data, said Steven Camarota, a statistician at the Center for Immigration Studies.
“Net immigration is a very hard thing to measure because there is so much sampling variability” amid continued arrivals and departures, he said, adding that President Donald Trump’s pro-American policies may be prompting illegal migrants to evade surveys.
The bureau’s conflicting migrant population estimates are hidden under the bureau’s claim that the nation’s population rose by just 0.5 percent from July 2018 to July 2019, up to 328 million. The number is low partly because the bureau says the resident population of legal and illegal migrants rose by only 595,000 during the year up to July 2019.
But the Department of Homeland Security reported that 700,000 migrants crossed the southeastern border in the nine months before July 2019. The vast majority of those Central American migrants were allowed to stay pending their eventual asylum hearings.
That inflow of 700,000 migrants does not include the inflow of many illegal immigrants, the inflow of people who overstay their visas, nor the back-and-forth flow of roughly two million white-collar and blue-collar temporary workers, nor the legal immigrant inflow that has been about one million per year, even as 3.8 million new Americans were born during the same period.
Trump sharply reduced the flow of border migrants in the second half of 2019 and may have reduced the number of new overstays and new illegals. But Congress and business have blocked his 2018 efforts to shrink legal immigration.
Business groups and investors want the federal government to stimulate their economic growth and stock values by adding more immigrant workers and more consumers. Faster population growth means higher forecasts for economic consumption, sales, housing prices, and profits, thus boosting the value of stock prices on Wall Street.
So business groups are touting the bureau’s new low-ball estimate to demand even more migration. For example, the New York Times portrayed the bureau’s new claim of slow immigrant growth as bad for investors and the economy:
William H. Frey, a noted demographer and senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, said in an interview Monday that the percentage increase was the lowest in a century. The growth rate during the most recent decade, about 6.7 percent, is expected to be the lowest since the government started taking population counts around 1790, he said.
“This is a huge downturn in the nation’s growth,” Mr. Frey said. “This is even lower than the Great Depression.”
Census watchers say that one of the biggest reasons for the stagnancy of the population is the decrease in the number of new immigrants. a trend that has continued through President Trump’s first three years in office.
…
“The immigration is really the [economic] safety valve for us going forward,” Mr. Frey said of population growth. “I think that immigration is an important part of what we have to think about going forward.”
In contrast, wage-earning Americans gain from a reduced migrant inflow. Any declines in worker population pressure employers to compete for new employees by offering higher wages and by training sidelined Americans. The slower population growth also allows young Americans to migrate to good jobs in other regions, and to buy homes in good locations at lower costs. Slower population growth also forces employers to buy labor-saving machines to allow employees to earn more by getting more work done each day.
Those changes also mean that slower population growth — via lower births or reduced immigration — also tends to transfer wealth from older investors back to young wage-earners. “Throughout American history, even during the Great Depression, business always says they don’t have enough workers,” said Camarota, adding:
That’s true today as well – [because] they always want to keep wages down [and] they have an [economic] interest in an ever-more densely populated America. Whether that is in the interest of the American people already here that is a different question.
Almost 50% of U.S. employees got higher wages in 2019, up from almost 40% in 2018.
That's useful progress - but wage growth will likely rise faster if Congress stopped inflating the labor supply for the benefit of business. http://bit.ly/2SyaLg7
Pay Raises and Training Expand in Donald Trump's Tight Labor Market
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However, the Associated Press pushed the same pro-migration, pro-growth theme. “Immigration is a wildcard in that it is something we can do something about,” Frey said. “Immigrants tend to be younger and have children, and they can make a population younger.”
“Immigration is no fix for an aging society,” said Camarota. “The immigrants grow old, and they don’t have that many children.” Currently, “everybody has got low fertility … and the fertility of young immigrants has declined more than the fertility of natives,” he said.
Some of the population data is easy to count accurately. For example, government agencies and hospitals reported just 3,791,712 births and 2,835,038 deaths in 2019, so boosting the native-born population by only 956,674.
