The Real Immigration Crisis
By Virginia Deane Abernethy, Ph.D.
The Census Bureau’s much-heralded announcement in October that the United States has reached the population milestone of 300 million is another scene in a great charade. The Census Bureau (CB), it appears, is massaging statistics, possibly in the service of policy rather than accuracy.
The CB also claims there are roughly 9 million illegal aliens in the United States, and that the U.S. population will reach 600 million by the year 2100. But can we believe these statistics? Many estimates, along with some conservative mathematical calculations, suggest that the U.S. population is already nearing 330 million, and that we could have a billion people in America by the year 2076.
Illegal Calculations
In February 2002, a Border Patrol supervisor of 27 years service testified before Congress that the number of illegal aliens was several times the Census Bureau (CB) estimate. He stated, “According to various Mexican media and official Mexican government sources, the country of Mexico has 18 million of its citizens residing illegally in the United States at this very minute.”
That is not to mention other illegals: Filipinos, Indians, Chinese, Koreans, Vietnamese, Eastern Europeans, Irish, Brazilians, Guatemalans, Hondurans, and Haitians.
Using financial and employment data, analysts for Bear Stearns Asset Management also put forth a number much higher than anything considered by the CB. They concluded in early 2004 that, “The number of illegal immigrants in the United States may be as high as 20 million people, more than double the official 9 million people estimated by the Census Bureau.”
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The Real Immigration Crisis
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