HOME-Au
HOME-Au
24h
24h
USA
USA
GOP
GOP
Phim Bộ
Phim Bộ
Videoauto
VIDEO-Au
Home Classic
Home Classic
Donation
Donation
News Book
News Book
News 50
News 50
worldautoscroll
WORLD-Au
Breaking
Breaking
 

Go Back   VietBF > USA NEWS > USA News in English


Reply
 
Thread Tools
  #1  
Old  Default Earned Entitlements And Mass Immigration
.



Earned Entitlements And Mass Immigration










By Christian Vezilj
Nov. 29, 2025

In the shadow of well-meaning slogans and impassioned rallies, a quiet crisis is brewing—one that threatens the very systems built by generations of American workers. Social Security and Medicaid, two pillars of our social contract, are facing demographic and fiscal strain.

At the same time, a growing political movement seeks to legalize millions of illegal aliens, offering them a pathway to citizenship and, eventually, access to these entitlement programs—programs to which they haven’t, or have barely, contributed. The moral impulse behind this push is understandable. But the economic consequences, especially for older Americans and the rising generation, are rarely discussed with honesty.

We can explore the question of naturalizing those who entered the country illegally through the lens of simplicity and critical thought. I have witnessed rallies across the nation, crowds of retirees and working-class citizens standing shoulder to shoulder, passionately endorsing illegal immigration and denouncing ICE as if it were an occupying force.

Many of these same citizens, I suspect, have spent three, four, even five decades faithfully contributing to Social Security. Their payroll taxes were mandatory. Their sacrifices were tangible. Their commitment was unquestionable. Yet few seemed to recognize that the very system they labored to sustain now stands at risk of destabilization by the very policies they so fervently champion.

Let’s be clear: illegal aliens are not currently eligible for Social Security or Medicaid. But if legalized and eventually naturalized, they would become eligible, and that’s where the tension begins.


The Contribution Gap


It is undeniable that many individuals residing in the country illegally do, in fact, pay taxes. Some file returns using Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers (ITINs), while others are employed under borrowed or fraudulent Social Security numbers. According to estimates from the Social Security Administration, illegal alien workers contributed more than $26 billion to the trust fund in 2023 alone.

Yet this headline figure conceals a deeper reality. Millions of others remain outside the system entirely, working off the books, paid in cash, and contributing nothing to the tax base or social safety net. This shadow economy not only undermines fairness but also erodes the integrity of the system itself.

Moreover, every position filled by someone who is in the country unlawfully represents an opportunity denied to an American citizen. Jobs that could provide stability, dignity, and upward mobility for legal residents are instead diverted, creating a silent but significant displacement in the labor market.

Even among those who do pay, the duration and amount of their contributions often fall short of what’s required to sustain long-term benefits. Social Security is not a welfare program; it’s an earned benefit. The average American worker contributes for decades before drawing retirement income. Legalizing millions of illegal aliens who have only recently begun contributing, or who may never meet the full eligibility criteria, creates a fiscal imbalance. They will receive more than they paid in, and someone else will have to make up the difference.

That someone is the American citizen.


The Hidden Costs of Compassion


Supporters of mass legalization often argue that immigrants will bolster the workforce and stabilize entitlement programs. After all, most illegal aliens are of working age. But this argument ignores the wage suppression and job displacement that often accompany large-scale immigration.

Harvard economist George Borjas found that illegal immigration reduces wages for low-skilled native workers, particularly those without high school diplomas. In sectors like construction, agriculture, and hospitality, American citizens are increasingly displaced by cheaper, illegal labor. This not only erodes wages but also undermines the tax base needed to fund Social Security and Medicaid.

Moreover, the fiscal drain extends beyond payroll taxes. The Center for Immigration Studies estimates a lifetime net cost of $68,000 per illegal alien, largely due to low education levels and higher use of means-tested programs. Medicare, in particular, faces pressure from emergency care provisions and long-term eligibility expansions. Legalization would only accelerate this trend.


