Liberal, Pulitzer-Winning Reporter: Uncontrolled Immigration Is Hurting Our Country
Emily Benedek writes at Tablet about reporter Jerry Kammer investigating the connection between uncontrolled immigration, the fraying of the American social fabric, and the rise of Donald Trump. His conclusion:
Uncontrolled immigration was hurting the country, was hurting American workers, and was straining labor markets and community resources--schools, neighborhoods, and medical systems. He said the growth was insupportable, and he was afraid of what the public backlash might bring. This was 2007.I was shocked. I knew that Jerry was a liberal--he had spent years of his life writing for the Navajo Times, for goodness sake, and a prize-winning story about cruel and dangerous conditions in the maquiladoras. How could he say something as wild as, we need to control immigration? Wasn't it the duty of American liberals to welcome into our country any and all who want to live here? And wasn't it also the only defensible moral position, especially for a Jew?
I have been waiting since that meeting to read the book that would emerge. And now it's just been published. After years of research, some as a fellow at the Center for Immigration Studies, Kammer has produced: Losing Control: How a Left-Right Coalition Blocked Immigration Reform and Provoked the Backlash that Elected Trump.
The book isn't another unreadable policy tome. It's a colorful, rich narrative, meant for people like me, who thought they understood immigration, but in truth don't understand anything about it at all.
Losing Control explains the origins of the immigration mess we're now in and its consequences for American society and American workers. It's obvious how flooding the market with unskilled laborers takes away jobs from low-paid Americans and also depresses their wages. But American business is now finding an angle to import cheap immigrant labor for high-tech jobs as well. According to a recent Bloomberg piece, American high-tech workers are being fired and forced to train their replacements--immigrants from India who will accept lower wages on an H-1B Visa.
"Rather than shepherding exceptional talent to the U.S. and turning them into Americans, the H-1B system has given companies a steadily expanding supply of guest workers who are themselves stuck in indentured limbo," writes Rachel Rosenthal, who quotes Labor Secretary Eugene Scalia saying: "The H-1B program was never intended to create a pool of foreign labor that displaces Americans' opportunities for good-paying jobs." The misallocation of H-1B visa is just the latest tool the business lobby has used to ensure cheap, powerless laborers; in earlier decades it was agribusiness that played a major role in limiting immigration controls.
Kammer identifies the cause of our current immigration problems: decades of congressional failure to enforce the Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA), signed into law by Ronald Reagan in 1986; a law that Kammer tells Tablet was a "noble attempt at an historic compromise" between liberals and conservatives. It offered amnesty on the one hand to immigrants already established in the United States, and, on the other, strict controls on future illegal immigration through employer verification systems.
Avoiding the dubious strategy of walls and border police, the act sought to "demagnetize the worksite" by focusing enforcement efforts on the employers. That strategy required a fraud-resistant identity card or some other dependable means of identifying who was a legal resident. However, the idea of a national identity card so inflamed both the civil-liberties left and the libertarian right that a consensus never could be reached to provide the key technology for effective enforcement.
IRCA was passed, amnesty was given, and a "strangest-of-bedfellows" coalition of activists, ethnic groups, business interests, and civil libertarians conspired to hamstring a credible system of enforcement. A feckless Congress and six successive administrations surrendered to the "powerful, intensely organized forces of the coalition" despite overwhelming public sentiment, expressed in polls year after year, for reasonable immigration limits.
Anthropologist Wade Davis wrote, in an essay in Rolling Stone on Aug. 6, "The collapse of the working-class family has been responsible in part for an opioid crisis that has displaced car accidents as the leading cause of death for Americans under 50. At the root of this transformation and decline lies an ever-widening chasm between Americans who have and those who have little or nothing."
The immigrant population in the United States was 9.6 million in 1965 and 14 million in 1980. It more than doubled after the IRCA was passed to a whopping 31 million in 2000, and is about 47 million today. The largest group of foreign-born immigrants hail from Mexico, followed by China, India, and the Philippines.
Let's drill down. Kammer writes: "The Latino population grew from 22 million in 1990 to 35.3 million in 2000. That growth rate was four times that of the overall U.S. population. It was fueled by a robust birth rate and major increases in both legal and illegal immigration. During the 1990s, while legal immigration continued at an average annual rate of about 900,000, illegal immigration rose by about 500,000 per year."
Farm workers' wages fell 8.7% during the 1980s while nonagricultural wages rose by 11%. In California, new immigrants took jobs away from established (legal) Latino workers, who had an unemployment rate double the national average. New immigrants were preferable because they didn't complain about pay or terrible working conditions. UC Davis professor Philip Martin reported that in the 1990s, the percentage of foreign-born unauthorized (illegal) farm workers in California rose from 10% to 50%, and their wages in 1997 and 1998 averaged $5.93 an hour. (Most workers were married with children, and agricultural work is seasonal, meaning they and their families lived in dire poverty.)
Immigrants themselves argue for restriction. Kammer quotes Reihan Salam, whose parents immigrated from Bangladesh, and who is now president of the Manhattan Institute: "High levels of low-skill immigration will make a middle-class melting pot impossible." The not-so-subtle title of his 2018 book is Melting Pot or Civil War? A Son of Immigrants Makes the Case Against Open Borders.
