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Transcript
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SPEAKER 1
Some people say that mass immigration into the United States can help reduce world poverty. Is that true? Well, no it's not. And let me show you why. This gumball represents the one million legal immigrants that the United States has taken every year on average since 1990. Now who in the world deserves our humanitarian compassion?
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The World Bank has one measure of the desperately poor of the world. They make less than $2 a day. people make less than $2 a day in the world? Let's start with Africa. In Africa alone there are 650 million people who make less than $2 a day. 650 million. And in India another 890 million people, desperately poor.
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China adds another 480 million people. less than $2 a day. And unfortunately the rest of Asia has a heartbreaking 810 million people who the World Bank says make less than $2 a day. And finally there's 105 million of Latin America's population that are desperately poor.

Why Immigration Is Not the Answer to Resolving Poverty

Presented by immigration author/journalist Roy Beck

Politicians and governments want to do the noble thing - but is it wise?

Come to find out, we are hurting the countries we are pulling immigrants from as they become trained, schooled, and experienced here in the U.S., but very few of them return to their homeland to assist their country in resolving poverty issues.

In other words, only the best of any impoverished country immigrate to top countries, resulting in a brain drain on that country that never gets addressed or resolved.

Global humanitarian reasons for current U.S. immigration are tested in this updated version of immigration author and journalist Roy Beck's colorful presentation of data from the World Bank and U.S. Census Bureau.

The 1996 version of this immigration gumballs presentation has been one of the most viewed immigration policy presentations on the internet.

To learn more about how the dynamics of immigration affect countries…

CLICK HERE to Discover More

ADDENDUM - Govt Immigration Policy Is Creating a Miserable Future for the USA

THE PROBLEM ISN’T IMMIGRANTS - IT IS IMMIGRANT POLICY

A startling look at how U.S. immigration will add 300 million people to the country this century if immigration policies are not changed.

This dramatic presentation of the latest Census data raises serious immigration questions about the ability of the country to achieve environmental sustainability and to meet the quality-of-life infrastructure needs of the national community considering current immigration policy.

The people have NOT asked for an increase in immigration, the politicians have been unwisely noble in pushing in upon all of us.

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China adds another 480 million people. less than $2 a day. And unfortunately the rest of Asia has a heartbreaking 810 million people who the World Bank says make less than $2 a day. And finally there's 105 million of Latin America's population that are desperately poor.