Does using the word racism somehow validate your opposition to enforced border laws? What Invar said is absolutely true. There is nothing racist about it. If you want immigration it has to be legal and for the benefit of the country and its citizens. There is no more need for low income labor. Plenty here already. Has nothing to do with color of skin.
What is happening is not good for the country. It is only good for the people that benefit from cheap labor. If it was your job you wouldn't be using the racist card. That racist card.....so convenient. And these people do not come and take care of themselves. They rely on social benefits that our legal citizens have to pay for. I don't care whether they are black, brown, yellow or white. They need to come into this country legally and according to real need.
All one needs to do is take a look around. There are a number of communities in North Texas that have been swamped by the H-1B worker, specifically Valley Ranch (North Irving) and Frisco. When we moved here 20+ years ago, the new elementary school had sufficient students for only the first floor. In the years that followed, Indian/South Asians have congregated here, where they now account for over a third of the student population...in a district where the teachers are 90% white.
Another elementary school is under construction, across the street from us, the second new elementary school to be built in the past three years.
From my vantage point, at least a third show no signs of assimilation, particularly the stay at home parents and especially the grandparents of the extended family that are allowed to immigrate here. Our neighborhood alone is now 80% Indian...lovely people, no complaints. The commercial development at Cypress Waters a mile away guarantees that the H-1B program will continue in force for years to come.
Frisco ISD has grown even more, now with 10 High schools to meet the population boom.
The employment centers of Dallas, Las Colinas, and Plano are hubs for H-1B workers, depressing salaries for citizens, despite the historically low unemployment rates.
I've spoken to my son's and grandson's class for Veterans Day for years. Last year, I asked my grandson's class, "how many of you live in households where English is not the first language spoken?" At least 75% of the students raised their hands. I explained that I know what's that like, as I lived in Germany for four years, and learned to speak the language there.
There's no racism in INVAR's words, just an informed opinion in a politically correct world.