Colson claims removing illegal immigrants would be a death blow to our economy.
http://www.breakpoint.org/listingarticle.asp?ID=2073
Americans have witnessed over the past two days the largest public protest since the Vietnam War: millions marching to protest Congress's failure last week to enact immigration reform. So many immigrants left their jobs to parade that many businesses in major cities were shut down.
The immigration issue is a classic illustration of the irresistible force meeting the immovable object. The immovable object is, of course, the need to uphold the rule of law in dealing with immigration. But the irresistible force is the economy. Removing all the illegal immigrants in our society would deal a death blow to our economy. This is going to take a Solomonesque solution, something Congress is not very often able to provide.
Look at the economy first: If you could find and deport every undocumented alien in America, you would go to the grocery store next week and find the shelves bare. Without immigrant workers, we could not harvest crops. Just as happened yesterday, service industries everywhere would be shut down. With unemployment at a five-year low of 4.7 percent and with 200,000 new jobs added to the economy last month, there is simply a shortage of workers in much of America.
http://www.breakpoint.org/listingarticle.asp?ID=2073
Americans have witnessed over the past two days the largest public protest since the Vietnam War: millions marching to protest Congress's failure last week to enact immigration reform. So many immigrants left their jobs to parade that many businesses in major cities were shut down.
The immigration issue is a classic illustration of the irresistible force meeting the immovable object. The immovable object is, of course, the need to uphold the rule of law in dealing with immigration. But the irresistible force is the economy. Removing all the illegal immigrants in our society would deal a death blow to our economy. This is going to take a Solomonesque solution, something Congress is not very often able to provide.
Look at the economy first: If you could find and deport every undocumented alien in America, you would go to the grocery store next week and find the shelves bare. Without immigrant workers, we could not harvest crops. Just as happened yesterday, service industries everywhere would be shut down. With unemployment at a five-year low of 4.7 percent and with 200,000 new jobs added to the economy last month, there is simply a shortage of workers in much of America.