| akuma587 said: From an economic growth standpoint...yes. It is much easier to grow your GDP if you have a larger workforce and more people spending money in your country. You are actually hurting your country's economic growth with harsh immigration policies (assuming obviously that you aren't already supersaturated like China). This is another reason I find the Republican Party's stance on immigration kind of confusing. It is anti-business. |
Because it hurts black people economically. The US has an obligation to its black citizens, and traditionally their middle class only improves in times of war or when we have shortages of immigrant labor.
Though you have mentioned in the past that you feel blacks are genetically inferior due to forced slave breeding. A view I would recommend you reevaluate if you plan on pursuing a law career.
Yet, today, America's leaders are reenacting every folly that brought these great powers [Russia, Germany, and Japan] to ruin -- from arrogance and hubris, to assertions of global hegemony, to imperial overstretch, to trumpeting new 'crusades,' to handing out war guarantees to regions and countries where Americans have never fought before. We are piling up the kind of commitments that produced the greatest disasters of the twentieth century.
— Pat Buchanan – A Republic, Not an Empire







