Letters to the Editor - Paxton, immigration, classrooms.
Assuming that Paxton and his lawyers did read the law, then I can only assume that they think that we are stupid.Re: “Immigration Reform Needed Now — Bipartisan Dignity Act deserves a hearing from Congress,” Aug. 1 editorial.
Regarding immigration reform, it is incomprehensible why Congress doesn’t want to act on the bipartisan Dignity Act. Everyone cries out about the immigration problem, but no one really tries to solve the problem. There is a word in Spanish that echoes the show horses vs. workhorses metaphor you use in the editorial. The word isHow does busing immigrants to Chicago or California or placing buoys at the Rio Grande solve the immigration problem? That is just superficial.
Poorly controlled immigration over the past 40-plus years has contributed to the decline in non-college-graduate wages. Although immigrants may not take many jobs away from residents or earlier immigrants, excess immigration does depress wages for all non-college graduate workers. Higher unemployment rates result in limited upward pressure on wages.
I believe the Dignity Act could gain broader support from political conservatives if some reasonable limit on the number of immigrants were included in the proposal. Immigration is necessary to keep the economy growing. Too few and the economy slows; too many and wages stay low. We need the just-right number.Re: “Actively support education” by Ellen Seldin, Friday Letters.
Let the teachers do their jobs without having the students check their phones for messages, or get help from their phones for some math problem that they don’t have to learn how to solve because their phone solves it for them, or how to spell a word because they don’t know how to look it up in a dictionary.
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