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Study shows most illegals not hard up. Just trying to move up the corporate ladder!
The Home of Uncommon Sense ^ | 12/07/2005 | Craig DeLuz

Posted on 12/07/2005 11:00:42 AM PST by Craig DeLuz



As liberals try to portray illegal immigrants as destitute, unemployed farm workers just looking to feed their families; the facts are revealing and entirely different picture. According to Pew Hispanic Center 95% of those who enter this country illegally had jobs in Mexico before come here.

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Craig DeLuz

Visit The Home of Uncommon Sense... www.craigdeluz.com

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TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; Politics
KEYWORDS: aliens; hispanics; illegal; immigrantlist; immigration; jobs

1 posted on 12/07/2005 11:00:44 AM PST by Craig DeLuz
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To: Craig DeLuz
By world standards, Mexico is a rich country. 5.5 billion of the world's 6.5 billion people are on average poorer then Mexicans. They could be a much richer country if they would make some basic reforms. A good first step would be to line Vincete Fox, his entire government, and all of the opposition up against an adobe wall and in fine Mexican tradition, execute them.
2 posted on 12/07/2005 11:27:13 AM PST by jackbenimble (Import the third world, become the third world)
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To: Craig DeLuz

I'm all for stopping illegal immigration. Nonetheless the article makes a good point: The people coming here from Mexico are not necessarily the dregs of humanity some paint them to be.

Lets not forget, this country was built on and by immigrants (albeit legal ones) who were willing to work.


3 posted on 12/07/2005 11:47:51 AM PST by Pessimist
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To: Craig DeLuz

They are stealing our working class jobs, and committing crime. Nuff said.


4 posted on 12/07/2005 1:26:12 PM PST by stephenjohnbanker
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To: Pessimist; All
Lets not forget, this country was built on and by immigrants (albeit legal ones) who were willing to work.

Not so. This country was founded by people born in this land, many of several generations.

Wrong on the Founders The Wall Street Journal Independence Day tradition. By John Fonte

(snip) However, the open-borders ideology continues to haunt the Journal's otherwise sensible editorial pages. On July 3, on the paper's website, assistant editor Brendan Miniter begins his op-ed, "Let Their People Come," with the quotation from the Declaration of Independence that complained about George III's restrictions on European immigration to the American colonies. Miniter then uses this quotation as a launching pad to endorse a "fundamental right" of emigration to America and implies that this "right" is one of the founding principles of our nation. He thus maintains that the "right and necessity to allow people to live and move freely is self-evident indeed."

In fact, exactly the opposite is true. As the Declaration of Independence states our nation is based on " rights " and "consent" — or "government by consent of the governed." Clearly, in American democracy, immigration policy is decided by the "consent of the governed," that is to say, by the American people. There is not — and never has been — a "fundamental right" to immigrate to the United States against the consent of the American people. To suggest otherwise, as the Wall Street Journal editorial page did on July 3, is to ignore the crucial principles of "consent" central to our democratic republic.

Nowhere in their voluminous writings do any of the Founders endorse the idea that everyone in the world has a "fundamental right" to immigrate to the United States. They would have considered such a notion preposterous. The Founding Fathers' views on this subject are best explained by the Claremont Institute's Thomas G. West in Vindicating the Founders in his chapter on immigration.

At the beginning of the chapter, Professor West notes that the United States from the first days of the republic has "always set limits" on immigration and citizenship. Moreover, he argues that:

To say that there is a fundamental right to immigrate is as much as to say that the government of one country is obliged to secure the rights of every person in the world who presents himself and demands it. Such an obligation is by nature both impossible and unjust….a violation of the fundamental terms of the social compact.

On immigration, assimilation, and citizenship naturalization, West finds that the views of Washington, Adams, Jefferson, Hamilton, Madison, Franklin, John Jay, and Gouverneur Morris are remarkably similar.

FFirst, the Founders believed that the American republic had the right to set the limits and conditions of immigration and eventual citizenship. As Gouverneur Morris stated at the Constitutional Convention in 1787, "every society from a great nation down to a club had the right of declaring the conditions on which new members should be admitted."

Second, they welcomed immigrants, but on the condition that they become good citizens. As George Washington explained, "We shall welcome [them] to a participation of all our rights and privileges, if by decency of conduct they appear to merit the enjoyment."

Third, the Founders insisted on assimilation. Washington wrote to Adams that he worried about immigrants "retain[ing] the language, habits, and principles (good or bad) which they bring with them" and favored "an intermixture with our people [where] they, or their descendants, get assimilated to our customs, measures, [and we] soon become one people."

In short, the Founders maintained (sensibly enough) that immigration/assimilation policy be judged on the basis of national interest, i.e., what was good for America. There is not a scintilla of agreement between the Founders' views and Miniter's position that there is some "fundamental right" of free immigration. (Incidentally, Miniter's position is also rejected by leading libertarians such as Milton Friedman). (snip) http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/comment-fonte071403.asp

5 posted on 12/08/2005 1:32:42 PM PST by WatchingInAmazement ("Nothing is more expensive than cheap labor," prof. Vernon Briggs, labor economist Cornell Un.)
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