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"Hasty Call for
Amnesty" - New York Times editorial,
February 22, 2000. Excerpt:
"The primary problem with amnesties is
that they beget more illegal immigration.
Demographers trace the doubling of the number of
Mexican immigrants since 1990 in part to the
amnesty of the 1980's. Amnesties signal foreign
workers that American citizenship can be had by
sneaking across the border, or staying beyond
the term of one's visa, and hiding out until
Congress passes the next amnesty. The 1980's
amnesty also attracted a large flow of illegal
relatives of those workers who became newly
legal. All that is unfair to those who play by
the immigration rules and wait years to gain
legal admission. It is also unfair to unskilled
workers already in the United States. Between
about 1980 and 1995, the gap between the wages
of high school dropouts and all other workers
widened substantially. Prof.
George Borjas of Harvard estimates that
almost half of this trend can be traced to
immigration of unskilled workers. Illegal
immigration of unskilled workers induced by
another amnesty would make matters worse" |
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