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Federal law places limits on immigration. What for? After all, there are those who advocate the free flow of people across borders, allowing unlimited immigration into the United States. This week’s episode of Parsing Immigration Policy addresses the reasons for immigration laws.
Kent Lundgren, a retired career Border Patrol officer and a member of the Center’s board of directors, explains that immigration rules exist to protect Americans and legal immigrants. Lundgren breaks down the areas to be protected into four categories: public health, public safety, national security, and jobs and wages. An enforced border is necessary to secure these four necessities of life for those living legally in the United States.
“Countries have borders, and unless those borders have rules for people who want to come in and who do come in, then the border is meaningless and the country dissolves”, said Lundgren.
In his closing commentary, Mark Krikorian, the host of Parsing Immigration Policy and the Center’s executive director, highlights a report on Biden administration plans to give identification cards to illegal border-crossers who have been released into the United States. Krikorian calls this “documenting the undocumented”, and an incremental step towards amnesty for illegal aliens.
Mark Krikorian is the Executive Director of the Center for Immigration Studies.
Kent Lundgren is a retired Border Patrol officer and member of the Center for Immigration Studies Board of Directors.
Biden Has Released More Than a Million Border-Jumpers Into the U.S.
Border Conveyor Belt Continues
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Voices in the opening montage:
 

The Center for Immigration Studies is an independent, non-partisan, non-profit research organization founded in 1985. It is the nation’s only think tank devoted exclusively to research and policy analysis of the economic, social, demographic, fiscal, and other impacts of immigration on the United States.

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