W.E.B Du Bois, Frederick Douglass, Marcus Garvey and Booker T. Washington Were Against Immigration

Bunchy Carter

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African American leaders have long called for tougher immigration laws​


860x394.jpg

Frederick Douglass was just one of many African American leaders over the past 140 years to argue that lax immigration has harmed the employment opportunities of African Americans.


Taking a hard stance on illegal immigration will increase employment opportunities for unemployed African American workers. In 2014, the US Census Department and the Department of Labor reported that there were 8 million undocumented immigrants in the U.S. working or looking for work, making up 5 percent of the civilian labor force. At the same time, there were over 31 million African Americans legally able to gain employment, more than 4 million of them unemployed – a 13 percent unemployment rate. Many of these people live in Philadelphia.

Black leaders such as W.E.B Du Bois, Frederick Douglass, Marcus Garvey and Booker T. Washington all spoke out against immigration during their time. They saw the effects it had on the African American worker, both in cities and in rural America. Jobs that were held by African Americans were being taken by European and Chinese immigrants, which created an unemployment cataclysm for Black Americans already facing intense racial and economic discrimination at the time.

During the second Industrial Revolution of the late 1800s and early 1900s, Black Americans fought back against pro-immigration legislation. In 1879, Frederick Douglass explained the negative role of Chinese immigration on the African American worker: "They would rather have laborers who would work for nothing; but as they cannot get the negro on these terms, they want Chinamen...The loss of the negro is to gain them the Chinese, and if the thing works well, abolition, in their opinion, will have proved itself to be another blessing in disguise."

Black leaders openly spoke out against European, Mexican and Chinese immigration. In 1895, Booker T. Washington, in one of his most famous speeches, discussed the issue of immigrant workers taking jobs from African Americans. Washington's “Atlanta Compromise Address” of 1895 targeted industrialists who were employing immigrant labor instead of American-born Blacks: “To those of you who look to the incoming of those of foreign birth….cast down your bucket where you are… we shall stand by you with a devotion that no foreigner can approach, ready to interlace our industrial, commercial, civil and religious life with yours.”

In 1928, the soon-to-be business manager of the NAACP, George Schuyler, stated the obvious on Mexican immigration: "If the million Mexicans who have entered the country have not displaced Negro workers, whom have they displaced?”

More recently, African American Congresswoman Barbara Jordan, who chaired the U.S. Commission on Immigration Reform in the 1990s, took a stance for stiffer immigration policies that seems conservative by current standards: “The credibility of immigration policy can be measured by a simple yardstick: people who should get in, do get in; people who should not get in are kept out; and people who are judged deportable are required to leave.”

And in March of 2016, Peter N. Kirsanow, a member of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission, explained in a US Senate hearing that illegal immigration has a “disproportionately negative effect on the wages and employment levels of blacks, particularly black males." Progressives who claim to represent the interests of Black workers should take note: these have been the positions of our African American leaders for centuries. We have been engaged in a national debate on illegal immigration for years now. There is nothing that has been more harmful to the African American worker. Isn’t it about time for the effects of illegal immigration on the African American Worker to become part of the discussion? Isn’t it time for our elected African American lawmakers to stand up for their constituents?

Via: African American leaders have long called for tougher immigration laws
 

WIA20XX

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LOL at y'all fake blacktivists trying to put Southern Black People back on the plantation.

Only on The Coli do we get "brehs" looking for ways to turn Black people back into Share Croppers

Are y'all from the South?
Lived in the South?
Lived in the Country?
You ever done real farm work?
You ever done real work? With your hands?
Years of back breaking work for 9 bucks an hour?

Y'all need to quit. Your guy won.
He's in the White House handing out tangibles like getting rid of the Black-Sonian and erasing Jackie Robinson from the history books.
 

blackestofpanthers

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LOL at y'all fake blacktivists trying to put Southern Black People back on the plantation.

Only on The Coli do we get "brehs" looking for ways to turn Black people back into Share Croppers

Are y'all from the South?
Lived in the South?
Lived in the Country?
You ever done real farm work?
You ever done real work? With your hands?
Years of back breaking work for 9 bucks an hour?

Y'all need to quit. Your guy won.
He's in the White House handing out tangibles like getting rid of the Black-Sonian and erasing Jackie Robinson from the history books.
Couldn’t address anything in the OP, so make it about trump :skip:
Fake concern trolling from people that aren’t even black Americans.
2022 posters woat
Where were you in here? Since you care about the well being of black Americans.

Much more data I can drop
 

RickyDiBiase

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Couldn’t address anything in the OP, so make it about trump :skip:
Fake concern trolling from people that aren’t even black Americans.
2022 posters woat
Where were you in here? Since you care about the well being of black Americans.

Much more data I can drop

Being anti-immigration during that period was a common thing
 

Robbie3000

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OP, Trump could Thanos snap every immigrant back to their country and you’d still be a dusty loser.

