People hop a fence to get to a footbridge to Manhattan at a temporary shelter for migrants on Randall's Island in New York, Friday, Jan. 19, 2024. As New York City struggles to house an influx of immigrants, an unsanctioned tent community is growing outside the gates of the city's largest migrant shelter on the island.Photo by AP Photo/Seth Wenig

Jamie Sarkonak: Trump's immigration plan is reasonable — ignore gaslighting media

Public support for immigration controls shows that Americans aren't buying media hysteria

by · National Post

Canada was once lauded all over the world for having a merit-based immigration system. Though strict, this country was widely perceived as welcoming. The same cannot be said for Donald Trump, who, despite angling for a similar approach, is being cast as though he’s bringing an immigration apocalypse upon the United States.

For months, Trump’s keystone promise on the file has been “mass deportations of undocumented immigrants,” of whom there are roughly 11 million (or 17 million, by the count of anti-immigration advocates). It’s a perfectly acceptable thing to do: entry requirements are there to ensure newcomers aren’t criminals or otherwise unable to support themselves in the new country. They’re also a cost to the rest of the population, with generous taxpayer-supported benefits packages available in states like California and New York.