Intergenerational Consequences


The most troubling aspect of this debate is its impact on generational equity. Older Americans, many of whom support illegal migration policies out of compassion or nostalgia, may not realize that their benefits are at risk. Social Security is already projected to run short by 2033, triggering a 23% cut in benefits unless reforms are enacted. Adding millions of new claimants, many of whom contributed far less, will force painful choices:
  1. Raise the retirement age to 68 or beyond.
  2. Increase payroll taxes on younger workers.
  3. Reduce benefit formulas for future retirees.
  4. Means-test benefits, undermining the universality of the program.

These changes won’t affect the wealthy. They’ll hit the middle class, the very people who built the system and now rely on it. And they’ll hit the rising generation hardest, forcing them to pay more for benefits they may never receive.


Why the Silence?


Why don’t we talk about this? Why do older Americans, who have the most to lose, support policies that could erode their own retirement security?

Many see immigration through the lens of their own family histories—grandparen ts who came through Ellis Island, parents who worked hard to build a better life. They forget that those immigrants came legally, often with sponsors, and without access to entitlements. Today’s immigration landscape is fundamentally different.

Another reason is media and political messaging. The debate is framed as compassion versus cruelty, not sustainability versus collapse. Few politicians dare to speak the truth: that compassion without contribution is a recipe for fiscal ruin.

Finally, there’s a disconnect between policy and personal impact. Retirees may assume their benefits are locked in, unaware that future COLA adjustments, spousal benefits, and lifetime caps could be trimmed to accommodate new claimants. They may not connect their decades of contributions to the redistribution effects that legalization could trigger.


A Call for Critical Thinking


The older generation and the younger generation alike are, perhaps unknowingly, supporting their own financial demise at the expense of illegal aliens who should not be in the country to begin with. The question must be asked: why can’t they see beyond the talking points? Why do so many blindly support policies that will affect them deeply later—policies that will erode their retirement, suppress their wages, and burden their children?

America is a nation of immigrants, but also a nation of laws, systems, and promises. Social Security and Medicaid are not infinite wells. They are fragile compacts between generations. To preserve them, we must confront hard truths, not just comforting narratives.

Americans need to think with clear heads, not heated emotions. If millions of people who entered the country illegally are naturalized, workers nearing retirement will see their benefits erode, while younger workers will face higher taxes to sustain the system. The younger will pay, the older will sacrifice, and everyone in between will bear the burden—without having truly consented to these outcomes. What was once designed as a safeguard for those who worked and sacrificed may instead become a mechanism of redistribution, eroding the very promise of security it was meant to uphold.


----------------

Link: https://www.americanthinker.com/arti...migration.html






.
VIETBF Diễn Đàn Hay Nhất Của Người Việt Nam

HOT NEWS 24h

HOT 3 Days

NEWS 3 Days

HOT 7 Days

NEWS 7 Days

HOME

Breaking News

VietOversea

World News

Business News

Car News

Computer News

Game News

USA News

Mobile News

Music News

Movies News

History

Thơ Ca

Sport News

Stranger Stories

Comedy Stories

Cooking Chat

Nice Pictures

Fashion

School

Travelling

Funny Videos

Canada Tin Hay

USA Tin Hay

VietBF Homepage Autoscroll

VietBF Video Autoscroll Portal

Home Classic

Home Classic Master Page



Da Lat
R6 Đệ Nhất Cao Thủ
Release: 3 Days Ago
Reputation: 188983


Profile:
Join Date: Jan 2024
Posts: 2,523
Last Update: None Rating: None
Attached Thumbnails
Click image for larger version

Name:	q5us6nws2ot0l9talubt_640.jpg
Views:	0
Size:	63.1 KB
ID:	2596713  
Da Lat_is_offline
Thanks: 2,134
Thanked 4,756 Times in 1,610 Posts
Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 88 Post(s)
Rep Power: 13
Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9
Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9Da Lat Reputation Uy Tín Level 9
Reply

