Opinion Immigrants make Pittsburgh stronger

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There’s hardly a more humane — or economically sensible — use of resources in Pittsburgh than helping recent immigrants integrate into the city’s culture and economy. That’s why organizations like the Immigrant Workforce Program, a joint initiative of Jewish Family and Community Services and Literacy Pittsburgh recently profiled by the Post-Gazette’s Jordan Anderson, are so important and worthy of support.

After decades of decline, population is a constant anxiety in southwestern Pennsylvania — and rightly so. But the conservation usually focuses on keeping people in Pittsburgh, and sometimes attracting domestic migrants. Not enough, however, is said about making the city an attractive landing place for newcomers to the United States.

About 9% of Pittsburghers were born outside the U.S., one of the lowest rates in a major American city. Compare that to the national rate of 15%, or about 50 million people, which matches the years 1890 and 1910 for the highest percentage in American history. The gap represents economic and cultural vibrancy Pittsburgh is missing out on.

In 2019, immigrants in Pittsburgh earned $1 billion in income and contributed nearly $100 million in state and local taxes (plus $200 million in federal taxes). The remaining $700 million was largely invested right here, in everything from housing to goods to small businesses. The figures have surely increased since.

Meanwhile, the city’s population has declined every decade since 1950, from 671,000 then to about 303,000 in 2020. The most recent American Community Survey estimates for 2022 — known to be rough — indicate a further, very slight, decline.

Without immigrants, these figures would all be far worse. With more immigrants, in 2030 Pittsburgh could see its first population increase since the Truman administration.

That’s where organizations like the Immigrant Workforce Program step in. IWP helps newcomers to the U.S. with English-language instruction and skills, such as resume-writing and interview-taking, that are important to succeeding in the American system. The organization also actively connects new Americans to employers, like UPMC and Giant Eagle, interested in recruiting them.

This kind of focused support is particularly important in place like Pittsburgh where the organic chains of immigration are weaker than in other places. Generally, having a lot of immigrants attracts more, as friends and relatives go to places where they’ll have a built-in support network. Organizations like IWP can help to build those networks.

While some American cities have found their social services systems overwhelmed by rapid influxes of migrants, Pittsburgh is ready and waiting to be a new home. One of the strongest legacies of the Peduto administration is in this area: The former mayor founded the ambitious and comprehensive Welcoming Pittsburgh initiative in 2014, and created the Office of Immigrant and Refugee Affairs in 2021. While these remain active, the information on the Welcoming Pittsburgh website is dated, and its last annual report is over two years old.

From private citizens to public agencies to the region’s foundation community, supporting immigrants is one of the best ways to support Pittsburgh.
 
That’s why organizations like the Immigrant Workforce Program, a joint initiative of Jewish Family and Community Services and Literacy Pittsburgh recently profiled by the Post-Gazette’s Jordan Anderson, are so important and worthy of support.
Of course...
Every. Fucking. Time.
 
More like Shitsburgh. PA has been so blacked since Puppet obongo's 2nd term, and in the last 5 years alone many town have been utterly Pajeetified/Mexica'd into near unrecognizable status. The factories, hotels, state hospitals, and secular churches (colleges) breed and employ them, the Yahvist State nourishes them, the Kike monopolies like blackrock house them, and the city buses spread the cancer around in all directions.

There is no surviving this literal feces infection.
 
As long as they come here legally am all for immigration. The process works, from personal experience. I just want all the illegal aliens out and no more allowed in.
 
After decades of decline, population is a constant anxiety in southwestern Pennsylvania — and rightly so. But the conservation usually focuses on keeping people in Pittsburgh, and sometimes attracting domestic migrants. Not enough, however, is said about making the city an attractive landing place for newcomers to the United States.
To translate this from Journoscum to English.

"After decades of shipping jobs over seas, stagnating wages and soft on crime policies, population in southwestern Pennsylvania has declined. But conversations around fixing population decline rarely focus on the causes, and more often on the symptoms. Instead, a possible solution instead of fixing problems is importing cheap foreign labor to work for low wages and keep property values high. In other words, kicking the can down the road."
 
Of course...
Every. Fucking. Time.
Now to be fair, there are plenty of Catholic and Lutheran Aid Agencies hoovering dusky immigrants into your grandma's backyard. I've never understood why they all import Muslims, though. Are they trying to get more converts? Because the one thing that will make me less likely to convert to Christianity is one look at your average Christian. Fat, weak cucks who hope destroying their children's future will absolve them of the crime of having mean ancestors.
 
Immigration is acceptable when:
It’s very small numbers
The population is large and wealthy enough to support it without being diluted
Cultural differences aren’t large (a sane moving to Norway, a frog moving to Spain)
People integrate completely
There is a valid reason for it (someone got married to an American and they bring them over/ we have a shortage of skill in x area.)
People are fully vetted and can support themselves.
None of the above seems to apply today.
 
None of the above seems to apply today.
A lot of Americans will cite the words on the Statue of Liberty (which were added later) like it's our immigration policy. While also being blind that Ellis Island was also called the Island of Tears, since that was the screening ground, and many were rejected. Paperwork, health inspections, and work were requirements.
 
As an immigrant myself; fuck immigrants.

70%+ of the non white ones I shared a neighborhood with are still there or in section 8 housing, on drugs, and in and out of jail.

The only ones who consistently make something of themselves are europeans. The Africans imitate the domestic blacks, the Cubans are credit card scammers, and most of the Vietnamese who were 2nd and 3rd generation are some kind of criminals, fucking nguyens.
 
Looks like some immigrants would change their mind when they read that article.

March 10, 2024

Pittsburgh will only respond to dire emergency police calls at night​

By Andrea Widburg


Pittsburgh is Pennsylvania’s second-largest city. Naturally, being a large, northwestern city, it’s under Democrat control. And also naturally, it responded to George Floyd’s drug death by doing everything it could to hamstring policing. Inevitably, that meant that the police force began to suffer from a staffing crisis. Now, that staffing crisis means that at night unless people are experiencing a real-time, life-threatening emergency, no police will show up. In Pittsburgh, the “broken windows” theory of law enforcement is irrelevant; instead, the windows are breaking.
For those young ’uns who don’t remember the 1970s, that was the first decade that felt the full effects of the leftist contention that policing was inherently racist and classist. With police prevented from doing their jobs, cities fell into decay. This was the heyday of subway train tagging in New York and the irritating windshield guys who’d dirty your window and then extort you through implied violence if you didn’t pay them to clean it.
What helped bring about change was an article entitled “Broken Windows” that James Q. Wilson and George L. Kelling introduced in March 1982’s The Atlantic Monthly (when it was still a magazine of ideas and not a Democrat party outlet). The theory was simple: If you don’t police small crimes, such as broken windows, criminals will move on to larger crimes. Or, as Wilson and Kelling explained:
 
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