But estimates for immigration are far more difficult, said Camarota.
For example, the two Census Bureau population-tracking estimates lag far behind the news.
In November, the bureau released its 2018 American Community Survey that excluded data from the second half of 2018 and all of 2019. So the 2018 report missed the inflow of roughly 800,000 migrants across the border in 2019 as it reported that 1.45 million new legal and illegal immigrants settled in the United States during 2017.
The estimated 1.45 million immigrant inflow in 2017 is down from 1.75 million migrants in 2016 and the 1.62 million migrants in 2015, but it was also more than any year between 2002 to 2013.
Alongside the ACS, the bureau also releases the Current Population Survey (CPS). It “showed a significantly larger total number of [legal and illegal] immigrants in 2018 (45.8 million) vs. the total shown in the ACS (44.7 million),” said a November analysis by Camarota.
“A recent news story in the New York Times announced that growth in the immigrant population “Slows to a Trickle,” said an October report by CIS, which explained:
An op-ed in the Times a few weeks later went even further, mistakenly interpreting the earlier report as meaning that “immigration fell 70%” in the last year. The writers interpret this as the result of President Trump’s immigration policy changes.
But it is not clear that any slowdown in immigration has actually taken place.
First, growth in the immigrant population does not measure new arrivals; immigrants come and go, so the net change in the total is not the same as the annual number of new arrivals.
More important, though, is that the two Census Bureau surveys that measure the foreign-born have recently diverged in unexpected ways. The Times news story correctly reports the results of one of those data sources, the American Community Survey (ACS), showing a growth of 200,000 immigrants. But the other data source, the Current Population Survey Annual Social and Economic Supplement (CPS ASEC, or just CPS for short), shows an increase of 1.6 million in the immigrant population between 2017 and 2018 – quite the opposite of “slowing to a trickle”.
These annual differences produce larger differences over several years, said the CIS report:
In terms of growth, the ACS shows a 4.8 million increase from 2010 to 2018 in the immigrant population, while the [2018] CPS shows a 6.9 million increase over the same period. The just-released 2019 CPS shows an increase of 7.3 million since 2010 …
From 2015 to 2019, growth in the immigrant population averaged one million in the CPS, while in the ACS it averaged 600,000 from 2015 to 2018 (Figure 1 and Table 1).
NYT's Tom Edsall says Trump's immigration-reform voters are 'snakes and vermin.'
Edsall usually tries to understand ordinary Americans' concerns. But he & his elite peers live in a bubble & just don't see immigration's huge economic damage to Americans.http://bit.ly/2YQO7Aq
NYT Columnist: American 'Snakes and Vermin' Support Trump's Immigration Policy
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The swearing-in of new citizens also lags,he Census Bureau reports. The naturalization data show that a record number of immigrants became citizens — and possible voters — in 2019:
Acting Deputy Secretary Ken Cuccinelli
11 year high! @realDonaldTrump and his administration are pro-LEGAL immigration, while being tough on ILLEGAL immigration. https://twitter.com/USCIS/status/1211693430562275328 …
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CALIFORNIA: now a colony of Mexico
http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2012/11/california-mexicos-looted-welfare-state.html
By Jessica Vaughan
Earlier this week ICE released its 2019 report on enforcement activity. While overall removals increased due to a record number of illegal arrivals at the southwest border, removals from the interior declined by 10 percent. Meanwhile, ICE's caseload grew by 24 percent, with more than 630,000 cases added to its docket, which has grown to a record high of more than three million cases.
Vox Editor Says U.S. Needs 600 Million Migrants to Counter China
GUILLERMO ARIAS/AFP/Getty Images
3 Jan 202031
5:27
The nation’s Military-Industrial Complex needs to import at least 600 million immigrants to counter the growing push by China for world power, says a forthcoming book by Matthew Yglesias, the top editor at the influential progressive website, Vox.com.
