ETFOptimize | High-performance ETF-based Investment Strategies

Quantitative strategies, Wall Street-caliber research, and insightful market analysis since 1998.


ETFOptimize | HOME
Close Window

Texas’ new immigration statutes are common sense, not racist

Texas recently passed legislation that would allow local law enforcement officers to arrest foreign nationals for having unlawfully entered the U.S. Critics call these commonsense laws racist.

For the last two years, the state of Texas has been awash in illegal aliens. And because the Biden administration’s overriding immigration policy goal is complete erasure of the border with Mexico, the Lone Star State has been wholly unable to turn to the federal government for assistance. 

Accordingly, the Texas legislature recently passed legislation that would allow local law enforcement officers to arrest foreign nationals for having unlawfully entered the United States.

The ink was barely dry on the new laws when mainstream media outlets began crying, "Racism!" According to a headline featured by U.K. news outlet The Guardian, "Texas Legislators Pass Hardline Immigration Bill Denounced as Racist." According to Spectrum News, the American Civil Liberties Union plans to sue, claiming that the new legislation "fuels racial profiling and harassment."

Accusations of racism are nothing new in the immigration sphere. Anti-borders advocates want the public to believe that U.S. immigration policies favor European Caucasians and discriminate against so-called "Black and Brown folk." But this is an inherently stupid claim and nothing could be further from the truth. 

TEXAS GETS MAJOR WIN IN BATTLE TO SECURE BORDER DESPITE BIDEN ADMIN'S ATTEMPTS TO STOP IT

To begin with, migrants aren’t a race. They come from every corner of the globe and from every racial, ethnic and religious background found on Earth. Migrants, taken as a group, might include Irish, Africans and Asians – none of whom share a common racial background. Therefore, unless one dislike’s the human race generally, it’s not possible to be racist against immigrants. 

Moreover, the vast majority of people immigrating to the United States over the last four decades have been neither Caucasian nor from a European background. Per Pew Research, Asians (28%), Mexicans (25%) and other Latin Americans (25%) each make up about a quarter of the U.S. immigrant population, followed by 9% who were born in another region. 

Those statistics hardly paint a picture of U.S. immigration policies designed to facilitate the perpetuation of a predominantly White, Western Europe-dominated America.

And while the immigration population headed for the U.S.-Mexico border is changing, it is hardly starting to mirror the demographics of Andy Griffith’s Mayberry R.F.D. In fact, the National Institute of Migration says that citizens from 103 countries have passed through Mexico on their way to the United States. 

That included four Swiss nationals, 39 Kyrgyzstanis, 345 Afghanis, 738 Chinese and one Singaporean, along with myriad Africans and the usual assortment of Latin Americans. Meanwhile, there’s been an astounding 500% increase in the number of Indian nationals attempting to enter the United States by sneaking in from Mexico. 

Given that voluminous data, why do claims that all immigration restrictions are racist persist? 

MIGRANTS DISRUPT COMMERCIAL OPERATIONS AT TEXAS BORDER PORT

America has lost control of its borders. Those who benefit from unchecked mass migration want to distract attention from any kind of honest debate about its negative effects. They don’t want responsible, well-informed people discussing the connections between porous borders and things like increased crime, unemployment and housing shortages. 

So anti-borders advocates instead take the coward’s way out, resorting to deliberate attempts to inhibit consideration of the real questions at issue by claiming that any immigration policies they dislike are "racist." After all, accusations of racism are the quickest way to end meaningful debate in American politics today.

Simply put, there’s nothing in Texas’ new laws that would indicate the state wants the Swiss but would prefer to keep out the Chinese and the Afghanis. Texas’ issue with the migrants isn’t a racial one, it’s one of nationality. 

Citizens of other nations have no right to enter America without the permission of the U.S. government. Congress has set strict limits on who may, or may not, be admitted to the United States. And the Biden administration has chosen to disregard those limits without ever having asked Congress to change the statutes that put those restrictions in place. 

CLICK HERE FOR MORE FOX NEWS OPINION

Ultimately, Team Biden’s refusal to abide by the terms of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA, places American sovereignty, public safety and national security at risk. Texas’ concern isn’t with keeping out migrants of any particular race. It is with ensuring that any migrants who are let into the U.S. are admitted in accordance with the INA, after proper vetting and screening.

Texas is merely attempting to employ the principles of constitutional federalism to assume important safety and security functions that the federal government has willfully abandoned. And it is doing so in order to protect all Texans, of any race, color or creed. In the end, there is absolutely nothing that is less racist than that.

Data & News supplied by www.cloudquote.io
Stock quotes supplied by Barchart
Quotes delayed at least 20 minutes.
By accessing this page, you agree to the following
Privacy Policy and Terms and Conditions.


 

IntelligentValue Home
Close Window

DISCLAIMER

All content herein is issued solely for informational purposes and is not to be construed as an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy, nor should it be interpreted as a recommendation to buy, hold or sell (short or otherwise) any security.  All opinions, analyses, and information included herein are based on sources believed to be reliable, but no representation or warranty of any kind, expressed or implied, is made including but not limited to any representation or warranty concerning accuracy, completeness, correctness, timeliness or appropriateness. We undertake no obligation to update such opinions, analysis or information. You should independently verify all information contained on this website. Some information is based on analysis of past performance or hypothetical performance results, which have inherent limitations. We make no representation that any particular equity or strategy will or is likely to achieve profits or losses similar to those shown. Shareholders, employees, writers, contractors, and affiliates associated with ETFOptimize.com may have ownership positions in the securities that are mentioned. If you are not sure if ETFs, algorithmic investing, or a particular investment is right for you, you are urged to consult with a Registered Investment Advisor (RIA). Neither this website nor anyone associated with producing its content are Registered Investment Advisors, and no attempt is made herein to substitute for personalized, professional investment advice. Neither ETFOptimize.com, Global Alpha Investments, Inc., nor its employees, service providers, associates, or affiliates are responsible for any investment losses you may incur as a result of using the information provided herein. Remember that past investment returns may not be indicative of future returns.

Copyright © 1998-2017 ETFOptimize.com, a publication of Optimized Investments, Inc. All rights reserved.