If, as Hillary Clinton told a crowd of women supporters in 2017, "The future is female," that future is coming to pass, and it can be seen in America's immigration policymaking.
Immigration journalism-at most major U.S. newspapers, at least-appears to be dominated by women as well.
In 2001 a Gallup poll showed that just 6 percent of Americans supported amnesty-an attitude likely linked to the disastrous Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986, which, right after it passed, produced a flood of unlawful immigration.
In any case, a connection between the increase of political activity among women and permissiveness towards high immigration, amnesty, refugees, and so on, seems to have solid grounding.
Failing to understand the innate differences between how women and men approach issues like immigration is to neglect a crucially important social question.
Several strong reasons have been put forward to explain the marriage gap: women hearing convincing Republican arguments from their husbands; women voting in accordance with their husbands' economic interests; and women replacing hyper-individualism with long-term family considerations.
To summarize, women on average seem to have a greater capacity for empathy; a preference for working with people; a desire for work-flexibility and giving back; and a high verbal IQ: the combination of this mix of ability, temperament, and motivation should make it understandable why women gravitate toward social and legal advocacy work in the immigration space and elsewhere.
https://chroniclesmagazine.org/featured/americas-female-future-has-open-borders-2/
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