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Sep 24 14 tweets 6 min read Read on X
Okay—challenge accepted.

For decades, we've been told that the only way to save small-town America is to flood it with foreign immigrants.

That's ridiculous.

We could rebuild these towns tomorrow, if we had leaders who cared enough to try.

Don't believe us? We'll show you. 🧵 Image
In a recent essay, @Noahpinion claims there's only "one kind of person" who will work at a factory in "a small midwestern town": "An immigrant, without much education, usually from a low-income country."

This is the same "jobs Americans won't do" line we've heard for decades. Image
We were in Charleroi, PA last week. It's a working-class town of 4,000 people—but it's been overwhelmed by thousands of Haitian immigrants.

You can watch the trailer for our film below.

This is the kind of town that Smith thinks immigration is "saving."
The same "jobs Americans won't do" line we heard from Smith has served as the justification for flooding Charleroi with foreign workers.

That's the argument made by the businesses that are importing these immigrants for cheap labor.

This is from a local outlet just last week: Image
But Americans *were* doing these jobs.

"Those jobs that [immigrants] have—they used to be American jobs," Andy, a Charleroi native, told us last week. (See below).

Businesses pay immigrants "poverty wages" instead of paying Americans fairly, he said.
It wasn’t just Andy who told us this.

Below is our interview with Rick. He worked for one of the staffing agencies bringing immigrants into Charleroi.

He told us they were intentionally hiring immigrant workers *instead* of Americans.

Why? Because immigrants were cheaper.
Research backs up what Andy and Tom told us.

In Miami, for example, the Harvard economist George Borjas found that a large influx of refugees slashed low-skilled workers’ wages by 10-30%.

This wasn't creating wealth for working-class Americans—it was taking it away from them. Image
Borjas' work shows this wasn't a one-off—it's a pattern.

Time and time again, we see that low-skill immigrants don't "revive" small towns. They compete for jobs with locals.

The result? Lower wages and higher unemployment for the most vulnerable Americans in these communities. Image
Borjas isn't the only economist to have arrived at this conclusion.

Despite what you might read in the press, there's a large body of evidence that immigration depresses wages for many working-class Americans.

National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, 2017: Image
Even some of Noah’s readers know this is true.

Under Smith's article, one reader explains how his wages *increased* when illegal workers at his plant were deported.

The "ICE raid did what our union couldn't do. It raised wages."

Now, he can work normal hours and pay his bills. Image
But it isn't just about wages.

As @oren_cass points out, when labor is artificially cheap, businesses don't need to innovate.

Thus, entire sectors see declining productivity.

In agriculture—which relies heavily on cheap migrant labor—productivity has been falling for decades.
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Smith also claims migrants aren’t being "dumped" on these small towns—they're moving in for jobs based on "word of mouth."

Again, our reporting shows that isn't true.

Companies are actively importing immigrants into Charleroi.

Nonprofits there are literally boasting about it:
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Smith's case for mass immigration has been conventional wisdom—in both parties—for decades.

Not only is it wrong; it betrays an extraordinarily low opinion of Americans. The core logic is that they can't be saved—they simply need to be replaced.

The cynicism here is astounding:
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We'll be doing a lot more deep-dive threads and videos like this over the next few months.

Our philosophy is simple: America first. America forever. 🇺🇸

If you want to support our work, you can follow us at: @America_2100

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More from @America_2100

Sep 17
Charleroi, Pennsylvania is a town of just over 4,000 people.

2,000 Haitian immigrants just arrived on their doorstep.

Local parents tell us their schools are overwhelmed. "Kids can't advance because the teachers are having to compensate for the kids who can't speak English."
We’re going to be in Charleroi all week. It’s one of the many small American towns that's being destroyed by mass immigration. We’ll be sharing their story on here.

To follow along, follow us here: @America_2100
There have been reports of assaults, too. Here's what one mother told us:
Read 4 tweets
Sep 10
There's a looming crisis at the Department of Veterans Affairs.

The Biden-Harris VA is facing a $15 billion budget shortfall.

If this isn't fixed soon, veterans could simply not receive their benefits—a disaster for many families.

Guess what the VA is funding instead? 🧵 Image
A cascade of poorly-planned rollouts, unexpected costs and inexplicable financial decisions has left the VA billions of dollars short of its budgetary needs.

That could disrupt payments to veterans as soon as October—"a potential disaster for families dependent on that support." Image
House Veterans Affairs Chairman @RepBost described this as "by far the largest budget shortfall" VA "has experienced under any administration."

The VA, he wrote, is "barely keeping the lights on despite Congress consistently providing every dollar requested in the budget." Image
Read 11 tweets
Sep 7
Springfield, Ohio is a working-class manufacturing town.

As of 2020, it was home to 58,106 people. 98% were U.S. citizens.

In 1983, Newsweek devoted its 50th anniversary edition to Springfield, titled "The American Dream."

Immigration is changing its way of life forever. 🧵
Image
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Over the past decade, Springfield has been flooded with more than 20,000 Haitian immigrants. (And the trend has only accelerated since 2020).

The results have been exactly what you'd expect: Surging crime, overwhelmed public services, and deep divisions in the social fabric.
Image
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The town's healthcare system, schools, housing, and public services—built to serve the needs of a relatively small, homogenous population—are totally overwhelmed.

Wait times at local clinics have tripled, and working-class Americans are getting boxed out of access to housing.
Image
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Read 11 tweets
Sep 5
This week, the former deputy chief of staff for New York Gov. Kathy Hochul was charged as a Chinese spy.

But that's just the tip of the iceberg.

Over the past few decades, China has established a vast fifth column in American society.

This goes much deeper than you think. 🧵 Image
Earlier this week, Linda Sun was charged with being an agent of the Chinese government.

Sun, who was born in China—and moved to America with her family at the age of five—served as an aide to two New York governors: Andrew Cuomo and Kathy Hochul. Image
But in truth, Sun was just one small cog in a much broader Chinese subversion operation—which dates back to the 1970s.

This subversion takes place through both normal and illicit channels, legal and illegal methods, and across a broad range of party, state, and non-state actors. Image
Read 22 tweets
Sep 3
Tim Walz talks a lot about being a high school social studies teacher.

So we took a look at what he's done to Minnesota's social studies curriculum.

"Radical" doesn't even begin to describe it. Walz has infused left-wing race ideology into every subject—even science and math.🧵 Image
In the wake of the 2020 George Floyd riots, Walz introduced a major new ethnic studies curriculum plan as part of his "Due North" education initiative. At the time, Republicans controlled the state senate—so the plan was blocked.

But in 2022, Democrats took back the majority. Image
The following legislative session, Tim Walz backed a proposal for new, "liberated" ethnic studies standards across all required subjects—including math + science—in K-12 education.

And not just in public schools—Walz moved to force the plan on private schools and homeschoolers. Image
Read 12 tweets
Aug 28
The pandemic was the largest upwards wealth transfer in modern history. The laptop class—people who could work from home—made a killing. A lot of folks in the labor class got screwed.

43% of all U.S. counties still haven't regained the jobs they lost in the pandemic. (1/7) Image
The winners and losers of the pandemic recovery aren't evenly dispersed. Not all blue-collar jobs got wiped out; some industries (i.e., construction) are actually booming.

There's a political element here, too: Some battleground states did great—and others fared badly. (2/7)Image
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Even within the "working class," broadly defined, the wins and losses are uneven.

Leisure and hospitality jobs—restaurants, hotels, movie theaters, etc—have seen the worst losses.

Construction, warehouses, and trucking jobs have seen a major rebound. (3/7) Image
Read 7 tweets

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