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About the Moderators' recent efforts on the Illegal Alien threads: keep an open mind
January 7th, 2003 | Sabertooth

Posted on 01/07/2004 7:22:57 AM PST by Sabertooth

Edited on 01/07/2004 10:46:05 AM PST by Lead Moderator. [history]

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To: Publius6961
  1. The total number of immigrants per year (including illegal and refugees) is somewhat less than it was in the peak years at the start of the 20th century, when the US population was less half as large its current population. The rate of immigration relative to the population is low rather than high. Immigration as a proportion of population is about a third of what is was in the peak years in the early part of the 20th century..
  2. In the early part to of the 20th century (1910-1920) the major debate in politics was that immigrants form southern Europe were going to destroy this country.  Those sneaky "I"talians and the dirty Irishman would bring this country to ruination. It seems the hatred has shifted to immigrants from Mexico?
  3. The U.S. government has forecast a shortage of 20 million workers by 2026 due to the aging baby boom and job growth.  Under the conditions that we now confront, we should be very carefully focused on the contribution which skilled people from abroad, (as well as) unskilled people from abroad, can contribute to this country, as they have for generation after generation.
  4. By the year 2050 according to Census projections racial and ethnic minorities will outnumber non-Hispanic whites. In the next fifty years this demographic shift will transform politics and business.  If us conservatives  lose the Hispanic vote, then we lose the nation.
  5. In the last decade hi tech professional immigrants have made extraordinary contributions to cutting edge US industries. It is estimated that almost one quarter of Silicon valley firms were established by immigrants. 
  6. Businesses founded by immigrants are a source of substantial economic and fiscal gain for U.S. citizens. Ten high-tech firms founded by immigrants (Intel, Sun Microsystems, Computer Associates, Solectron Lam Research, LSI Logic, AST Computer, Wang Laboratories, Amtel, Gupta Technologies, and Cypress Semiconductor) generated $32 billion in revenues in 2002. These and other businesses started by immigrants add at least another $29 billion to the total amount of taxes paid by immigrants.
  7. Immigrant entrepreneurs have revitalized neighborhood; from Dominicans in Manhattan's Washington Heights to Cubans in Miami's Little Havana, Hispanic immigrants have transformed their communities into thriving economically dynamic strongholds.  Of particular note is the resurgence of small business, which thirty years ago was in decay. Several researchers have suggested that immigration has encouraged the entrepreneurial drive of the total population, significantly contributing to this transformation.
  8. The average education of new immigrants has been increasing with each successive generation. The proportion of adult immigrants with 8 or fewer years of education has been decreasing and the proportion of adult immigrants with 16 years or more has been increasing. The proportion of immigrants with bachelor 's or postgraduate degrees is much higher than the proportion of the native labor force.
  9. Illegal aliens contribute about as much to the public coffers in taxes as they receive in benefits. New data suggests the undocumented pay about 46 percent as much in taxes as do natives, but use about 45 percent as much in services. A poll of the most respected economists found a consensus that both legal and illegal immigrants are beneficial economically.  However overall immigrants fare well in terms of income with adult, foreign-born, naturalized citizens actually have higher adjusted gross incomes (averaging $40,502) than families with U.S.-born citizens only ($35,249).  There goes the low wage myth.
  10. Most immigrants arrive in the United States in the prime of their working years. More than 70 percent of immigrants are over the age of 18 when they arrive in the United States. That means there are roughly 17.5 million immigrants in the United States today whose education and upbringing were paid for by the citizens of the sending country, not American taxpayers. The windfall to the United States of obtaining this human capital at no expense to American taxpayers is roughly $1.43 trillion. This makes immigrants a fiscal bargain for our country.

381 posted on 01/08/2004 8:46:27 AM PST by BushCountry (To the last, I will grapple with Democrats. For hate's sake, I spit my last breath at Liberals.)
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To: Publius6961
The above information is to help alviate your ignorance in regards to both illegal and legal immigration. There is nothing pointless about the information, just your inability to accept.
382 posted on 01/08/2004 8:48:51 AM PST by BushCountry (To the last, I will grapple with Democrats. For hate's sake, I spit my last breath at Liberals.)
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To: Sabertooth; Lead Moderator; Poohbah
Well, Sabertooth, I have to wonder a bit.

First you post an evasive answer to a very simple question asking if a comment was within the bounds of civil discourse. A comment which should, in my opinion, get a poster banned from this forum.

