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"It isn't about race......
This is an invasion!"
U.
S. OVERPOPULATION GROWTH
from buzzm,
12-3-08
http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/2819
When is an invasion not an invasion?
By
Tim Murray Tuesday,
April 29, 2008
The good Catholic Archbishop Joseph Naumann of Kansas City, Kansas
has a most novel concept of invasion. As quoted in The Kansas City
Star of March 15, 2008, he told lawmakers that if illegal immigration
is to be considered an invasion, it is indeed “the strangest invasion
in history, where the invaders clean our houses and harvest our
crops.”
The Archbishop, of course failed to add that they also, along with
legal immigrants, lower American wages by 5.4% and the wages of
American high school drop-outs by 7.4%, as well as rob the American
working class of $152 billion annually in depressed wages and job
displacement. All according to the data collected by Harvard’s Dr.
George Borjas. In fact Borjas found that a 10% increase in the labour
force from immigration reduces wages for native Americans by 5.25%.
Naumann failed as well to cite a UCLA Chicano Studies Research Centre
report that found that Americans and established immigrants suffer an
11% wage drop simply by working alongside new Hispanic immigrants.
It is evident that the illegal “invasion” that conservatively has
increased by 5.3 million , or 79% under George Bush, has grown the
labour pool and weakened labour’s hand vis a vis the employer. Lower
wages are only one consequence, the other was determined by Cornell’s
Vernon M. Brigg’s when he found that the percentage of the foreign
born population in the United States is inversely proportional to the
percentage of union
membership. Yet organized labour prefers to chase phantom Hispanic
recruits rather than defend the dues paying members it has.
One wonders if Archbishop Naumann’s assessment of immigrants’
contributions would be modified had he had a preview of Edwin S.
Rubinstein’s report for the Manhattan Institute, released a month
after his comment to the Kansas City Star. That report found that U.S.
taxpayers were giving more than $9,000 in cash or
benefits to each immigrant in excess of what they were receiving
in taxes, and a third of those immigrants were illegal. Total cost
$346 billion. Each immigrant pupil cost taxpayers $1030 or $3.4
billion since they comprised 19% of the student body. It presently
costs $1.5 billion to incarcerate 267,000 criminal aliens in federal
prisons, 27% of the prison population, so 80-100,000 are prematurely
released due to overcrowding to commit a disproportionate number of
offences. 29.2% of immigrant households receive Medicaid compared to
14.8% of native American households.
The foregoing statistics are not exhaustive but are surely sufficient
to convince us that immigration---legal or illegal---is not a
philanthropic
enterprise, except of course to employers. For them, as always, it
is manna from heaven. The puzzle is that liberals, trade union
leaders, socialists, human rights advocates and clergymen should also
see it as such and jump on the corporate welfare bandwagon. The
bandwagon of taxpayer subsidy—education, health-care, law
enforcement—to cheap labour employers who really don’t have to foot
their share of those costs.
In the context of Matthew 22:39 and Leviticus 19:10 one can forgive
the Archbishop for his belief that the common good cannot be defined
strictly by national borders and that a sense of solidarity with other
human beings is required to understand the plight of illegal
immigrants. However could he not earmark some of his boundless
Christian love for the hardworking low-income American worker whose
livelihood the illegals threaten? 1st Timothy 5:8 instructs us after
all to love our own family and attend to their needs first.
In the meantime, I am intrigued by Archbishop Naumann’s notion of what
actually constitutes an invasion, because this could be the basis of
moral and legal precedent. He apparently argues that if 38 million
liars knowingly break the law, enter your country and seek illegal
employment, they aren’t invaders if you judge their impact to be
beneficial.
By Neumann’s measure then, the British did not invade India because
they built railways, roads, hospitals, the telegraph system and public
works. Nor did the Norsemen invade the north of
England because they cultivated new lands and opened up the rural
economy. And I suppose the Germans really weren’t invaders in northern
France because they gave a real shot in the arm to the construction
industry of Normandy when they built the Atlantic Wall.
So when is an invasion not an invasion? When your clerical job is
secure and you’re standing in a comfortable pulpit.
Posted 04/29 at 08:06 AM
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