You’d have to find a new scapegoat to explain how a 5’4 Ecuadorian carpenter who just got her five years ago and who can barely speak English has leaped frogged you financially.
 

Richard Glidewell

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The disenfranchisement they were trying to protect against happened in a different way altogether and the IMMIGRANTS still came........people taking cues from dumpster fire now and reaching back trying to reenact outdated laws and philosophies..........you know......I'm sick of this Alamo fairytale these bytch ass crackers hold onto.......Mexico should have never allowed immigrants........
 

Buddy

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You Internet Ass Muhfukkas love to wax nostalgically as if you're on the same page of icons.... they were talking about Europeans. All those people and theur descendants are "White" now-- but you want them to fix immigration
6829955-orig.gif

African American leaders have long called for tougher immigration laws​


860x394.jpg

Frederick Douglass was just one of many African American leaders over the past 140 years to argue that lax immigration has harmed the employment opportunities of African Americans.


Taking a hard stance on illegal immigration will increase employment opportunities for unemployed African American workers. In 2014, the US Census Department and the Department of Labor reported that there were 8 million undocumented immigrants in the U.S. working or looking for work, making up 5 percent of the civilian labor force. At the same time, there were over 31 million African Americans legally able to gain employment, more than 4 million of them unemployed – a 13 percent unemployment rate. Many of these people live in Philadelphia.

Black leaders such as W.E.B Du Bois, Frederick Douglass, Marcus Garvey and Booker T. Washington all spoke out against immigration during their time. They saw the effects it had on the African American worker, both in cities and in rural America. Jobs that were held by African Americans were being taken by European and Chinese immigrants, which created an unemployment cataclysm for Black Americans already facing intense racial and economic discrimination at the time.

During the second Industrial Revolution of the late 1800s and early 1900s, Black Americans fought back against pro-immigration legislation. In 1879, Frederick Douglass explained the negative role of Chinese immigration on the African American worker: "They would rather have laborers who would work for nothing; but as they cannot get the negro on these terms, they want Chinamen...The loss of the negro is to gain them the Chinese, and if the thing works well, abolition, in their opinion, will have proved itself to be another blessing in disguise."

Black leaders openly spoke out against European, Mexican and Chinese immigration. In 1895, Booker T. Washington, in one of his most famous speeches, discussed the issue of immigrant workers taking jobs from African Americans. Washington's “Atlanta Compromise Address” of 1895 targeted industrialists who were employing immigrant labor instead of American-born Blacks: “To those of you who look to the incoming of those of foreign birth….cast down your bucket where you are… we shall stand by you with a devotion that no foreigner can approach, ready to interlace our industrial, commercial, civil and religious life with yours.”

In 1928, the soon-to-be business manager of the NAACP, George Schuyler, stated the obvious on Mexican immigration: "If the million Mexicans who have entered the country have not displaced Negro workers, whom have they displaced?”

More recently, African American Congresswoman Barbara Jordan, who chaired the U.S. Commission on Immigration Reform in the 1990s, took a stance for stiffer immigration policies that seems conservative by current standards: “The credibility of immigration policy can be measured by a simple yardstick: people who should get in, do get in; people who should not get in are kept out; and people who are judged deportable are required to leave.”

And in March of 2016, Peter N. Kirsanow, a member of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission, explained in a US Senate hearing that illegal immigration has a “disproportionately negative effect on the wages and employment levels of blacks, particularly black males." Progressives who claim to represent the interests of Black workers should take note: these have been the positions of our African American leaders for centuries. We have been engaged in a national debate on illegal immigration for years now. There is nothing that has been more harmful to the African American worker. Isn’t it about time for the effects of illegal immigration on the African American Worker to become part of the discussion? Isn’t it time for our elected African American lawmakers to stand up for their constituents?

Via: African American leaders have long called for tougher immigration laws
 

Json

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There weren’t even 50 states nor was the American economy in the globalization it is now,

Immigration was a permanent move. There was no 9:40 flight back to England after finishing a contract with Ma Bell.
 
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Are y'all from the South?
Lived in the South?
Lived in the Country?
You ever done real farm work?
You ever done real work? With your hands?
Years of back breaking work for 9 bucks an hour?

Yes to all of this….and modern black Americans or Americans in general are not built for this type of work… with that being said, the fact remains that immigrants drive down labor costs… Many Americans will do this work if it paid a proper wage…. I fully believe they want our 12 to 13 year olds out their farming and picking fruit
 

OneManGang

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Americans reap every single benefit of a fully globalized society and yet seek to isolate themselves which would inevitably make their cushioned lives even harder due to straight ignorance and racism

America has destabilized the entire western hemisphere to make sure it sits alone at the top and nikkas wonder why people immigrate to America. Can’t have it both ways
 
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