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You lost me in the first sentence, with the premise that immigrants are “overburdening” our social services. Most immigrants work. Most immigrants come here specifically to work. They pay taxes. Immigrants who commit social security fraud have taxes deducted from their income that they will never collect in the form of social services. Most of the immigrants receiving public assistance (like, for example, asylum seekers) are doing so because our government doesn’t allow them to work, even if they want to. The solution is to let immigrants work.
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> with the premise that immigrants are “overburdening” our social services. Most immigrants work.

I just want to point to a flaw in your reasoning.The point is not that immigrants are some special kind of human beings that require more assistance. It is just that immigration can unlike natural population growth, result in arbitrary population growth in a short amount of time.

From that view point, it makes sense that immigrants can overburden the social services, because the latter does not get a chance to accommodate the increased population properly, causing additional suffering to existing population.


It would have to be an extremely fast influx to cause real problems along those lines. Social services are able to handle a growing case load with growing budget pretty well.

You can't grow doctors on tree just because you now get more funding. It take 6+ years to train a doctor while people can cross a border and grow the population right now.

Are doctors usually underrepresented among legal immigrants? I could see it actually helping out with our self-inflicted doctor supply problems.

Also the "all immigration happens overnight" plan is obviously a bad way to handle things. That lag wouldn't be a big deal if we 'merely' instantly doubled the rate we issue green cards and ramped up from there, just to make up some numbers.


>Are doctors usually underrepresented among legal immigrants?

Definitely.

>I could see it actually helping out with our self-inflicted doctor supply problems.

Only if they are overrepresented which they aren't(in Europe at least). You need to actually work hard to convince doctors to come to your country and not others, but with other migrants you need the opposite. Convince them to stop coming.


https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2025/11/how-immigrant...

Well the US isn't Europe and it imports a ton of doctors.

We pay doctors a lot and have an artificially limited supply of native doctors.


That totally depends on the existing population of the state/region in question...

Immigration trends are also localized, so that largely cancels out.



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