The core statistics in the claim are factually accurate, but they represent only part of a complex picture. The 53.5% figure for immigrant household welfare usage is correct, as is the higher rate for illegal immigrant households. However, several important contextual factors must be considered:
- Per capita consumption remains lower for immigrants when considering total government expenditures
- Most benefits go to U.S.-born children in immigrant households
- Methodological challenges exist in identifying illegal immigrants in survey data
- State-level variations significantly affect actual access to benefits
- Age demographics heavily influence total benefit consumption patterns
The claim presents valid data but would benefit from acknowledging these methodological limitations and the multifaceted nature of immigrant welfare usage. Both the CIS and Cato analyses contribute valuable but complementary perspectives to understanding this complex policy issue.
My question for you @MTTiger19 is does this REALLY affect your life in any real way? Like, honestly does this makes your life worse to see these stats? Get away from your echo chamber- you're clearly a blue collar guy. There is no reason to remove the humanity from your fellow blue collar workers, legal or undocumented, to fit your agenda.
It's not worth it- you're projecting your personal grievances on humans. Literal people, who aren't affecting your life in any way get you all riled up. There's a better way homie