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To: Dick Bachert
His brother Jeb is married to a native of Mexico and his nieces and nephews are mixed blood. And before you scream "ethnocentric bigot" at me, there's nothing inherently wrong with that. But that fact -- and the first item -- DOES predispose him to a warm and fuzzy feeling for folks from south of the Rio Grande.

I disagree. This is about helping companies that want to keep the price of labor down. Rather than pay a decent wage, they would rather uphold an irresponsible immigration policy.
7 posted on 05/26/2007 5:16:40 AM PDT by etradervic (Any Conservative in 2008)
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To: etradervic

While the REST of us pay the fringe benefits for these greedy bastards — not only in treasure but since they are killing hundreds of us each month, in blood as well.

Robert Rector stirred up the puddin’ inside the beltway yesterday.

Who is Robert Rector? He is the Senior Research Fellow at The Heritage Foundation specializing in welfare, poverty and marriage. He is a leading and respected authority in Washington on poverty and the U.S. welfare system.

Yesterday Heritage released a special report written by Rector and Christine Kim titled “The Fiscal Cost of Low-Skill Immigrants to the U.S. Taxpayer.” You can read the entire report right here [pdf], or you can click here for the executive summary.

You aren’t going to hear very much about this report from the mainstream media. John McCain and Ted Kennedy, the architects of the amnesty bill, are going to do their best to ignore it.

So ... we’ll tell you right here. What we don’t tell you can be learned by clicking on the links above.

First .... There may be a common perception out there that these illegal aliens actually contribute to our economy by “doing the jobs that Americans won’t do.” Not so. Illegal alien households cost the American taxpayers billions of dollars a year. Try $89 billion.

The Heritage report points out that at least 50 percent and maybe as much as 60 percent of illegal alien households lack a high school education. This makes them low-skill households.

Here’s where the numbers start to get interesting -— or depressing, if you will.

Do you know what a “distributional deficit” is? That’s the difference between what you pay in taxes to government and what government spends on you and your household. The paper will give you the details, but low-skilled immigrant households in the U.S. received about $10,000 more in government benefits than does the average U.S. household. What’s the figure? About $30,160 every year in immediate benefits and services for every low-skill immigrant household. To compound the distributional deficit, low-skill immigrant households pay less in taxes than do the average U.S. Households. These low-skill immigrant households pay about $10,573 a year in taxes. Subtract this from the amount government spends on them and you have a deficit of $19,588.

Let’s carry these numbers for our wonderful illegal — soon to be legal — households out a few years. Rector says that the average adult lifespan for each head of household is about 60 years. The research shows that this distributional deficit will continue throughout this life span for low-skill immigrant households. The total? About $1.2 million for each low-skill immigrant household.

In 2004 there were 4.5 million low-skill immigrant households in the U.S. More math: Multiply the average net distributional deficit of $19,588 per household and you get a total deficit of $89.1 billion .... per year!

Ask yourself .. can this country afford this? Can we afford an amnesty bill that will legitimize and legalize these illegal-alien households, and millions more to come? No. The costs are financially unsustainable.

Why isn’t this more of a part of the immigration debate?


20 posted on 05/26/2007 5:33:36 AM PDT by Dick Bachert
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To: etradervic
This is about helping companies that want to keep the price of labor down. Rather than pay a decent wage, they would rather uphold an irresponsible immigration policy.
I find such arguments illogical. If the bill passes and the illegals are legal then federal wage laws kick in and there is no more cheap labor.
And you can bet your bottom dollar that with all of the activism from the various Hispanic groups there will be plenty of legal help with ensuring that the newly legal get those federally mandated wages.
No, cheap labor is not a logical explanation. In fact, it's counterintuitive.
39 posted on 05/26/2007 6:04:28 AM PDT by philman_36
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To: etradervic
I disagree. This is about helping companies that want to keep the price of labor down. Rather than pay a decent wage, they would rather uphold an irresponsible immigration policy.

There's a very good article you need to read. I think it is dead on the money, and it's not about cheap labor.

Immigration and Usurpation - Real reason why your Senator wants this immigration amnesty bill

79 posted on 05/26/2007 7:05:37 AM PDT by AFreeBird (Will NOT vote for Rudy. <--- notice the period)
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To: etradervic

This is also about throwing a bone to the high powered Hispanics in Texas that helped put him in both the Governor’s mansion and the White House.


82 posted on 05/26/2007 7:21:29 AM PDT by moreisee
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