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U.S experts don’t foresee massive influx of illegal immigrants

A United States Border Patrol vehicle cruises along the primary and secondary fence line on the Tijuana, Mexico border in San Diego. (UPI Photo/Earl Cryer)
A United States Border Patrol vehicle cruises along the primary and secondary fence line on the Tijuana, Mexico border in San Diego. (UPI Photo/Earl Cryer)

PHOENIX, June 3 (UPI) — The number of undocumented immigrants caught entering the United States from Mexico is up this year, officials say, but doesn’t portend a massive influx.

Border Patrol officials said 189,172 people were caught crossing the border in the first six months of 2013, a 13 percent increase, but that number is still near historical lows, The Arizona Republic reported Monday.

Immigration experts say those levels shouldn’t change much because of demographic changes within Mexico.

“Fertility rates have dropped, there are fewer people of young age who are the likeliest to migrate, the economy is improving, educational attainment is improving,” said Michelle Mittelstadt, communications director for the Migration Policy Institute, a non-partisan think tank in Washington, D.C.

David Fitzgerald agrees. The sociologist at the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies at the University of California-San Diego said while improvements in the U.S. economy could make a border run attractive, there are other reasons it is “highly unlikely” the number would reach the levels of a decade ago, when border agents arrested nearly 1.7 million immigrants in 2000 alone.

A survey he conducted in January found the two biggest reasons people decided not to cross the border were the hazards of crossing the desert and the dangers of traveling through areas of northern Mexico controlled by drug cartels.

More of the migrants being apprehended now come from Central America, the U.S. Border Patrol says. Mittelstadt said that’s another reason migration levels won’t rebound to historical highs. The combined populations of El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras equal less than 20 percent of Mexico’s.

Copyright 2013 United Press International, Inc. (UPI).

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If Republicans don’t want illegals here, then stop supporting their providers, the corporations. You don’t do that because you’re corporate fascists at heart. Nuff said.

@corporate-did you grow up that stupid or did you have to work at it?

More think tank politically correct window dressing talking past the issue to assuage American voters.
What part of “we don’t want illegals making an end run on our system don’t they get”?
When will we see a politician actually grow a pair & stop chain and birth right migration? When will we be able to count on someone to actually be in the corner of American taxpaying citizens – and not use this mess to further their own political careers at our expense?

Undocumented immigrants have become the USA’s version of modern day slave labor. These people come here to work, they have taxes and social security taken out of their checks, but because they use false I.D.’s that money goes to a holding fund that is used to prop up the social security system. That money is in the billions. Plus of course the employers get by on the cheap and are able to put more money in their bottom line pocket.

Is there any wonder this continues to be a on going problem?…its called turning a blind eye.

Talk to the people in Arizona and Texas and they will tell you this is just more administration cover up and lies.

US experts?? Well Hells Bells what a statement!!! There already here you idiots!!!

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