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Let's Give the Children of Immigrants a Break and Take a Break from Mass Immigration

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December 11, 2009



New Report From FAIR Says Obama Administration Not Serious on Enforcement

The Obama Administration has failed in its efforts to secure the border and enforce immigration laws, an anti-illegal immigration group said in a report released Wednesday. "The Federation for American Immigration Reform, a Washington D.C.-based group, says the administration "has systemically dismantled" immigration enforcement since the beginning of the year," the Redlands Daily Facts reported. "Obama has delayed on three occasions a requirement that federal contractors use the E-Verify employment verification system, according to the report." Read FAIR's New Report.

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Rep. Gutierrez Will Introduce Amnesty Bill Next Week

"On Tuesday, December 15, Congressman Luis V. Gutierrez (D-IL) will introduce new legislation, the Comprehensive Immigration Reform for America's Security and Prosperity Act of 2009 (CIR ASAP), to the U.S. House of Representatives," notes a press release today. "The time for waiting is over. This bill will be presented before Congress recesses for the holidays so that there is no excuse for inaction in the New Year," Gutierrez said in the release.

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High Unemployment Will Frame Amnesty Debate

"Several studies suggest that among Americans and legal residents, it's mainly those lacking a high school diploma who are competing directly with undocumented immigrants for jobs (and by most estimates, that's less than one out of every 10 U.S. workers)," says Marcelo Balive with New America Media. "Rep. [Lamar] Smith, a fifth-generation Texan and a known Capitol Hill immigration hardliner, asked: 'How can the administration justify giving millions of jobs to illegal immigrants when the economy is struggling with a 10 percent unemployment rate?'"

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Let's Give the Children of Immigrants a Break and Take a Break from Mass Immigration

By Ira Mehlman, FAIR Media Director

A December 7, 2009, article in the Washington Post offers a troubling profile of the children of Latino immigrants in the United States. They are falling farther and farther behind educationally and economically.

"Second-generation Latinos have the highest high school dropout rate - one in seven - of any U.S.-born racial or ethnic group and the highest teen pregnancy rate. These Latinos also receive far fewer college degrees and make significantly less money than non-Hispanic whites and other second-generation immigrants," reports the Post.

The paper goes on to note that given the magnitude of immigration to this country in recent decades, the success or failure of the next generation is of vital importance to all Americans. "Whether they succeed will have consequences far beyond immigrant circles," states the article.

These are precisely the concerns that FAIR has expressed ever since the organization was founded in 1979. Making sure that the children and grandchildren of immigrants succeed in our society has been the stated objective of FAIR's calls for a time out from mass immigration.

While FAIR and others in the immigration reform movement are repeatedly accused of being "anti-immigrant," the reverse is true. Taking a break from the excessive levels of immigration we've witnessed over the past several decades would be the most pro-immigrant policy this country could implement.

We need to reduce the dropout rate among the children of Latino immigrants because doing so is good for everyone. But how do we address the needs of kids who are falling behind at the same time that we are adding millions more through our immigration policies? How do we boost the incomes of second generation Latinos when, as the so-called immigrant advocacy groups insist, we add millions of new workers to compete with them?

Assimilating immigrants and their children and grandchildren into the educational and economic mainstream has never been an easy or quick process. As the Post notes, "to be truly guaranteed a middle-class lifestyle, second-generation Latinos need at least a bachelor's degree - a feat that the last major wave of immigrants, from Eastern and Southern Europe, took three or four generations to achieve."

What has changed significantly since the experience of the last major wave of immigration is that a bachelor's degree has, in most cases, become a prerequisite to achieving middle class status. Earlier waves of immigrants and their descendants first achieved middle class status. Only once they got a firm foothold in the middle class did their kids and grandkids begin routinely earning college degrees.

The jobs that allowed previous waves of immigrants to achieve middle class status without a strong education are quickly disappearing. The age of the highly paid, unionized, assembly line worker in the United States is rapidly becoming a thing of the past. Those workers have been replaced by highly sophisticated machines, or low-wage immigrant workers, or the jobs themselves have been outsourced.

Having acknowledged that the children of the largest group of immigrants to the United States are not faring well, the question is what do we do next? For the elitist media, the congressional leadership and the Obama administration the choices are limited to:

  • Keep doing what we're doing.
  • Vastly increase immigration levels and legalize millions of illegal aliens.
  • Throw (borrowed) money at the problem.
  • Appoint another commission to study it.
  • All of the above.

Or, we could try something not on the above list of options: Reduce our immigration intake and get to work on the critical challenge of making sure that the children and grandchildren of recent immigrants have a chance to succeed in American society, because all of us have a stake in their success.

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