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The New York Times columnist Thomas B. Edsall wrote “{text},” an op-ed where he shared many pieces of commentary on immigration, even using Gallup findings to drive home that immigration support is on the rise. Unfortunately, he has managed to collect some of the worst takes out there.
Edsall has a simplistic pro-immigration vs. anti-immigration (mis)understanding of the issue and debate. He seems especially attracted to “it’s-all-about-race” theories. An example:
“René D. Flores, a professor of sociology at the University of Chicago who studies American attitudes toward immigration, and Ariel Azar, a graduate student in sociology at the University of Chicago, found that white people’s attitudes toward immigrants could be broken up into “five main classes or ‘immigrant archetypes’ that come to whites’ minds when they respond to questions about immigrants in surveys: the undocumented Latino man” (38 percent), the “poor, nonwhite immigrant” (18.5 percent), the “high status worker” (17 percent), the “documented Latina worker” (15 percent) and the “rainbow undocumented immigrant” (12 percent).”
The New York Times opened comments (and promptly closed after 335 comments) to readers who mostly disagreed with Edsall’s column and commented on what they think needs to be done regarding imigration policy. Here are some of the top The New York Times and Reader Picks:
If the Democrats don’t recognize this we are going to be in for very bad times.” – Airborne, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Readers Picks)
“Who, Mr. Edsall, are you to say such a thing? [How do you define ‘deserving’? That they managed to avoid detection and deportation for 10 years? That they pay taxes (although there are many who get paid in cash and pay virtually no taxes)? That they don’t commit crimes? What does it mean to be deserving of citizenship? I don’t think you, or any individual, gets to decide that.” – Roger Demuth, Portland, Oregon (Readers Pick)
There are plenty more comments from readers available to read here.
CHRIS JOHNSON is a content writer for the Media Standards Project for NumbersUSA
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