5 Immigration and America's Racial Reckoning - Politics Information

Immigration and America's Racial Reckoning


By Jonette Christian


The Civil Rights Movement was America's greatest moral crusade, the culmination of years of determined citizen activism, leading to radical changes in the 1960s. And we didn't just settle for a level playing field. We embraced affirmative action, expanded anti-poverty programs, rewrote history books, renamed public buildings, erected new statues, and promoted talented Black people in journalism, sports and Hollywood. Multiple Black mayors, city councilors and police chiefs were elected.

Black incomes grew after World War I, and the Black-white wage gap narrowed until around 1970. This remarkable achievement was mostly accomplished in the face of Jim Crow laws, and with minimal help from white people.

In the ensuing half-century, the gap widened to 1950 levels. What happened?

A new book, "Back of the Hiring Line" by Roy Beck, offers a meticulously documented perspective on this national puzzle. Along with employment data and immigration and labor historians, Beck tells the story through the writings and speeches of prominent Black leaders such as Booker T. Washington, Frederick Douglass, W.E.B. DuBois, A. Phillip Randolph, and Black-owned newspapers, all of whom doggedly advocated for tight labor policies following the Civil War.

Finally, a mounting demand by Black and labor activists forced Congress to cut immigration numbers in half in 1924. The Great Wave ended. Blacks began migrating North to fill blue-collar jobs in factories deprived of European workers.

During this half-century of tight labor, wages increased, wealth disparities shrank, the middle class exploded, and Black average incomes skyrocketed. Employers were forced to hire and train from within, and negotiate with unions for pensions, cost of living wages, and health care.

But, in 1965, Congress changed course again, radically expanding annual immigration numbers. Since 1990 Congress, placating the tech lobby, has given away millions of high-paying tech jobs through guest worker programs. The demand for foreign workers is unending. This February, the House passed the America Competes Act, expanding yet again foreign worker visas.

With the surge in foreign workers, some employers tended to prefer immigrants who were willing to accept long hours and lower wages. Blacks were shafted in one industry after another where previously employed. They also missed out on entry-level jobs in technology, losing the opportunity to develop those skills, networks and work experience that lead to upward mobility and generational wealth.

Blacks earn one in 10 computer science degrees nationwide, but account for only 2.6% of Silicon Valley tech workers. Seventy-one percent of tech workers in Silicon Valley today are foreign-born.

In the 1990s, Congress authorized the formation of the U.S. Commission on Immigration Reform. After seven years of study, the commission told Congress to significantly decrease immigration, setting an annual cap of 550,000. The current level of immigration is over one million annually. Congress ignored the experts they had chosen to consult, and set immigration numbers to please business lobbies wanting more workers and more consumers. And the clamor for more foreign labor continues.

Immigration numbers have played a largely unrecognized role in forcing vulnerable groups to compete against each other, and Blacks have been especially harmed. The solution is simple: Congress should reduce the numbers. All workers, immigrant and native-born, would benefit from tighter labor markets and higher wages.

Jonette Christian is a founder of Mainers for Sensible Immigration Policy. This piece originally ran in the Lewiston Sun-Journal

More Resources


05/05/2024
Trump Is a Rorschach Test for the Body Politic
It is no secret that Donald Trump is a hot wire that either fires up the imagination of voters or fries the brain.For those of us who experience Trump as a Promethean bringer of enlightening fire to the dark barren fields of modern politics, it is hard to fathom the reaction of those who are terrified of him. We just say they have Trump Derangement Syndrome.But for those Trump haters, of course, it is the rest of us who are deranged. We are cult members or Christian nationalists or foot soldiers of the new Hitler.You cannot imagine more diametrically opposed views of one man. On one hand, he...

more info


05/05/2024
The Absurdity of Trump and RFK Jr. Running as ‘Outsiders'


more info


05/05/2024
What Went Wrong With the Third-Party Movement This Cycle?


more info


05/05/2024
2020 Election "Was Not Fair" and "Was Rigged In Many Ways"


more info


05/05/2024
Why the Pro-Palestinian Protests Have Been a Success
Even extreme repression worked to their advantage as they have applied pressure to the political class and liberal institutions.

more info


05/05/2024
The Columbia Protests Are Nothing Like 1968
Today's anti-Israel activists are a sad parody of the 1960s anti-war, anti-racist radicals.

more info


05/05/2024
Marjorie Taylor Greene Is Not as Powerful as She Thinks She Is
The uproars that don't seem to touch Trump at all can still bring down other Republicans.

more info


05/05/2024
Biden Has a Problem With Centrist Voters
Biden won the 2020 Democratic nomination as a self-described centrist, but has since adopted more liberal policies that could cost him in 2024.

more info


05/05/2024
Close Presidential Race Careens Toward Uncertain End
Here's where the race for president stands six months from Election Day - in the polls, on the balance sheet, in key battlegrounds and more.Volume Muted Icon

more info


05/05/2024
It's the Democrats' Turn To Scare America
No one should be surprised it ended up here.

more info


05/05/2024
Is Trump on Track To Blow the Election?
Democrats are in a bit of a panic over Donald Trump's polling numbers against President Biden - the former president has led Biden in the RealClearPolitics ballot test for months and is consistently outpolling Biden in the battleground states.

more info


05/05/2024
The Trump Trial, Columbia Anarchy--and Hope for New York
The view from Ninth Avenue is of a city that has gone crazy. But statewide there are signs of sanity.

