Our Most Recent Articles
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SCOTUS’s Medieval Ruling
Every illegal entry, visa overstay, and birth tourism visit carries a citizenship multiplier. On July 30, 2026, the Supreme Court blocked the United States from joining nearly every other industrialized nation in ending automatic birthright citizenship for children of illegal aliens and tourists. Six of the nine Justices ruled that President Trump’s Executive Order violated … Continued
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2-0: Today’s SCOTUS Decisions
The Supreme Court today cleared the way for the government to turn back migrants before they reach the border, and to terminate “Temporary” Protected Status designations that have shielded hundreds of thousands of illegal aliens. These are big wins! The two rulings will help future administrations prevent asylum abuse before it happens, and wind down … Continued
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The Border Crisis Fallout Isn’t Over
These two cases involve just some of the roughly 500,000 unaccompanied minors who were released into the U.S. during the Border Crisis.
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Colorado River Talks Collapse as Demand Outpaces Supply
The Colorado River basin faces difficult choices as states negotiate how to share shrinking water supplies. While conservation programs have produced savings, growing demand for water, housing, and infrastructure continues to intensify pressure on the river's dwindling flows.
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Trump Administration Expands Low-Wage Guestworker Program
The U.S. dairy industry is one of the largest in the world, and the Trump Administration just opened it up to an unlimited guestworker program.
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Swiss Voters Nearly Capped Immigration-Driven Population Growth
The Swiss referendum demonstrated that population growth itself can be a legitimate public policy issue. Across the developed world, governments face growing pressure to balance immigration levels with housing, infrastructure, and environmental sustainability.
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We’re Saving the Salamander—but Not Its Habitat
The frosted flatwoods salamander is one of America's most imperiled amphibians. Scientists can breed endangered salamanders in captivity, but long-term recovery depends on preserving habitat. As immigration-driven population growth increases demand for housing and development, protecting that habitat becomes more difficult.
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The Housing Fix That Makes Sprawl Worse
Housing advocates often focus on increasing supply, but demand matters too. With immigration now driving most U.S. population growth, millions of additional homes will be needed in coming decades. Accommodating that growth could require more than a million acres of new development, increasing pressure on farmland, wildlife habitat, and natural resources.
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Water Demand Is Overwhelming Efforts to Save the Great Salt Lake
Utah's billion-dollar effort to save the Great Salt Lake highlights a growing environmental challenge. Conservation programs can increase water supplies, but immigration-driven population growth also drives demand for housing, infrastructure, and water, making it difficult for those gains to keep pace.