The One Billion Americans book is “a bold case for massive population growth in the name of national greatness,” says the blurb from the publisher, Penguin Random House. The press release continues:
America is in decline. Fewer children are born each year due to financial pressure. Thousands flee our iconic cities with their housing shortages and broken infrastructure. While we tie ourselves into knots trying to stop the flow of immigrants, our exhausted economy deflates the heartland’s already shrinking population. To survive China’s impending global takeover (not to mention Russia), we can’t afford to be weak. We need to get bigger, much bigger. We need one billion Americans.
The United States has a population of roughly 320 million Americans, so Yglesias’s plan would require a population boost of at least 600 million. If the migrants are imported over 20 years, his plan requires that annual immigration be raised from roughly one million legal immigrants to at least 15 million legal immigrants.
The blurb does not describe how much extra cash the 320 million Americans will have to pay for housing as the 600 million people compete for decent housing — any housing — in cities and suburbs.
The blurb is silent about how much wealth would flow from wage earners to stock investors as hundreds of millions of imported workers flood the labor market, drive down salaries, and spike the stock market.
The blurb says nothing about the politics of a country where most new immigrants would likely flow to the coastal states, boosting the relative wealth and voting power of California over Colorado, New Jersey over Nebraska, and New York over Nevada.
The blurb does not describe the likely civic chaos in a super-diverse country where American citizens would be stripped of their shared religious, cultural, and historical ties that have long been used to bind the people to each other, the elite to the ordinary, and the rulers to the ruled.
The blurb ignores alternative ideas for curbing China, for example, cutting immigration to spur Americans’ productivity, science, prosperity, political coherence, and ability to support weaker countries in Asia and Africa.
The blurb discreetly ignores the role of clever people who have helped to export jobs, technology, and wealth to China over the past 20 years:
Neil Munro
✔@NeilMunroDC
Careless US estb. lets China hire thousands of scientists in the US, incl. many employed by US taxpayers, to steal tech by the boatload, admits (far too late) bipartisan Senate report.
No gov't or Ivy League managers are fired.
No visa program is frozen.http://bit.ly/2QL4dto
Senate Report: Careless Elites Help China Steal Americans' Technology
Careless elites help the Chinese government snatch U.S. technology and taxpayer funding for Chinese research, says a Senate report.
breitbart.com
67
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But the blurb suggests Yglesias’s great transformation will create many opportunities for a class of clever people in the major cities — such as Matt Yglesias — to rule over ordinary Americans amid the civic divisions that Yglesias and his peers want to create:
Of course, more people requires more housing, not to mention better transportation, improved education, a revitalized welfare system, and climate change mitigation.
…
Drawing on economic theory and research from leading policy experts, he offers ideas from around the globe—from Singapore’s approach to traffic jams to Canada’s town planning—that move us beyond left-right divides, to explore the practical and creative solutions our times call for.
Yglesias’s website is pro-migration and anti-Trump. In August 2019, he echoed the Cold War claims that Americans’ homeland is instead a “Nation of Immigrants” with a world-changing mission that overwhelms mundane matters, such as Americans’ wages and prosperity:
Immigration to the United States has not, historically, been an act of kindness toward strangers. It’s been a strategy for national growth and national greatness.
Washington and his fellow founders could have established America as a kind of exclusive club. The present-day United States undoubtedly would still be a prosperous and pleasant nation. But our cities would be smaller, our global influence would be reduced, and many fewer of the world’s cutting-edge companies would be based here. We would suffer, as small countries tend to, from our talented and ambitious young people seeking their fortunes in bigger places abroad. With many fewer people, it wouldn’t be the great nation it is today.
While a lot has changed since Washington’s time, two fundamentals have not. The United States is still a country with a mission and a desire for greatness on the world stage. And America’s openness to people who want to move here and make a better life for themselves is fuel for that greatness.
Unsurprisingly, Yglesias breezily dismisses the abundant evidence the immigration shifts money from ordinary wage-earners to wealthy investors:
as Michael Greenstone and Adam Looney of the center-left Hamilton Project put it, “immigrants and U.S.-born workers generally do not compete for the same jobs; instead, many immigrants complement the work of U.S. employees and increase their productivity.”
