Saying No to Unlimited Immigration
Thursday, 31 July 2008
By Jim Camp

As a negotiation coach it is natural for me to view election campaigns conducted between the two candidates for president and voters as a negotiation with multiple agendas, adversaries, and intense decision making.

That is why it strikes me as disturbing that both of the presidential candidates have similar positions on immigration that run contrary to the vast majority of voters in both parties. Other than the war in Iraq and concerns about the economy, the issue of immigration, both legal and illegal, and the need to bring immigration reform into our society is likely to emerge as a deciding factor.
In a new book by Dr. Joseph H. Boyett, a political science scholar, “Won’t Get Fooled Againâ€