Yet the combined forces supporting immigration expansion were more powerful than those advocating for restriction.
Too often, policy is made from emotional angles, with little realistic projection of how things could play out.
It feels, in many sectors of life right now, like we can't amortize the errors like we used to.








"...It feels, in many sectors of life right now, like we can't amortize the errors like we used to...."
Wow. This is excellent, and probably the best summation of 21st-century America that I've ever seen.
Thank you for expressing what many Americans feel, but could never articulate.
Stephen Taylor at August 15, 2020 7:01 AM
“Too often, policy is made from emotional angles, with little realistic projection of how things could play out.
It feels, in many sectors of life right now, like we can't amortize the errors like we used to.”
Too often, an open immigration policy is a product of politicians wanting to line their pockets, and bolster their voting block rather than what is in the interests of American citizens, American workers, and American culture.
There has never been anything high minded about it. Just grubby greed.
Isab at August 15, 2020 8:15 AM
That's because the errors compound and build upon one another, becoming the baseline for a new set of errors.
And it's not just the US. Every civilizational collapse can be traced to a steady decline, usually compounded over time and built upon earlier missteps.
Conan the Grammarian at August 15, 2020 8:30 AM
When the free and prosperous United States that we have known is no more (which is coming sooner rather than later), historians (if any still legally exist) will identify the Immigration and Naturalization Act of 1965 as the tipping point -- the beginning of the end of "e pluribus unum" and the rise of "e unum pluribus".
Over human history, diversity + proximity = conflict. Allowing in more immigrants from foreign cultures faster than they can be assimilated into the host culture is a recipe for disaster -- you don't have immigration, you have invasion.
As Joni Mitchell sang, "You don't know what you've got 'till it's gone." Our "paradise" is rapidly turning into a "parking lot", and there may be no going back at this point.
Jay R at August 15, 2020 3:23 PM
Sadly, I think you're right. Immigration wasn't the issue, assimilation was. Not only did we fail to assimilate new immigrants, we stopped trying. To insist they adopt our culture was to treat theirs as inferior; to deny the validity of theirs.
We failed to defend our own culture since we had begun looking upon other cultures as superior; at the least, equally valid. We fell in love with other cultures: Native American, African, Indian, etc. What was an inconvenient truth about them or what we truly didn't understand, we dismissed or covered up with a pseudo-cultural mish-mash - e.g., yoga. We thought it made us worldly.
Conan the Grammarian at August 15, 2020 4:22 PM
So if there are too many immigrants (most of whom are not elderly), why do some politicians still push American citizens to have more babies than they want or can afford?
Somehow, I doubt they do that just for the purpose of arguing, in the future, that there isn't enough room for immigrants. That wouldn't be very practical - and it would take too long anyway.
Lenona at August 15, 2020 5:40 PM
“So if there are too many immigrants (most of whom are not elderly), why do some politicians still push American citizens to have more babies than they want or can afford?“
Who would these politicians be? Inquiring Minds want to know.
Isab at August 15, 2020 6:12 PM
Paul Ryan, for one, in 2017. Quote:
"This is going to be the new economic challenge for America: People. . . . I did my part, but we need to have higher birth rates in this country,” he said as part of a riff on how Republicans planned to tackle entitlement reform in 2018. “We have something like a 90 percent increase in the retirement population of America but only a 19 percent increase in the working population in America. So what do we have to do? Be smarter, more efficient, more technology . . . still going to need more people."
(After all, in a have-it-all society, any couple that doesn't already have children typically SHOULDN'T be having children, whether for economic reasons or other reasons. But he couldn't be bothered to address that.)
Lenona at August 15, 2020 7:30 PM
Boy, Lenona, your definition of *pushing* sure the heck isn’t the same as mine.
I’m not against immigration, I just want it legal, and from areas of the world which have an understanding of the rule of law, and how a republic operates.
Isab at August 15, 2020 7:48 PM
And here's another:
And, from ThinkProgress, in Dec. 2017:
...Ryan isn’t alone among male Wisconsin Republicans in believing that women should have more babies for the good of the economy. On the floor of the Wisconsin State Assembly last month, Wisconsin state Rep. Scott Allen (R) argued on behalf of a bill that would prevent health insurance plans for state employees from covering most abortions, saying more births are needed to spur economic growth.
“Labor force shortages are tied to population declines. Labor force shortages are a limiting factor in economic growth,” Allen said. “And limited economic growth poses a problem when government tries to pay for public services and infrastructure. In spite of this Mr. Speaker, ironically, the Democrats continue their effort to support the abortion industry.”
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As if any woman has an abortion for the fun of it. Women who have had them very often couldn't afford more than one contraceptive at a time - and even the Pill needs a backup, for those who don't know. Women who can't use hormonal methods may well have to use THREE contraceptives at once. If a woman can't afford safe, reliable contraception, how can she afford a baby?
Lenona at August 15, 2020 8:28 PM
Plus Rick Santorum, who, last I heard, has never been friendly to the very EXISTENCE of contraception. Contraception doesn't just keep 20-year-old people out of poverty. Couples with children also use it, after all.
Lenona at August 15, 2020 8:38 PM
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