Thursday, February 17, 2011

H.R. 629 Would Stop Chain Migration

Friends this bill would do more than any other single action to reduce overall legal and illegal immigration numbers.

That is a big claim. (I will come back to you at another time on why stopping legal Chain Migration would also stop a lot of illegal immigration.) But I will tell you that this bill is NumbersUSA's No. 1 legislative goal. And it has been No. 1 with us since we formed in 1996.

NEARLY QUARTER MILLION FEWER FOREIGN WORK VISAS A YEAR

With the simple passage of this bill -- and at no expense to the federal government -- H.R. 692 would reduce the number of permanent work visas for foreign citizens by nearly a quarter million a year!

H.R. 692 would eliminate family chain categories that have been engorging the U.S. labor force with unneeded workers. These permanent work permits are handed to these relatives
without any regard to their skills
without any regard to their education
without any regard to their own humanitarian claims
without any regard to whether there is a job for them.

The Chain Migration categories are among the worst examples of an immigration system that is on auto pilot and floods the country with new workers, new users of infrastructure and new users of public services without any regard to their effect on the American people.

Under H.R. 692, recent immigrants no longer would be able to bring additional immigrants into the country
because they are:

brothers and sisters
adult children
parents

The only immigration that immigrants would be allowed to control in the future would be to bring in their spouse and minor children -- the traditional nuclear family.

There is nothing intrinsically wrong about an immigrant being able to bring siblings, parents or adult children into the country. But the numbers add up to an effect that is a profound disservice to the American taxpayer, to the American worker and to the American citizen.

FAMILY IMMIGRATION SHOULD BE LIMITED TO NUCLEAR FAMILY

H.R. 692 is named the Nuclear Family Priority Act.

Once again, it has been introduced by Rep. Phil Gingrey (R-Ga.).

This bill conforms with what polls show most American think immigration policy should do in terms of families. That is, most Americans don't think an immigrant should demand to bring his/her entire extended family once he/she has been granted the incredible opportunity to be an immigrant.

Immigrants allowed into the U.S. can visit their extended family by air travel once a year (just like many Americans do with relatives that live in other states) or more. They can communicate with their extended family daily by phone and hourly by internet and other social media. Their extended family can come to the U.S. to visit them.

But immigrants should NOT feel entitled to put large extended families on waiting lists to get permanent U.S. work permits.

BILL IS HUMANE FOR TREATMENT OF PARENTS

Until 1959, immigrants weren't allowed to send for parents, adult children or siblings.

But Rep. Gingrey's H.R. 692 provides a major humane offer to immigrants who want to care for their aging parents over extended periods.

H.R. 692 allows immigrants to bring their parents to the U.S. on VISITOR visas that can last as long as 5 years, and can be renewed.

But unlike current conditions, H.R. 692 imposes these conditions on parents:

Parents are not immigrants and cannot become U.S. citizens

Parents wouldn't be able to petition for other relatives to immigrate

Parents wouldn't be allowed to use taxpayer-supported public services

Parents' health care would have to be fully provided by their naturalized U.S. citizen children

Parents wouldn't be allowed to hold a U.S. job.

Violation of the restrictions would result in parents being sent home.

But the bottom line would be nearly a quarter million fewer new immigrants each year to be competing for jobs and competing for public services and demanding more physical infrastructure and requiring vast new amounts of natural habitat to provide for their residence, work, recreation, etc.

Comment: 

Another step in the right direction, however, I don't feel it goes far enough.  For one thing, immigration has gotten so out of control in the past 20 years, that we need time for things to become rebalanced.  I'd like to see ALL immigration stopped for ten years.  I'll settle for five, but I'd prefer ten.  Once things are under control again, then we can talk about limited immigration under certain circumstances.  But the main thing is to stop the flow of immigrants from Turd World Countries, or else we'll all be sucked into an immigration blackhole and become a permanent Third World Country ourselves.  In many ways, we already have.  But it's still not too late.  There is one way back:  National Socialism.  It worked once, it can work again.  But we'll all have to work our asses off to see it come to pass.  It won't happen without us.

Dan Schruender  88! 

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