Too late to stop the immigration takeover

United States
February 16, 2007 11:12pm CST
Most estimates of undocumented workers in this country place the number at 12-14 million. Sorry to disagree with that, but it's more like 50 million or higher. How do I know this? People who staff the "official" immigration offices in this country are deeply connected to the illegals and doctor the books to make it appear that fewer undocumented workers are in the country. Immigration insiders also quietly lend support to illegals and their families so they can avoid detection and deportation. If they are caught, they can still delay deportation for months or even years. Even if deported, they can get right back into the U.S. fairly easily. And it is not strictly a Mexican phenomenon. All the Central American countries -- Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, El Salvador and Belize -- have networks that sneak people into the U.S. I didn't mention Costa Rica here because that country has its act together and is quite livable. Many American expatriots live there quite nicely. Asia is not that far behind, especially the Hmong population of the nation formerly known as Laos. They are here in sizable numbers already. So what we have is a hijacking of America that has already gotten so far along that it is not stoppable. If we were to enforce the existing immigration laws firmly, we would drain the U.S. of most of its work force and the American economy would sink into a quicksand pit -- paving the way for the Chinese to take over where we left off. It's over. We must have guest workers or we are a dead nation.
2 responses
@Aussies2007 (5336)
• Australia
17 Feb 07
I think you are exagerating... How can you have 50 million illegals in a country of 280 million? Considering all the security mesures in place since the 9/11... I just cannot see how 50 million people could hide in America. 12 million is hard enough to swallow as it is. Perhaps you should ask the French how to deal with this problem. They have a lot of experience in those matters... as they had to deal with it for 40 years.
• Australia
18 Feb 07
Well... if your government tolerate illegals... there is nothing to complaint about. France and Australia do not tolerate them. The problems in France are about integration... Those problems are not caused by illegals.
• United States
17 Feb 07
Rest assured the number is closer to 50 million than 12 million. As for the French, thousands of burned cars and wrecked neighborhoods stand witness to the encroaching Muslim immigration problem which the "progressive" French have neglected for decades. The only reason more uprisings do not occur in the U.S. is that we herd the illegals into our many pork, beef and poultry processing plants, citrus packinghouses and farms in general. Note that in January we had a catastrophic freeze that destroyed 80 percent of the citrus crop in Central California. Thousands of people were laid off in the farm and citrus processing industries -- mostly illegals. They have overwhelmed local relief agencies who have and I quote, seen "four times the numbers we would expect" with such a freeze. That ratio fits my estimate of 50 million instead of 12 million. No help for them and misery in the streets, of which I am a first-hand witness. And they aren't hiding, they're out in the open, trucked in by farmers to pick the crops! It's a matter of zero enforcement, not a matter of "hiding" anyone. Security measures vis-a-vis 9/11? That's a laugh. There is zero security in the Central California farm belt. And, please, update your demographic data. The U.S. population topped the 300 million mark and then some last month -- excluding, of course, millions of illegals who cannot be counted.
@naty1941 (2336)
• United States
17 Feb 07
I live in California and if it wasn't for the illegal workers this State would not survive. Many Americans in California do not want to work the fields, clean toilets, or do heavy work. In addition, in California the Immigration Dept. is very busy day and night trying to catch the illegal workers but they are not doing anything to the employers that hire them.
• United States
17 Feb 07
I am in central California and it is bizarre that businesses and farms cannot survive without these undocumented workers. The recent freeze is case in point. All the oranges couldn't be picked in time and the farmers were all crying about not having a "guest worker program" to get more workers into the groves. Cost us $1 billion. It is a failed policy.
@naty1941 (2336)
• United States
24 Feb 07
Thank you for best response.