E
Elizabeth502
Guest
[cont’d]…
I know that there are some imperfect legal immigration policies, but it will never be socially just to admit only the poor & illiterate, for reasons I stated above – at least not in A.D. 2011. These tend to be attracted especially to the metro regions, where they assume that the “relatively rich/richer” will employ them, but that is not proving true, at least in the massive numbers in which the poor, unskilled, & illterate have settled in metro areas within the last 25 years. The survival cost of living cannot support their essential needs, first of all, even when they work 60-75 hr weeks. I have first-hand experience with these people; it is **not **working. Perhaps it once worked; not now. Second, there is an oversupply of them in regions in which they have settled historically, relative to their potential market.
The combination of some of the bishops’ utterly romanticized version of illegal immigration, along with a similar mythology emanating from the least informed immigrants themselves, and oy, vey: what a combination. What a setup for social injustice. Legal immigration tries to look at the reality of economic assimilation, not the mythology. Undoubtedly it could do a better job of it, but it still beats the enabling of chaotic and compromised illegal immigration in any form.
I know that there are some imperfect legal immigration policies, but it will never be socially just to admit only the poor & illiterate, for reasons I stated above – at least not in A.D. 2011. These tend to be attracted especially to the metro regions, where they assume that the “relatively rich/richer” will employ them, but that is not proving true, at least in the massive numbers in which the poor, unskilled, & illterate have settled in metro areas within the last 25 years. The survival cost of living cannot support their essential needs, first of all, even when they work 60-75 hr weeks. I have first-hand experience with these people; it is **not **working. Perhaps it once worked; not now. Second, there is an oversupply of them in regions in which they have settled historically, relative to their potential market.
The combination of some of the bishops’ utterly romanticized version of illegal immigration, along with a similar mythology emanating from the least informed immigrants themselves, and oy, vey: what a combination. What a setup for social injustice. Legal immigration tries to look at the reality of economic assimilation, not the mythology. Undoubtedly it could do a better job of it, but it still beats the enabling of chaotic and compromised illegal immigration in any form.