How DACA Amnesty and Chain Migration Threaten English as Primary U.S. Language


The President of the United States campaigned often on the many disparate advantages that were being handed off to minorities while White America was placed on the bench, wondering when it was going to be our turn at a chance to be heard.  His pleas were aimed, of course, at the “forgotten men and women” of America, but there is a profound message of unity that is being lost in all this.

The FNIC continues their drumbeat that Donald Trump is dividing America when all he wants (and all WE want) is for this division and identity politics to just go away.  Nowhere in the Constitution is there a single right given to a Hispanic citizen, or a Black citizen, or a White citizen, but always to “the People.”  Last time I checked, the People refers to every citizen.

Regardless, the Left has attempted to skew this in a way that pits class against class, race against race, and religion against secularism.  It’s always been about fairness and righteousness and good.

The trend of the U.S. becoming a majority non-English-speaking country could readily be slowed for the national interest by Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) and Sen. David Perdue’s (R-GA) RAISE Act, which would not only cut legal immigration levels in half but give priority to English-speaking immigrants.

The leading English language group in the U.S., ProEnglish, has endorsed the RAISE Act for the importance it places on English as a defining factor for sustaining America’s common culture:

“The English component is especially necessary,” ProEnglish Executive Director Stephen Guschov said in a news release. “The Clinton-era Executive Order 13166, which has never been repealed, requires all federal funds recipients including hospitals, doctor’s offices and school districts to provide interpreters or translations for non-English speaking persons. And they must pay for it themselves. If they don’t, they face civil rights violations, fines and even jail time.”

“Over a decade ago the General Accounting Office estimated the cost of E.O. 13166 was in the billions of dollars annually. So it is only common sense that if we’re going to be forced to bear the cost of immigrants who can’t speak English, we should require them to speak it before they get a visa and can come into our country,” Guschov says.

“E.O. 13166 heavily impacts the area of health care,” Guschov adds. “Requiring extra translation services for the over 300 languages spoken in this country only increases the cost of health care on all Americans while promoting linguistic divisions.”

“It only makes sense that President Donald Trump add E.O. 13166 to his list of unwise or unconstitutional presidential fiats that should be relegated to the trash can,” Guschov concludes. “After all, a requirement for a green card or U.S. citizenship is that one should be proficient in the English language.”

If this can be brought to the attention of the president, there is no doubt that this wasteful and unneeded legislation can be done away with, especially when one realizes how much money could be saved for the American taxpayer.  It would certainly add to the Trump legacy when all is said and done.  The amount of money he would have saved the taxpayer by the end of his term would be phenomenal.

Along the same vein as the repeal of Executive Order 13166, Representative Steve King (R-IA) and Senator James Inhofe (R-OK) are also working hard to reintroduce an idea that Michele Bachmann, former Representative of Minnesota, that sought to make English the “official” language of the United States!

Read on the next page about these courageous efforts to halt our current spiral into madness!

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