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| "What the new population growth represents is a return to our immigrant past," said William Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution in Washington and a professor at the University of Michigan. He said although today's baby boomers, who make up 26 percent of the population, have put their mark on the US identity in the last decades and control the main positions of power, that will no longer be the case as the younger immigrant population ages. "It will be a gradual change before we see the positions of power being taken by the new immigrants groups but I think it will happen, maybe in 20 years," Frey said. He said the changing ethnic makeup of the United States and the new immigrants should be welcomed, rather than scorned, as they represent the future of the country. "I think the political battle over immigration policy is short-lived and we will realize the positive impacts immigrants bring to the labor force," Frey said. "Something about our heritage as an immigrant country will allow this to happen." |
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