During the Great Depression, unemployment reached 35% from 5% in
1929. The lack of jobs caused Congress
to curtail immigration in the 1930s.
Immigrants were required to have “sponsors”, who would support them
until they could become employed. These
were often relatives of the immigrants.
Immigration had been limited to 3% and then 2% based on the US
population by country of origin. US
immigration policy was based on the need for labor.
Early 1900's US
Immigration Flow
|
8,795,386
immigrants arrive in the US
|
|
|
5,735,811
immigrants arrived in the US
|
|
|
4,107,209
immigrants arrived in the US
|
|
|
532,431 immigrants
arrived in the US (massive fall due to the Great Depression)
|
|
Immigration
remained restricted throughout the 1940s. Immigration from the 1950s to 1989
varied from 200 thousand a year to 300 thousand a year. These included H1B degreed engineers and
seasonal agricultural workers.
In 1989,
US immigration doubled from 500,000 to over 1 million and remained over 1
million for the past 27 years. In many of these years, immigration reached 2
million and 3 million a year. Illegal
immigration delivered up to 30 million illegals over the period. The Jobs Recession that started in 2008 is
the result of excessive immigration, NAFTA and other bad trade agreements and
the election of Obama in 2008 and 2012.
There are
94 million working-age US citizens who do not have jobs. Our current economy cannot even support the
1.8 million new grads we have each year.
If we froze all immigration, it would take 25 years to allow half of
these US citizens to secure employment.
In 2000,
our National Debt was $5 trillion and federal revenue was $2 trillion. Now our National Debt is approaching $20
trillion and federal revenue is $4 trillion.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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