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    Opinion: Cats, dogs a distraction from real immigration concerns | Phil Derrow

    By Philip Derrow,

    22 days ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2U1XYd_0vleEBRa00

    New Albany resident Philip Derrow is a retired business owner. He was a two-term member of the New Albany-Plain Local Board of Education . He is a frequent Columbus Dispatch contributor.

    The immigration debate has become like a storm that’s raining cats and dogs.

    That’s more than a bad pun.

    Amid the deluge of silly idiomatic nonsense, the reality of the tsunami of millions of new immigrants on U.S. citizens each year has been lost. At least 11 million of these new arrivals are now here illegally . That’s almost as much as the entire population of Ohio.

    I generally support lawful immigration for a variety of economic, cultural and humanitarian reasons. With the birth rate of American citizens below maintenance levels, a pattern seen across the entire developed world, we need immigrants to have a vibrant, growing economy.

    Illegal immigration, however, is an affront to the rule of law, a threat to the safety and security of American citizens and a burden on already over-burdened government (i.e., taxpayer) budgets.

    And, no, the vaunted immigration reform bill that failed to pass earlier this year wasn’t a good deal for Americans.

    Since our nation’s founding, we’ve seen multiple waves of immigrants. More than 80 million people have come here, mostly from parts of Europe but also from Africa, Asia and more recently from Mexico, countries in Central and South America, and the Caribbean.

    Their presence enriches our nation in ways most of us rarely consider. Through their labor, culture, and traditions, they become “Americans” and America becomes what we used to describe as a melting pot.

    We must also acknowledge the evil of slavery that forcibly brought millions of Africans to our shores and treated them as less than human throughout that period. It took the bloodiest war in our nation’s history to end slavery’s scourge, and the descendants of slaves are thankfully now as fully American and equal in rights as every other citizen.

    I’m the grandson of immigrants on both sides of my family. My grandparents arrived in this country a little more than a century ago after escaping the horrific pogroms targeting Jews across much of Eastern Europe and Russia. My paternal grandparents were initially denied entry to the U.S. and had to settle temporarily in Argentina. They buried their first born child there before they were able to legally immigrate to the U.S.

    I have no interest in pulling up the welcome mat for new arrivals, but just as my grandparents waited to come here legally, so should every other immigrant. While the vast majority of Americans support that view , our current administration has failed to honor it millions of times.

    So what’s going on in Springfield, Ohio? In 2020, this small city 45 miles west of Columbus had a population of just under 60,000. Springfield’s mayor says the city is now home to an additional 12,000-15,000 new arrivals, mostly from Haiti.

    Anyone who thinks a sudden 25% population increase in a small Midwestern city is easily accommodated hasn’t given it much thought. This is particularly so when most of those new residents don’t speak English or share the cultural traditions of their neighbors. Taxpayers will continue to spend millions of dollars to help support them.

    The cost and availability of housing burdens local residents. Springfield schools, already struggling to educate the city’s kids , must now divert substantial dollars and teaching hours to immigrant children.

    Former President Trump started the latest drama with his flippant debate remark about what’s for dinner. While most of the media has focused on that, former Wall Street Journal reporter Asra Nomani uncovered evidence of human trafficking targeting Springfield’s Haitians. A couple of days later, Dublin resident and former presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy hosted a town hall event for Springfield residents to share their concerns. He heard plenty.

    All is definitely not well in Springfield.

    While our new Haitian neighbors are likely here legally, that status was a choice by the Biden-Harris administration. It wasn’t necessary. It was a choice that simply gave as many as 500,000 Haitians “ Temporary Protected Status ” to be in the U.S.

    Our immigration laws also require proper vetting of applicants. We only need to see the Venezuelan gangs battling for turf across the country to know the Biden-Harris administration is fundamentally incapable of enforcing those laws , even if they wanted to do so.

    In this debate, the safety of pets is a distraction. In a world that has only become more dangerous, the security of American citizens should be our leaders’ primary responsibility.

    While the politicians fight like cats and dogs, the rest of us should remember that sensible immigration is an invitation-only event, not an open house.

    New Albany resident Philip Derrow is a retired business owner. He was a two-term member of the New Albany-Plain Local Board of Education . He is a frequent Columbus Dispatch contributor.

    This article originally appeared on The Columbus Dispatch: Opinion: Cats, dogs a distraction from real immigration concerns | Phil Derrow

    Comments / 1
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    Huck Fynn
    21d ago
    During Harris's tenure as border czar, ICE is reporting that over 13,000 illegals with murder convictions have crossed into the US. ICE compiled over 15,000 rapes and sex crimes during the same period. There are over 1 800 pending murder convictions by illegals currently. These numbers come from the Director of ICE, P. Lechleitner.
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