The Audacity of Amnesty: How Obama’s 2006 Admitted Fear of Record Immigration Has Come Back to Haunt Him
Instead of finalizing the details of a 10-point immigration plan the White House is expected to debut this week, President Obama may need to explain the contradicting views on immigration that he included in his 2006 autobiography, “The Audacity of Hope.”According to the Daily Caller, Obama carved out a chapter of the memoir to share his thoughts on immigration, including concerns about the negative effects record levels of immigration were already having on the country’s economic well-being.The book’s message – a call to reclaim the American Dream – was intended to woo undecided voters; especially blue-collar workers whom he acknowledged had a legitimate concern of losing their jobs to immigrants willing to work at lower wages.In light of these new-found remarks, allegations that true immigration reformers in the Republican Party have made against the president, in regard to high immigration levels causing job displacement, a growing income gap and overpopulation, have been validated by Obama’s own statements below.
- “The number of immigrants added to the labor force every year is of a magnitude not seen in this country for over a century.”
- “If this huge influx of mostly low-skill workers provides some benefits to the economy as a whole—especially by keeping our workforce young, in contrast to an increasingly geriatric Europe and Japan—it also threatens to depress further the wages of blue-collar Americans and put strains on an already overburdened safety net.”
- “Native-born Americans suspect that it is they, and not the immigrant, who are being forced to adapt” to social changes caused by migration.
- “[T]here’s no denying that many blacks share the same anxieties as many whites about the wave of illegal immigration flooding our Southern border—a sense that what’s happening now is fundamentally different from what has gone on before…”
- ”Not all these fears are irrational.”
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