Archive for February, 2017

MSU prof says wall won’t slow illegal immigration – Mankato Free Press

MANKATO Business groups' push for immigration reform and welcoming immigrants (see related story) comes against a backdrop of immigration protests in the U.S. and fear and uncertainty in other countries.

James Dimock, a communications professor at Minnesota State University, has for years led student trips to Columbia, Nicaragua, Cuba and Mexico. The most recent 10-day trip was in Mexico last month at the time President Trump's travel ban was announced.

"Generally the feeling was they were very, very concerned about what was going to happen."

He doesn't believe the flow of illegal immigrants will be slowed by deportations or a border wall.

"There's a myth about why people migrate. They're leaving friends, family, food, their comfort zone to go to a placed they'll often be treated hostilely. But they're doing it because of the need they have for their family," he said.

"A wall will make it more difficult but it will just make corruption more potent, it won't slow that flow of people. If someone can be bribed to lift a crossing gate they will be bribed to find another way across. It's not a physical barrier we're fighting but financial and corruption. If they can't support their families they will keep coming."

Dimock said that with 40 percent or more of the Mexican population in poverty, the ability of family members to work in the U.S. and send money (remittances) home is their lifeline. Mexican families take in $25 billion annually in remittances.

"Remittances are in the top three sources of revenue for the states and country. If they were to lose or inhibit that remittance money they'd be devastated. The government has no mechanism to address poverty," he said. Cutting into those remittances, he said, will only make people more desperate to get into the U.S. illegally. "It's a rational decision they're making."

He said the Mexicans he meets, mostly farmers, miners, activists and rural village residents, are hostile to NAFTA. The agreement, he said, flooded Mexico with cheap U.S. corn, decimating some 2 million farmers there who left their land but often found no other living, sending many of them to the U.S.

He said those people would welcome a renegotiated NAFTA, but he thinks if NAFTA is radically altered with no good replacement, corn exports from the U.S. would dry up. "There would be starvation."

He said Mexicans also despise NAFTA because American farmers and agribusiness are heavily subsidized by the government, allowing for the cheaper grain and other farm products to be sold to Mexico, while Mexican farmers receive little or no support.

Finally, he said a portion of the NAFTA agreement, called the Mrida Initiative, aimed at combating drug production and smuggling from Mexico, has harmed many Mexicans with no drug connections. The initiative, launched during the Bush administration, was funded with a $2.5 billion appropriation from Congress. American companies, Dimock said, thought it would bring a level of law and order in Mexico, allowing them to do business there more easily.

"There's been no decline in drugs flowing across the border from Mexico since it went into effect. Heroin and coke has increased since then and the quality of it has increased."

He said the funding prompted the militarization of police forces all over Mexico, forces that he said often turn on Mexicans who protest or take on local governments or businesses.

"A lot of Mexicans have just disappeared. They're last seen with someone from the government and then they're never heard from again."

Follow Tim Krohn on Twitter @TimKrohn

Continued here:
MSU prof says wall won't slow illegal immigration - Mankato Free Press

Illegal Immigrant Is Suspect Behind Connecticut Amber Alert – Townhall

You may have seen an Amber Alert on Fridaydetailing that a 6-year-old girl had been abducted by her fatherfrom her home inBridgeport, Connecticut and her mother had been stabbed and killed, while another woman suffered injuries. Police chased down the subject and caught him onInterstate 99 in Benner Township, Pennsylvania.The little girl suffered minor injuries in the pursuit.The suspect, Oscar Hernandez,is an illegal immigrant. Worse, he had been previously deported.

Federal immigration officials said Hernandez is a citizen of El Salvador and had been previously deported on Nov. 27, 2013. He has prior felony convictions including assault and threatening. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement had placed a detainer on him, an agency spokesman said in a statement.

Despite such horrid crimes, several cities (and nowstates) are seeking sanctuary status to harbor illegal immigrants like Hernandez.

Last week, during an immigration town hall hosted by Fox News' "First One Hundred Days", "Angel Mom" Laura Wilkerson explained how her son had been brutally murdered by an illegal immigrant. In heremotional account, she demanded sanctuary cities be abolished because "no one gets sanctuary from the law."

