Quote:
Originally Posted by Guest
There have NOT been 50 million anchor babies.
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The huge number of foreign children born on U.S. soil– roughly 340,000 per year— is also an economic imposition on Americans, who pay taxes to help raise, feed, and educate those children of illegal migrants."
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71 percent of illegal-alien headed households with children received some sort of welfare in 2009, compared with 39 percent of native-headed houses with children. "
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The cost of K-12 public school alone for a U.S.-born child of illegal migrants is, at a minimum, around $160,000 (using the average cost $12,300 per pupil per year)."
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This means that one anchor baby is delivered every 93 seconds, based on the 2008 census data analyzed by the Pew."
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The country's youngest citizens, those younger than 5 years old, are the first group in U.S. history to represent a "majority-minority," which means more of them are minorities than whites. About 50.2 percent of Americans younger than 5 are minorities, the Census said.Jun 25, 2015"
"For context, in 1970 there were 9.1 million and in 2012 there were 53 million"
"The Huffington Post said that by 2039, racial and ethnic minorities would be the majority, and by 2043, Hispanics will be the leading ethnic group."
"Hispanic people are the largest minority in the United States.
Only Mexico has a larger Hispanic population than the United States. "
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How do Hispanic people define their race?
White: 35,684,777 (66%)"
Hispanics skew the numbers by calling themselves "white" when they clearly are not.
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Back in 1965, whites made up about 85 percent of the population, according to an analysis from the Pew Research Center. The remaining 15 percent was overwhelmingly African-American. "
"In a recent article for the American Prospect, sociologist Richard Alba critiqued the Census Bureau for essentially over-counting tomorrow’s minorities by assuming that every child with at least one Hispanic, Asian, or black parent would grow up with the same minority identity as that parent. "
"But this isn’t how things work in the real world.
Over time, some children with minority parents grow up to think of themselves as white — particularly when they have one minority parent and one white parent.
A recent paper in economics found that by the third generation, about 18 percent of Hispanic children stop identifying as Hispanic. Among Asians, the effect was even stronger; 42 percent of third-generation children no longer identified as Asian."
Here you go...a list of "minority majority" places in America...not ONE is like the villages...not one.
List of U.S. communities with Hispanic-majority populations in the 2010 census - Wikipedia
"In the United States of America majority–minority or minority–majority area is a United States state or jurisdiction whose population is composed of less than 50% non-Hispanic whites.
Racial data is derived from self-identification questions on the U.S. Census and on U.S. Census Bureau estimates. (See Race and ethnicity in the United States Census).
Five states are majority–minority as of 2016: Hawaii (which is the only state that has never had a white majority), New Mexico, California, Texas and Nevada.[4]
The District of Columbia reached a majority black status during the latter stages of the Great Migration. Although the district is still majority–minority, blacks now make up only 47.7% of the population;[5] increases have been among minorities who identify as Asians and Hispanics. Whites have also moved into the district in increasing numbers since the turn of the 21st century.[6]
The percentage of non-Hispanic white residents has fallen below 60% in Maryland, Georgia, Florida, Arizona, New York, New Jersey, Mississippi, and Louisiana. Maryland, at 51.5% non-Hispanic White American as of 2016, is on the verge of becoming majority minority.[7]
All populated United States territories (Puerto Rico, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa) are majority–minority areas. They never had a non-Hispanic white majority.
As of 2012, 50 metropolitan areas in the U.S. are majority–minority.[8]
As of 2015, 12% of U.S. counties are majority–minority.[9]
The whole United States of America is projected to become majority–minority in 2043.[10] With alternate immigration scenarios, the whole U.S. is projected to become majority–minority sometime between 2041 and 2046 (depending on the amount of net immigration into the U.S. over the next 35 years).[11][12]
Minority children will be the majority in the entire United States by 2019.[13]
Minority children are the majority among children in the following ten states: California, Nevada, New Mexico, Arizona, Texas, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Mississippi, and Maryland.[14]"
It's IMPOSSIBLE to get accurate numbers bacause 66% of hispanics call themselves white.