Well here we are in the year 2007 and immigration is being illegalized! Can you believe it guys? No more immigrants in the united states! We better all protest, because clearly they are very important for our economy and populace.
 Native-born Americans flee cities 
  Native-born Americans moving out of cities of all sizes,  Census Bureau says
   The Associated Press
  Updated: 8:27 a.m. PT April 5, 2007
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  WASHINGTON - Without immigrants pouring into the nation’s  big metro areas, places such as New York, Los Angeles and Boston would be  shrinking as native-born Americans move farther out.
  Many smaller areas, including Battle Creek, Mich., Ames,  Iowa, and Corvallis, Ore., would shrink as well, according to population  estimates to be released Thursday by the Census Bureau.
  “Immigrants are filling the void as domestic migrants are  seeking opportunities in other places,” said Mark Mather, a demographer at the  Population Reference Bureau, a private research organization.
  Immigrants long have flocked to major metropolitan areas  and helped them grow. But increasingly, native-born Americans are moving from  those areas and leaving immigrants to provide the only source of growth.
  The New York metro area, which includes the suburbs,  added 1 million immigrants from 2000 to 2006. Without those immigrants, the  region would have lost nearly 600,000 people.
  Without immigration, the Los Angeles metro area would  have lost more than 200,000, the San Francisco area would have lost 188,000 and  the Boston area would have lost 101,000.
  The Census Bureau estimates annual population totals as  of July 1, using local records of births and deaths, Internal Revenue Service  records of people moving within the United States and census statistics on  immigrants. The estimates released Thursday were for metropolitan areas, which  generally include cities and their surrounding suburbs.
   
 Among the findings:
  <li class="textBodyBlack">Atlanta added more people than any other metro area from  2000 to 2006. The Atlanta area, which includes Sandy Springs and Marietta, Ga.,  added 890,000 people, putting its population at about 5.1 million. Gaining the  most after Atlanta were Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston, Phoenix and Riverside,  Calif. <li class="textBodyBlack">On a percentage basis, St. George in southwest Utah was  the fastest growing metro area from 2000 to 2006. St. George’s population jumped  by 40 percent, to 126,000. The next highest percentage increases were in  Greeley, Colo., Cape Coral, Fla., Bend, Ore., and Las Vegas. <li class="textBodyBlack">The New Orleans area, still recovering from Hurricane  Katrina, lost nearly 290,000 people from 2005 to 2006, reducing its population  to just over 1 million. The Gulfport-Biloxi area in Mississippi, also hit hard  by Katrina, lost nearly 27,000 people and dropping its population to 227,900. <li class="textBodyBlack">Parts of the Rust Belt also had large declines. The  Pittsburgh metro area led the way, losing 60,000 people from 2000 to 2006. Its  population loss was followed by declines in Cleveland, Buffalo, N.Y.,  Youngstown, Ohio, and Scranton, Pa. <li class="textBodyBlack">Houston edged past Miami to become the sixth largest  metro area, with about 5.5 million people. Miami slipped to seventh. There are about 36 million immigrants in the U.S. About  one-third are in the country illegally. The Census Bureau, however, does not  distinguish between legal and illegal immigrants.
  
The White House floated a plan last month that would  grant work visas to illegal immigrants, but they would have to return home and  pay hefty fines to become legal U.S. residents.
 Lawmakers were unable to reach an agreement last year on  how best to stem the flow of illegal immigrants. Immigration was a contentious  issue in many congressional races in November.
 
Link with economy?
Many demographers  associate shrinking populations with economic problems, typically poor job  markets or prohibitive housing prices.
 “A lot of cities rely on immigration to prop up their  housing market and prop up their economies,” said William Frey, a demographer at  the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank.
 Advocates for stricter immigration laws question whether  a stable, or even a shrinking population, is bad.
 “Don’t we have concerns about congestion and sprawl and  pollution?” asked Steven A. Camarota, director of research at the Center for  Immigration Studies, which advocates for stricter immigration policies.
 “Maybe those metro areas should think about what it would  take to make Americans want to live there,” Camarota said.
  
© 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This  material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17954186/
We have to be very careful if we outlaw immigration our major cities will shrink and disappear!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!