In contrast, there’s much evidence — including 30 years of economic statistics — that immigration is a disguised economic policy to transfer wealth from young American wage-earners to older investors, and from heartland states to the coasts.
Neil Munro
✔@NeilMunroDC
NYT's Tom Edsall says Trump's immigration-reform voters are 'snakes and vermin.'
Edsall usually tries to understand ordinary Americans' concerns. But he & his elite peers live in a bubble & just don't see immigration's huge economic damage to Americans.http://bit.ly/2YQO7Aq
NYT Columnist: American 'Snakes and Vermin' Support Trump's Immigration Policy
Americans who oppose large-scale immigration are "snakes and vermin," says one of the most moderate columnists at the New York Times.
breitbart.com
73
53 people are talking about this
EconomyImmigrationPoliticsChinaimmigrationMatthew YglesiasmigrationMilitary-Industrial ComplexNation of Immigrantsvox.com
THOMAS HOMAN, the former acting head of
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
warned Democrats running in 2020 about
“enticing” illegal immigrants with lax policies.
"They say they care about these people, they
care about children dying and women being
raped... they need to look in the mirror
because if you keep offering enticements...
'sanctuary cities'... free health care... in-state
tuition... people are going to put themselves in
harm's way to come to this country," Homan
told Steve Hilton on "The Next Revolution."
Six-Time Deported Illegal
Alien Accused of Killing
Colorado Grandmother
GCSO
29 Dec 20192,239
1:57
A six-time deported illegal alien has been arrested for allegedly killing a 51-year-old Colorado grandmother after being released from local law enforcement custody.
Juan Sanchez, a Mexican illegal alien who has already been deported from the United States six times over the last decade, was arrested last week and charged with vehicular homicide and fleeing the scene of an accident after he allegedly hit and killed Annette Conquering Bear, a grandmother, while she was walking home from Walgreens, 9 News reported.
Sanchez, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials revealed, was deported from the U.S. twice in 2002, three times in 2008, and in 2012. Sometime after his last deportation, he illegally re-entered the U.S. for the seventh time.
“Sanchez is an ICE enforcement priority,” ICE officials said in a statement.
Four days before Conquering Bear’s killing, Sanchez was in local law enforcement custody on suspicion of drunk driving but was released after Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials said they did not have enough time in advance to lodge a detainer against him so he could be turned over to their custody.
During that arrest, Sanchez was allegedly driving drunk with a blood-alcohol level of 0.183, which is twice the legal limit. Police said Sanchez admitted to having had “two beers” before getting in his car and driving with an “international driver’s license.”
Sanchez was taken into custody at the time and was then quickly released after he became uncooperative and allegedly telling officers, “I’ll fight my way out of jail.”
The illegal alien is now being held on a $500,000 bond.
John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Follow him on Twitter at @JxhnBinder.
Sanctuary City Released Human Rights Violator
And then NYC hit the snooze button on this wake-up call
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By Andrew R. Arthur on December 21, 2019
In my last post, I discussed a Liberian amnesty provision that was snuck into section 7611 of the National Defense Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year 2020. I specifically referenced the case of Liberian human rights violator Charles Cooper, who was removed by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to Liberia in June 2018. I left out the part about how the New York Police Department (NYPD) failed to honor an ICE detainer for him, and released him without even notifying the agency. The incident does not reflect well on those who set the rules for New York's finest.
Cooper entered the United States in January 2006 on a nonimmigrant visa, and remained beyond his authorized return date. He was no ordinary visa overstay. According to ICE, Cooper "served as a bodyguard to former Liberian President Charles Taylor and was a member of a paramilitary police unit called the Secret Security Service (SSS)."
ICE continued: "Cooper, while a member of the SSS and the National Patriotic Front of Liberia [NPLF], was directly involved in the persecution of civilians in Liberia." In addition to identifying Cooper as "a human rights violator," the agency asserted that he was "a member of an organization known for setting fires to whole villages."
