... the really bad employment news last month wasn’t in the headline numbers, but in the “other” employment survey, of households rather than businesses.
In September 2015, the Center for Immigration Studies published a landmark study of immigration and welfare use, showing that 51 percent of immigrant-headed households used at least one federal welfare program — cash, food, housing, or medical care — compared to 30 percent of native households...
In a move around the standard refugee settlement process in America, the United Nations and the administration are scheming to find other ways to boost the number of Syrians entering the country, from 10,000 this year to possibly 200,000.
The Supreme Court's Evenwel v. Abbott ruling is not the final word in the debate over equal representation, and some states will resort to ballot initiatives to win the right to draw district lines based on population alone.
I once was a member of the Sierra Club in the mid-1990s, back when their population policy included addressing mass immigration as the root cause of US Population growth. At that time, environmentalists had a lot of common sense.