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The Case Against Immigration

Books - Thursday, November 29, 2007

Journalist Roy Beck vividly portrays the damaging effects of mass immigration on American workers and local communities. See the disastrous consequences of immigration not only for the coastal cities but for interior towns such as Storm Lake, Iowa, and Ashland, Alabama, and Garden City, Kansas, and Lexington, Nebraska. The 500% increase in immigration numbers has played an integral part in destroying middle-class occupations and turning them into minimum-wage jobs. The book describes many occupations where this has happened. It gives special attention to the way the immigration policy of Congress has reduced economic opportunity for black Americans, deepened the poverty of farm workers, destroyed the health of poultry plant employees and turned many construction, manufacturing and service jobs into "work Americans won't do."

by Roy Beck

Journalist Roy Beck vividly portrays the damaging effects of mass immigration on American workers and local communities.

See the disastrous consequences of immigration not only for the coastal cities but for interior towns such as Storm Lake, Iowa, and Ashland, Alabama, and Garden City, Kansas, and Lexington, Nebraska.

The 500% increase in immigration numbers has played an integral part in destroying middle-class occupations and turning them into minimum-wage jobs. The book describes many occupations where this has happened. It gives special attention to the way the immigration policy of Congress has reduced economic opportunity for black Americans, deepened the poverty of farm workers, destroyed the health of poultry plant employees and turned many construction, manufacturing and service jobs into "work Americans won't do."

Especially shocking is the detailed story of how immigration was used at the turn-of-the-last century to create the working conditions in the meatpacking industry described by Upton Sinclair in The Jungle — how the curtailment of immigration from 1925 to 1965 allowed those same jobs to become one of the safest and best-paid occupations in America — and how the new mass immigration has driven working conditions and wages right back to the Jungle level.

Using numerous, recent little-known studies published in top academic journals, the book shows the role of immigration in the 20-year decline in non-supervisory wages, the widening of income disparity and the squeezing of the middle class. And it provides a review of immigration history that shows that these have been the destructive effects of immigration every time in American history when the numbers have surged.

This is a book that changes people's minds and convinces the apathetic of the urgency for action.

by Roy Beck

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Fact Sheet: E-Verify

Fact Sheets - Thursday, October 22, 2009

Answers to some of the most frequently asked questions regarding E-Verify.

By Rosemary Jenks

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Immigration Laws not Being Enforced

Fact Sheets - Monday, October 12, 2009

Over the years, immigration legislation has mandated that the federal government establish safeguards within the immigration system. Repeatedly, these safeguards have been delayed or simply ignored jeopardizing the safety of Americans. This list details those laws and what the government hasn't done.

By Rosemary Jenks - Director of Government Relations

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Sen. Grassley letter to USCIS on H-1B Visa Fraud

Letters & Endorsements - Wednesday, September 30, 2009

One year after an internal assessment showed extensive fraud and abuse in the H-1B visa program, Senator Chuck Grassley is asking U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services to hold employers accountable by requesting evidence from petitioners that H-1B visa holders actually have a job waiting for them in the United States.

Sen. Chuck Grassley

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Homeland security chief predicts bipartisan progress on immigration

Letters & Endorsements - Thursday, August 27, 2009

She did not say when a bill would ultimately be considered. At present, Congress and the White House are consumed with health care reform. So, she said, changes to the national immigration policy are probably down the road -- though she has had met with Schumer on the issue.

“There is a bipartisan recognition that the current law is outdated and needs to be brought up to date with our current needs,” she said.

By Gromer Jeffers - The Dallas Morning News

http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/latestnews/stories/082709dnmetnapolitano.120b122aa.html

NumbersUSA Endorsement of Rep. Shuler's SAVE Act

Letters & Endorsements - Thursday, July 23, 2009

On July 23, 2009, Congressman Heath Shuler (D-N.C.) introduced the SAVE Act which is a comprehensive immigration enforcement bill that would strengthen border security, interior enforcement and workplace enforcement.

By Roy Beck

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NumbersUSA Endorsement of Sen. Pryor's SAVE Act

Letters & Endorsements - Thursday, July 23, 2009

On July 23, 2009, Senator Mark Pryor (D-Ark.) introduced the SAVE Act which is a comprehensive immigration enforcement bill that would strengthen border security, interior enforcement and workplace enforcement.

By Roy Beck

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Chain Migration Chart

Fact Sheets - Monday, July 6, 2009

Chart depicting Chain Migration under current United States law. (2009)

By Rosemary Jenks

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Clear Act 2009 summary

Fact Sheets - Thursday, June 4, 2009

Clear Act 2009 summary

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Clear Act 2009 Two-pager

Fact Sheets - Thursday, June 4, 2009

Clear Act 2009 two-pager

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