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Podcast
Why Have Immigration Laws?
Host: Mark Krikorian
Guest: Kent Lundgren
Parsing Immigration Policy, Episode 64
Commentary
Are Democrat Mayors Really Just Now Waking Up to the Greatest Mass Migration Border Crisis in US History?
By Todd Bensman
Townhall, July 25, 2022
Excerpt: City mayors are probably not the only local leaders publicly or silently fulminating about huge new burdens, and certainly not about how their homeless shelters are overflowing with destitute immigrants that Joe Biden has admitted. School district superintendents should already have noticed a need for expensive portable classrooms to handle influxes of illegal immigrant children, who make up a significant portion of those Biden has admitted. Parents with kids in school across America will notice bond elections and higher tax rates to pay for new schools and expansions and English As a Second Language teachers. Hospital administrators should have noticed by now emergency room backlogs and operation deficits.
Featured Blog Posts
The August Column that Foretold Biden’s Border Policy
By Andrew R. Arthur
The threat of such a post-Title 42 surge heightened voters’ concerns about illegal immigration in late April; the real thing would likely tank Biden’s already anemic approval ratings. If the administration is allowed to end Title 42 by the fall, the resulting human border tsunami would likely spell a Democratic congressional wipe-out.

Can Asylum Seekers Relocate to Safety Within Their Home Countries?
By Elizabeth Jacobs
You're not eligible for asylum if you can avoid the claimed persecution by relocating within your own country -- which is especially relevant since most border-jumpers are not even pretending to have been persecuted by their national governments. Even without a change in statute, the administration can more effectively apply this by clarifying its regulations and providing adjudicators better training and resources on country conditions.
Frittering Away Our Strategic National Security and Technological Advantages
By Dan Cadman
To be effective, any change in our regimen for dealing with students or exchange visitors (whether from China or elsewhere) would also call for a significant change in the structure, control, and administration of the Student and Exchange Visitor Program (SEVP), which has been wholly co-opted by academia despite its placement inside a Homeland Security enforcement agency.

One Alien Jams the Justice System for 22 Years with Eight Federal Court Cases
By David North
Perhaps if he had been popped into jail after he being caught the second time as an illegal entrant, he would not have run up all those bills and created so much work for the feds, both in DHS and in the judiciary. It would have cost the taxpayers some initial money, but it might have saved a lot in the long run.

 
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