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To: Bladerunnuh
Where's you get that statistic about Mexicans in the USA averaging 6 kids? I googled all over the 'Net and couldn't find anything like that.

I don't know where one could get figures on this, since Mexican-Americans are not listed as such in the U.S. Census, and it would be pretty hard to get reliable figures on people who crossed the border illegally.

I'm not saying it's not true. It's just that I could make good use of a source or a link.

108 posted on 08/04/2007 3:43:00 PM PDT by Mrs. Don-o (Point of clarfication.)
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To: Mrs. Don-o
Unless the life chances of children raised by single mothers suddenly improve, the explosive growth of the U.S. Hispanic population over the next couple of decades does not bode well for American social stability.

The dimensions of the Hispanic baby boom are startling. The Hispanic birthrate is twice as high as that of the rest of the American population. That high fertility rate – even more than unbounded levels of immigration – will fuel the rapid Hispanic population boom in the coming decades.

By 2050, the Latino population will have tripled, the Census Bureau projects. One in four Americans will be Hispanic by midcentury, twice the current ratio.

It's the fertility surge among unwed Hispanics that should worry policymakers. Hispanic women have the highest unmarried birthrate in the country – over three times that of whites and Asians, and nearly 1 ½ times that of black women, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Every 1,000 unmarried Hispanic women bore 92 children in 2003 (the latest year for which data exist), compared with 28 children for unmarried white women, 22 for unmarried Asian women, and 66 for unmarried black women.

Forty-five percent of all Hispanic births occur outside of marriage, compared with 24 percent for whites and 15 percent for Asians. Only the percentage for blacks – 68 percent – is higher. But the black population is not going to triple over the next few decades.

The only bright news in this demographic disaster story concerns teen births. Overall teen childbearing in the U.S. declined for the 12th year in a row in 2003, having dropped by more than a third since 1991. Yet even here, Hispanics remain a cause for concern. The rate of childbirth for teens from Mexico, part of the fastest-growing immigrant population in the U.S., greatly outstrips every other group.

Bureau of Census Population Projections 2000-2050

119 posted on 08/04/2007 4:00:35 PM PDT by kabar
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