Perez Tells Trump He's Going to Be His 'Worst Nightmare'...Even Democrats Snicker

Suspect in Custody in New Orleans Parade Crash

See the original post here:
Illegal Immigrant Is Suspect Behind Connecticut Amber Alert - Townhall

CIS: If A Border Wall Could Cut Illegal Immigration By Only 10%, It Would Pay For Itself – VDARE.com

Among those who oppose a border wall/fence/barrier, one argument is that it would be too expensive.

I would guess that some of these people arent normally concerned about the government spending money, but in the defense of the illegal invasion, any argument will do.

To counter this argument, the Center for Immigration Studies now has a useful study available on its website. Its entitled The Cost of a Border Wall vs. the Cost of Illegal Immigration. Its by CIS numbers man Steven A. Camarota (February 2017) and it successfully deals with the expense argument.

Camarotas argument is that, economically, illegal aliens are a net lifetime drain on the U.S. government budget. Therefore, any wall or barrier, even if it stopped only about 10% of them, would already pay for itself!

This goes against the conventional wisdom that illegal aliens are a great boon to our economy and that we couldnt make it without them. But Camarota, using data from the (NAS) National Academy of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine demonstrates that the numbers dont show that.

Heres how the article begins:

The findings of this analysis show that if a border wall stopped a small fraction of the illegal immigrants who are expected to come in the next decade, the fiscal savings from having fewer illegal immigrants in the country would be sufficient to cover the costs of the wall. This analysis takes the likely education level of illegal border-crossers and applies fiscal estimates developed by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NAS) for immigrants by education level. NAS calculates the future fiscal balance immigrants create taxes paid minus costs. NAS reports fiscal balances as net present values, which places a lower value on future expenditures than on current expenditures. Based on the NAS data, illegal border-crossers create an average fiscal burden of approximately $74,722 during their lifetimes, excluding any costs for their U.S.-born children. If a border wall stopped between 160,000 and 200,000 illegal crossers 9 to 12 percent of those expected to successfully cross in the next decade the fiscal savings would equal the $12 to $15 billion cost of the wall.

So illegal aliens, though touted to be great economic contributors, are actual net economic drains, because of their lower levels of education. Here are the basic calculations Camarota uses to prove his point:

In his usual thoroughgoing way, Camarota goes though various ways to crunch the data, with both higher and lower estimates. But the calculations always arrive to the same conclusion illegal aliens are an economic drain to the budget and thus even a partially successful border wall would be worth the money.

Its important to know this, and to point out as part of the debate that 1) Illegal immigration is a net drain to our economy, and 2)Even a not-very-successful wall would be an improvement and pay for itself.

Just imagine what a very successful wall coupled with better internal enforcement would do!

Excerpt from:
CIS: If A Border Wall Could Cut Illegal Immigration By Only 10%, It Would Pay For Itself - VDARE.com

Mike Pence Blames Recent Town Hall Unrest on Liberal …

Please enable Javascript to watch.

On Wednesday, Vice PresidentMike Pence continued the narrative thats been coming from the conservatives in recent weeks during a speech in the St. Louis suburb ofFenton, Missouri. Speaking at the headquarters of Fabrick Cat, a manufacturer of construction vehicles, Pence insisted that the pro-Affordable Care Act/Obamacare stories being told at town hall events arent legitimate.The nightmare of ObamaCare is about to end, he said. Despite the best efforts of liberal activists at town halls around the country, ObamaCare has failed and it has got to go.

That same day, White House press secretary Sean Spicer gave a more tempered version of the same message, saying that Theres a hybrid there: I think some people are clearly upset, but there is a bit of professional protester, manufactured base in there. On Tuesday, PresidentDonald Trumptweeted the more harsh assessment, putting Pence in lockstep with him:

Also on Wednesday, though, Rep. Mark Sanford (R-South Carolina) went onCNN and pushed back against the idea of the pro-ACA town hall denizens being paid protesters:

[image via screengrab]

Have a tip we should know? tips@mediaite.com

Original post:
Mike Pence Blames Recent Town Hall Unrest on Liberal ...