The aforementioned Charles Taylor is a special case. He was a Liberian civil servant in the 1980s, and was accused of embezzlement. He made his way to the United States, but escaped from prison in Massachusetts where he was being held for extradition, and travelled back to West Africa. He thereafter formed the NPFL, and in 1989 launched attacks against the Liberian government from the Ivory Coast, igniting Liberia's first civil war.
Global Security explains that between December 1989 and the middle of 1993, the NPFL "is estimated to have been responsible for thousands of deliberate killings of civilians. As NPFL forces advanced towards Monrovia in 1990, they targeted people of the Krahn and Mandingo ethnic groups, both of which the NPFL considered supporters of [then-Liberian President Samuel] Doe's government."
Various factions became involved in the conflict, including the NPFL; forces that were loyal to Doe; the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and their Nigerian-led peacekeeping force, ECOMOG; and the breakaway Independent National Patriotic Front of Liberia (INPFL), which was led by Prince Johnson. INPFL captured, mutilated, and killed Doe on September 10, 1990.
The first bloody civil war ended with Taylor's election as president in 1997. According to Britannica, however:
As president, Taylor restructured the army, filling it with members of his former militia. Conflict ensued between Taylor and the opposition, and Monrovia became the scene of widespread gun battles and looting. Governments around the world accused Taylor of supporting rebels in Sierra Leone, and in 2000 the United Nations Security Council imposed sanctions on Liberia. The country was subsequently gripped again by civil war, and Taylor, accused of gross human rights violations, was indicted by a UN-sponsored war-crimes tribunal (the Special Court for Sierra Leone) in 2003.
Following widespread international condemnation, Taylor agreed to go into exile in Nigeria. In March 2006, however, the Liberian government requested Taylor's extradition, and Nigeria announced that it would comply with the order. Taylor subsequently attempted to flee Nigeria but was quickly captured. Charged with crimes against humanity and war crimes committed during Sierra Leone's civil war, he was later sent to The Hague, where he was to be tried before the Special Court for Sierra Leone.
Taylor was found guilty in April 2012 on 11 counts "of bearing responsibility for the war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by rebel forces during Sierra Leone's civil war", and subsequently sentenced to 50 years in prison.
Back to Cooper. As noted, he entered as a nonimmigrant with permission to remain until August 2006. When he failed to depart, he was placed into removal proceedings. He was ordered removed by an immigration judge and appealed the decision, which was dismissed by the Board of Immigration Appeals in February 2016.
According to ICE:
On Aug. 11, 2017, Cooper was arrested by the New York Police Department, and charged with DWI. On that same date, [ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO)] deportation officers lodged an immigration detainer with the NYPD's Richmond Central Booking. Cooper was released from NYPD custody, without the detainer being honored and without notification to ICE.
Fortunately, in May 2018, ICE deportation officers arrested Cooper in Staten Island, New York, leading to his removal.
As my former colleague Preston Huennekens reported: "In March 2013, New York City began ignoring [ICE] detainer notices." According to ICE, the agency had "not been notified about the release of aliens in custody at New York City facilities since 2014, except for those that fall within the 170 crimes considered egregious by the Mayor's Office." Apparently, human rights violators do not make the cut.
Huennekens noted that in just one three-month period (January to mid-April 2018), the NYPD and the New York Department of Corrections together ignored 440 detainers; "40 of those individuals released from custody subsequently committed more crimes and were arrested again." About this, ICE stated: "In just three months, more than three dozen criminal aliens were released from local custody. Simply put, the politics and rhetoric in this city are putting its own communities at an unnecessary risk."
To restate the obvious: Sanctuary policies, including those that prevent ICE from finding out about the release of dangerous aliens and that require police to ignore ICE detainers, make no sense. They only serve as sanctuary for criminals, or in Cooper's case, human rights violators.
Cooper should have served as a wake-up call to those in power who, for purely political reasons, require the NYPD to turn a blind eye to ICE's requests for help. But instead, as Huennekens' reporting demonstrates, Gotham's officials simply hit the snooze button.
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