User Tag List


Miền Trung chết đuối trong hai chữ “đúng quy trình” Nhật Bản thời Takaichi: Khi Tokyo thôi “hiền lành” và trở thành đối trọng cứng rắn với Bắc Kinh Từ lũ dữ miền Trung đến “Công ước Hà Nội”: Khi khế ước xã hội bị xé bỏ
Phú Yên không còn quan tài: Tiếng khóc giữa đại hồng thủy và những chuyến xe chở tình người Mafia công nghệ 4.0: Từ vụ Alice Guo đến cuộc cạnh tranh quyền lực ngầm ở Đông Nam Á Người đàn ông mang trạm sạc đến nối lại tin tức giữa vùng lũ
“Lũ nhân tạo” ở Việt Nam: Khi dòng sông bị bẻ cong vì thủy điện Đêm 19-11 và tiếng kêu giữa lũ dữ: Khi “đúng quy trình” nhấn chìm niềm tin của dân Lời nói dối “người Mỹ không làm việc này” và cái giá của cả một quốc gia
Đức dựng lại “đạo quân mạnh nhất châu Âu”: Tham vọng của Merz và nỗi lo nghĩa vụ quân sự Thích Trí Quang: Từ “vì đạo pháp và dân tộc” đến 44 năm im lặng Khi Bắc Kinh dọa “chặt đầu” bà đầm thép Sanae Takaichi
Trump hô tội “phản loạn, xử tử hình” 6 dân biểu Dân Chủ: chính trường Mỹ trượt sát lằn ranh bạo lực Ukraine giữa gọng kìm: Kế hoạch hòa bình của Trump và bóng ma drone Rubicon trên bầu trời chiến tranh Kinh tế Mỹ “chạy hết ga, nhưng ghế trống”: Nỗi lo suy thoái không việc làm dưới thời Trump
Hai thẩm phán liên bang chặn lệnh Trump “bóp cổ” ngân sách cứu trợ thiên tai để ép bỏ DEI và hỗ trợ di trú Đêm lũ cuốn trôi Camp Mystic: từ bức vẽ ám ảnh của bé Lulu đến 27 sinh mạng nhỏ bị bỏ rơi Từ cái chết Pamela Genini đến bóng tối đè lên phụ nữ Ý dưới thời Giorgia Meloni

 
Lên đầu Xuống dưới Lên 3000px Xuống 3000px

iPad Videos Portal Autoscroll

VietBF Music Portal Autoscroll

iPad News Portal Autoscroll

VietBF Homepage Autoscroll

VietBF Video Autoscroll Portal

USA News Autoscroll Portall

VietBF WORLD Autoscroll Portal

Home Classic

Super Widescreen

iPad World Portal Autoscroll

iPad USA Portal Autoscroll

Phim Bộ Online

Tin nóng nhất 24h qua

Tin nóng nhất 3 ngày qua

Tin nóng nhất 7 ngày qua

Tin nóng nhất 30 ngày qua

Albums

Total Videos Online
Lên đầu Xuống dưới Lên 3000px Xuống 3000px

Tranh luận sôi nổi nhất 7 ngày qua

Tranh luận sôi nổi nhất 14 ngày qua

Tranh luận sôi nổi nhất 30 ngày qua

10.000 Tin mới nhất

Tin tức Hoa Kỳ

Tin tức Công nghệ
Lên đầu Xuống dưới Lên 3000px Xuống 3000px

Super News

School Cooking Traveling Portal

Enter Portal

Series Shows and Movies Online

Home Classic Master Page

Donation Ủng hộ $3 cho VietBF
Lên đầu Xuống dưới Lên 3000px Xuống 3000px
Diễn Đàn Người Việt Hải Ngoại. Tự do ngôn luận, an toàn và uy tín. Vì một tương lai tươi đẹp cho các thế hệ Việt Nam hãy ghé thăm chúng tôi, hãy tâm sự với chúng tôi mỗi ngày, mỗi giờ và mỗi giây phút có thể. VietBF.Com Xin cám ơn các bạn, chúc tất cả các bạn vui vẻ và gặp nhiều may mắn.
Welcome to Vietnamese American Community, Vietnamese European, Canadian, Australian Forum, Vietnamese Overseas Forum. Freedom of speech, safety and prestige. For a beautiful future for Vietnamese generations, please visit us, talk to us every day, every hour and every moment possible. VietBF.Com Thank you all and good luck.

Lên đầu Xuống dưới Lên 3000px Xuống 3000px

All times are GMT. The time now is 18:21.
VietBF - Vietnamese Best Forum Copyright ©2005 - 2025
User Alert System provided by Advanced User Tagging (Pro) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2025 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.
Log Out Unregistered

Page generated in 0.11900 seconds with 13 queries