NYTimes | In
the matter of immigration, mark this conservative columnist down as
strongly pro-deportation. The United States has too many people who
don’t work hard, don’t believe in God, don’t contribute much to society
and don’t appreciate the greatness of the American system.
They need to return whence they came.
I
speak of Americans whose families have been in this country for a few
generations. Complacent, entitled and often shockingly ignorant on basic
points of American law and history, they are the stagnant pool in which
our national prospects risk drowning.
On point after point, America’s nonimmigrants are failing our country. Crime? A study
by the Cato Institute notes that nonimmigrants are incarcerated at
nearly twice the rate of illegal immigrants, and at more than three
times the rate of legal ones.
Educational achievement? Just 17 percent of the finalists
in the 2016 Intel Science Talent Search — often called the “Junior
Nobel Prize” — were the children of United States-born parents. At the
Rochester Institute of Technology, just 9.5 percent of graduate students
in electrical engineering were nonimmigrants.
Religious piety — especially of the Christian variety? More illegal immigrants identify as Christian (83 percent) than do
Americans (70.6 percent), a fact right-wing immigration restrictionists
might ponder as they bemoan declines in church attendance.
Business creation? Nonimmigrants start businesses
at half the rate of immigrants, and accounted for fewer than half the
companies started in Silicon Valley between 1995 and 2005. Overall, the
share of nonimmigrant entrepreneurs fell by more than 10 percentage
points between 1995 and 2008, according to a Harvard Business Review study.
Nor does the case against nonimmigrants end there. The rate of out-of-wedlock births for United States-born mothers exceeds
the rate for foreign-born moms, 42 percent to 33 percent. The rate of
delinquency and criminality among nonimmigrant teens considerably
exceeds that of their immigrant peers. A recent report
by the Sentencing Project also finds evidence that the fewer immigrants
there are in a neighborhood, the likelier it is to be unsafe.
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