Is this what Mike Pence wanted all along? – The Boston Globe

Vice President Mike Pence.

Think its difficult working among the ranks in the Trump administration? Try being Mike Pence.

The vice president has proven himself to be a loyal lieutenant to Trump, standing by his side through some of the most tumultuous times any commander in chief has faced. And for all that loyalty, he likely receives little advance notice ahead of the presidents early morning Twitter tirades.

Advertisement

Pence is simply and smartly putting his head down as much as he can, said Brian Howey, who has reported on Pence for decades for his newsletter, Howey Politics Indiana. About 40 to 45 percent of Republicans back home in Pences Indiana think that things are so crazy that he could be president in this term, and so Pence isnt going to do anything to screw that up.

After a month on the national stage, Pence is finding his way around his new political reality much like his boss. But during the first 30 days, Pence has been lied to by the nations top security adviser and then he repeated the lie on national television.

Get Fast Forward in your inbox:

Forget yesterday's news. Get what you need today in this early-morning email.

Further, when the president found out that Pence was lied to, he didnt inform his No. 2 for over a week. Trump told Pence moments before the whole world would know.

Vice President Mike Pence says the US has what could be a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to install conservative solutions to the nations problems.

Pence, a social conservative, had to like what he saw in the Trump administrations withdrawal of Obama-sanctioned protections for transgender students in public schools (however there is no evidence he personally pushed for it).

Adding to some of these insults is the shifting political landscape in Indiana. Republicans remain in charge of state government, but they are quickly trying to unravel Pences legacy.

Advertisement

Governor Eric Holcomb, Pences lieutenant governor and handpicked successor, quickly canceled a massive cell tower contract touted by Pence. Holcomb issued a pardon for a man many felt was wrongly convicted 20 years ago (Pence had refused to do so).

In addition, Holcomb declared a state of emergency in East Chicago over water contamination issues, something else Pence had declined to do.

And it is not just Holcomb. The Republican-controlled Legislature also overturned two of Pences vetoes, one on a 93-to-2 vote.

But does any of that matter to Pence now? Local Republicans say probably not.

I have known Mike Pence for three decades, and if you think that he is nothing but happier than a pig in slop right now, you are wrong, said Rex Early, a longtime Republican strategist who chaired Trumps campaign in Indiana. What Pence always wanted is a spot at the national stage.

Early may have a point about Pence being like a pig in slop.

Howey, the Indiana political expert, said the only way he and his colleagues understood most of the moves Pence made as governor was in the context of his national ambitions.

Pence was a hard-line conservative on fiscal and social issues, Howey said, so as to not cede any position on the right in a Republican presidential primary in the future. Years before Trump was even a presidential candidate, Pence was already speaking in New Hampshire at a major county Republican dinner.

Pence may have even run in 2016 if the states Religious Freedom Restoration Act had not gone over so poorly in 2015. He was forced to repeal the law, and instead of running for president, Pence would have faced even odds that he would be reelected last year.

Pence knew what he was getting into by signing up with Trump, said Amy Walter, a nonpartisan national political analyst with the Cook Political Report. Pence is not some naive politician now shocked by it all. This is what he wanted in a way.

Inside the White House, Pence is not within the team of four strategists that reportedly have the most access to Trump namely Stephen Bannon, Reince Priebus, Kellyanne Conway, and Jared Kushner.

Walter noted that, at the same time, it is Pence who has the task of soothing congressional and world leaders after something Trump has said.

His message to them is that everything is going to be OK, Pence is here and on it, Walter said. This puts him in the thick of it.

Pence may also be thinking about the future. In the first month, he has had lunch with former New Hampshire governor John H. Sununu, talked with current New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu about right-to-work legislation, and has appeared three times at events with US Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina.

What do all three men have in common? They hail from the states that are among the first on the presidential nominating calendar.

Continue reading here:
Is this what Mike Pence wanted all along? - The Boston Globe