more info


05/05/2024
New Polls Show Kennedy a Growing Threat to Both Parties
A new CNN/SSRS poll shows that independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. poses a serious threat to "dual incumbents" President Biden and former president Trump.

more info


05/05/2024
'Equity' Grading Is Latest Educational Fad Destined To Fail
Why work extra hard when you won't be able to get an A? Why try to improve when you won't get worse than a C?

more info


05/05/2024
How Student Encampments Can Strengthen U.S.
Instead of defending the right to protest, many centrists are delegitimizing students, despite the value of what they're doing

more info



Custom Search

More Politics Articles:

Related Articles

Environmentalists Should Get Behind Cleaner Fossil Fuels
Not all fossil fuels are created equally -- at least with respect to their carbon footprint.
Bill O'Reilly's Alleged Escapades, Hmmm
Bill O'Reilly most likely can afford to retire and he probably should be thinking about it before he spends all of his life savings on settling sexual harassment lawsuits. At least $13 million have been paid so far that we know about.
Hooray For Less Taxes! We Hope
Americans pay too much in taxes. President Trump's idea to eliminate four of the seven tax brackets is an excellent idea. Most Americans are sick and tired of paying everything they make in taxes. If you enjoy paying taxes and disagree with what I am writing simply write the Internal Revenue Service a check every month and mail them more money.
We won't rest until the American Health Care Act is law
Dan Weber, president of the Association of Mature American Citizens, warns that "liberals in Congress will continue to sabotage efforts to repeal and replace Obamacare. They see President Obama's so-called Affordable Care Act as a first step toward a single-payer system which is, itself, a first step toward the creation of a socialist state here in the U.S."
Middlemen Are Not Passing On All Drug Discounts Intended for Patients
Over 400,000 Americans with cancer suffer from a second disease -- "financial toxicity." The symptoms include missed mortgage and rent payments, raided retirement accounts, and decisions about whether to take medicines as prescribed or ration them to save money. Such choices can be deadly.
Supremes hand down big wins for the nation, says AMAC
The Supreme Court handed down "two big wins" for the American people this week, according to Dan Weber, president of the Association of Mature American Citizens.
Cut FDA Red Tape So Doctors Can Better Treat Patients
Doctors often fail to treat their patients with the most effective medicines -- but it's not their fault. Is an outdated FDA regulation to blame?
John McCain, Obamacare and Call 911 To Be Murdered
A Minnesota police office murdered Justin Damond this past week. According to reports she called 911 to report a possible sexual assault nearby her apartment where she lived. According to reports two police officers arrived after she called for help a second time. One of the police officers riding in the passenger side of the police car was reported to have been spooked and shot past the driving police officer and killed the woman approaching the car in her pajamas.
This is the End for Offshore Obstructionism
The Trump administration is one step closer to unlocking America's vast offshore energy reserves.
Surviving Nuclear Attack
President Donald Trump has vowed to meet more North Korea threats with "power the likes of which the world has never seen" and Kim Jong-un has responded with a plan for a nuke attack on the US island of Guam. Plans are being made for a horror scenario we must take seriously.
Forgotten conservative: Remembering George Schuyler
It was 40 years ago, August 31, 1977, that George Schuyler died. He has been largely forgotten, and that's a shame. At one point, Schuyler was one of the most recognized and read columnists in America, particularly from his platform at one of America's great African-American newspapers-the Pittsburgh Courier. He was also one of the nation's top conservative voices.
Liberalism - A Mark Too Low A Price Too High
The Senate recently confirmed two new appointees to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, or FERC, ending a seven-month dormancy due to lack of a quorum. With three members, two Republicans and one Democrat, one pick from each party remains for a full five-member commission.
America's Pain - Tomorrow You?
Northern California is suffering with some of the worse fires in that state's history. Twenty-three people have been reportedly killed with at least 285 people reported missing.
Expand the Health Savings Account 'Safe Harbor' To Reduce Healthcare Costs
As the health reform debate continues, partisans in both parties should adhere to a simple, overarching principle: help people who were hurt by Obamacare, but don't hurt those who were helped by the law.
On Sunday - Storm the Gates of Hell
.."On this rock I will build my church and the gates of hell will not overcome it," Matthew 16:18
After Sutherland Springs Church Massacre, Anglican Bishop Considers Arming Himself at the Altar
A man of the cloth in Pennsylvania who also wears a badge is now contemplating packing a pistol in the pulpit to protect his parish.
Remembering Fidel Castro's Death
This past week marked the anniversary of the death of Fidel Castro, our hemisphere's worst dictator for a half century. When we remember Castro's death, we should remember him for just that: death.
Energy Lessons from the Recent Hurricanes
Hurricanes Harvey and Irma killed dozens of Americans and caused tens of billions of dollars in property damage. But there's one silver lining. The storms taught us three invaluable lessons about the U.S. energy market.
To Curb Climate Change, Cities Need the Right Design
Over 300 mayors recently promised to uphold the goals of the Paris Climate Agreement. This pledge proves that cities are leading America's fight against climate change.
The Hypocrisy of Political Correctness
A professor at NYU was shunned by his colleagues because of "the content and structure of his thinking." That's right, the "thought police" were after him. They didn't like the fact that he was using social media to expose the hypocrisy of political correctness on campus.