Then when Poohbah confronts you about the evasive answer, your response is not to clarify, you instead accuse me of playing a "gotcha game" in Post 266 - a tactic reminiscent of Bill Clinton attacking his accusers.

If you will not condemn stuff that crosses the bounds, then I have no choice but to assume that you do not have a problem with it being part of the political dialogue and for it to be associated with conservatives and who are opposed to illegal immigration. I happen to have a problem with that attitude. That attitude is one of the primary reasons my views on immigration have evolved to strong support the Wall Street Journal's position on this issue from a pro-restriction posture.

You cannot have it both ways, Sabertooth. You cannot call for civility on this, and then try to sweep ugly comments under the rug, and I think you are trying to do that with regard to Sam Francis. Continued efforts to do so will force me to assume the worst, and that will be reflected in my posts.

So, I ask again, and ask for a yes or no answer, and you can feel free to elaborate as to why you give the answer you are giving:
Are the comments by Sam Francis at the May, 1994 conference of American Renaissance quoted by David Frum in National Review within the bounds of civility?
383 posted on 01/08/2004 8:51:40 AM PST by hchutch (Why did the Nazgul run from Arwen's flash flood? All they managed to do was to end up dying tired.)
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To: Lead Moderator
"So, when did you stop beating your wife?"

There are dozens of immigration control organizations. Sam Francis doesn't run one. I haven't seen anyone here who is concerned with controlling immigration using him as a source. The people who have been citing him are those who have long hurled accusations of racist, xenophobe, nativist, and other such epithets at anyone who calls for immigration reform.

The Brown Berets and other groups of communist thugs routinely support open borders and amnesty proposals.

http://www.fightbacknews.org/2003winter/brownberets.htm

Should the pro-pseudo-amnesty supporters be held responsible for everything their fellow travellers say? Or does Guilt By Association only flow to the right?

384 posted on 01/08/2004 9:03:09 AM PST by Pelham
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To: hchutch





Post a Sam Francis thread, and fulfill your fixation. Ping me if you like.


385 posted on 01/08/2004 9:04:06 AM PST by Sabertooth (Eighteen solutions better than any Amnesty - http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1053318/posts)
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To: Sabertooth
Stop ducking the question.

Are his remarks acceptable?
386 posted on 01/08/2004 9:09:18 AM PST by hchutch (Why did the Nazgul run from Arwen's flash flood? All they managed to do was to end up dying tired.)
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To: hchutch
After a while, refusing to answer IS an answer.
387 posted on 01/08/2004 9:13:00 AM PST by Poohbah ("Beware the fury of a patient man" -- John Dryden)
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To: mrustow; Sabertooth
The technique is to keep baiting Sabertooth with the Francis quote, in order to give the impression that he supports it. Sabertooth posted that he doesn't read Francis, so you can see that they aren't interested in debating Sabertooth's own arguments. It's a rhetorical device to get him to debate Francis' writing instead of his own. You can tell they are far more comfortable arguing against Francis than they are in debating Sabertooth.

If it turns out that there isn't much to gnaw on with Sam Francis then they'll just move on to some other writer, demanding that Sabertooth explain some other position he's never taken. It will all be wrapped up in indignant moralizing.

388 posted on 01/08/2004 9:28:37 AM PST by Pelham
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To: hchutch





http://www.freerepublic.com/perl/post_article?forum=news


389 posted on 01/08/2004 9:29:16 AM PST by Sabertooth (Eighteen solutions better than any Amnesty - http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1053318/posts)
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To: Poohbah
After a while, refusing to answer IS an answer.

What an unsurprising bit of fallacious reasoning...

A Freeper's Introduction to Rhetoric (Part 1, Introduction and the Argument From Ignorance)
      Posted by general_re
On 12/19/2003 5:46:41 AM PST with 61 comments


Introduction to Logic | Irving M. Copi & Carl Cohen
FALLACIES . . . arguments, like men, are often pretenders. — Plato It would, be a very good thing if every trick could receive some short and obviously appropriate name, so that when anyone used this or that particular trick, he could at once be reproved for it. — Arthur Schopenhauer WHAT IS A FALLACY? An argument, whatever its subject or sphere, is generally constructed in such a way as to prove that its conclusion is true. But any argument can fail to fulfill this purpose in either of two ways. One way it can fail is by assuming a...
     

Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.

Go post a Sam Francis thread, and make your case against him. Flag me, I'll be there.

Until then, your posts on this subject are rhetorical healsnapping.


390 posted on 01/08/2004 9:29:35 AM PST by Sabertooth (Eighteen solutions better than any Amnesty - http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1053318/posts)
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To: BushCountry
It's not inability, it's a conscious choice on my part.
You insist on lumping illegal immigration in the figures, I'll continue to consider the figures, and the argument, pointless.

Have a nice day.

391 posted on 01/08/2004 9:33:09 AM PST by Publius6961 (40% of Californians are as dumb as a sack of rocks.)
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To: Sabertooth; Poohbah
Again, why do you duck the question?

You keep tossing stuff out about fallacies and stuff in an effort to distract people from your failure to answer this question.

Are you afraid to take a stand on these comments? Why would that be?

Your evasiveness raises more questions than it answers.
392 posted on 01/08/2004 9:37:28 AM PST by hchutch (Why did the Nazgul run from Arwen's flash flood? All they managed to do was to end up dying tired.)
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To: hchutch; Sabertooth; Poohbah; rdb3
Are you afraid to take a stand on these comments? Why would that be?

I'm curious about that too, Saber. Please respond.

393 posted on 01/08/2004 9:57:22 AM PST by DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet (GO PACKERS!)
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To: Pelham; Sabertooth; Lead Moderator
These tactics recall communist agitators of yore breaking up their opponents' meetings. These guys are utterly incapable of debating anyone on anything. They have to lie and use the other methods I listed a ways back.

To tie in to something Sabertooth said, as much as I hate any limits on discussion, it seems that there is something even worse than straightforward censorship, and that is the censoring of certain writers, whom however one party is nevertheless permitted to use to intimidate and beat over the head their opponents.

394 posted on 01/08/2004 10:19:05 AM PST by mrustow
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To: Pelham
I am not really here (I just occasionally am checking my pager) but I will give a fast answer to that.

Let's stipulate for a hypothetical that I support open borders and some form of amnesty (both of which are not true, but for the hypothetical, let's pretend). And let's say that someone says "that puts you in the same camp as the Brown Berets". A response that I think could and should end it would be to say "I breathe air. Osama Bin Laden breathes air. That does not mean that we are allies or that I am Al Qaeda. If the Brown Berets and I agree on a particular issue, I am sure it is for very different philosophical reasons, because on almost all of their other views, such as their love of communism, they are completely out to lunch."

And if the person I was debating would later come back and say "you are just like the Brown Berets, why don't you repudiate them", then I would say "I already have, and you are now just playing gotcha games" and I would have a legitimate gripe that they are not trying to establish anything of any merit but just trying to bait and smear me.

I'm not saying this is the way everyone has to do it, but it just seems to me to be one way to handle a line of inquiry that isn't particularly difficult to parry.

395 posted on 01/08/2004 10:21:57 AM PST by Lead Moderator
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To: Poohbah
Unfortunately, the Stryker Brigade will not be that wildly successful. TheAbrams will be around until they wear out.

Perhaps when you got to the "wildly sucssful" part you might have recognised the comedy horn blairing in the distance . . .

I will include tags next time.

396 posted on 01/08/2004 10:34:11 AM PST by TLI (...........ITINERIS IMPENDEO VALHALLA..........)
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To: Sabertooth

397 posted on 01/08/2004 11:50:07 AM PST by adam_az (Be vewy vewy qwiet, I'm hunting weftists.)
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To: Rebelbase
"Bush is a neocon of the likes Ronald Regan would have spit from his mouth."

That's the funniest thing of all.

Reagan was the prototype neocon.

398 posted on 01/08/2004 1:38:51 PM PST by Luis Gonzalez (The Gift Is To See The Trout.)
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To: Columbine
"I have no doubt that Reagan might be appalled at some of the spending that's going on."

Why would he?

Reagan's spending as a percentage of GDP was significantly higher than Bush's.

399 posted on 01/08/2004 1:41:03 PM PST by Luis Gonzalez (The Gift Is To See The Trout.)
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To: Sabertooth
Why is VDARE verboten? A lot whackier stuff on FR than their views on immigration. JMHO.
400 posted on 01/08/2004 2:09:26 PM PST by WOSG (Freedom, Baby! Yeah!)
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