Here's a trifecta of ways to boost this Back of the Hiring Line review column!
Let's take a quick break from the House of Representative's action today to increase green cards and give away more professional jobs to foreign workers. (Don't worry, we'll have information on how the House vote turns out later today... and thank you all for your activism to stop the bill.)
Mark Krikorian's review of NumbersUSA president Roy Beck's "Back of the Hiring Line" book is out, and has been published in three publications. Each of them has different possible ways for you to engage the piece, although all of them are easy to simply share on social media
The New York Post doesn't have a comments section, but they did Tweet a link to the piece out. You can join the conversation on Twitter if you have an account.
"Beck's core message is that a tight labor market is the most practical means to improve the conditions of all marginalized Americans, non-college-educated black workers most of all. The brief immigration pause forced by World War I was 'proof of concept,' with the absence of European immigrant workers sparking a huge northward migration of black southerners.
With mass immigration surging back as shipping lanes reopened after the war, Congress reduced the flow via the Immigration Act of 1924. Given that the law was partly shaped by the racialist hokum that was the style at the time, it is ironic that it became the single greatest engine of black progress in American history."
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In National Review (where Krikorian's piece first appeared), there is a comments section for subscribers only. The New York Times and (recently) The Washington Post also have these subscriber-only comments sections, which has resulted in the comments being a lot more likely to be read by writers at these publications and have an impact.
"Every group of disadvantaged Americans is further disadvantaged by loosening the labor market, and every group is helped by tightening it."
Comment on National Review (subs. req.) |
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Also, the Center for Immigration Studies, which Krikorian is the head of, published part of the piece on their site. If you are not able to engage via Twitter or National Review's subscriber comments, but still wish to sound off, the CIS comments section can be used by anyone with a Facebook account. Lay down your marker!
"But realignment is in the air. The impressive economic gains enjoyed by black families during the brief pre-pandemic immigration slowdown under Donald Trump are another proof of concept of the beneficial effects of immigration restriction. Beck's book provides both the backstory and a roadmap for such a realignment."
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The open border elites, their corporate lobbyists, and progressives who care more about the global working class than the American working class absolutely hate this book and this issue. Make sure they continue to lose ground because they can't avoid confronting it. Take 5 minutes and spread the word, please!
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