| 1821 - 356 strani
...The importation of foreigners into a country, that has as many inhabitants as the present employment* and provisions for subsistence will bear, will be in the end no increase of people, unless the newcomers hare more industry and frugality than the natives, and then they will provide more subsistence,... | |
| Benjamin Franklin, Jared Sparks - 1836 - 584 strani
...more by natural generation, than any other sect in Britain. 21. The importation of foreigners into a country, that has as many inhabitants as the present...new comers have more industry and frugality than the natiA'es, and then they will provide more subsistence, and increase in the country ; but they will... | |
| John Ramsay McCulloch - 1859 - 618 strani
...more by natural generation than any other sect in Britain. 21. The importation of foreigners into a country that has as many inhabitants as the present...will be in the end no increase of people, unless the new-comers have more industry and frugality than the natives, and then they will provide more subsistence,... | |
| Ernest Ludlow Bogart, Charles Manfred Thompson - 1916 - 904 strani
...Foreigners into a Country that has amany Inhabitants as the present Employments and Provisions to: Subsistence will bear, will be in the End no Increase of People, unless the Xew-comers have more Industry and Frugality than the Natives, and then they will provide more Subsistence... | |
| Ernest Ludlow Bogart, Charles Manfred Thompson - 1924 - 922 strani
...many Thousand labouring People have been imported. . . . 21. The Importation of Foreigners in to a Country that has as many Inhabitants as the present...will be in the End no Increase of People, unless the Xc .. comers have n.ore Industry and Frugality than the Natives, and then they will prosdde more Subsistence... | |
| Raymond Pearl - 1925 - 284 strani
..."The importation of foreigners into a country that has as many inhabitants as the present employment and provisions for subsistence will bear, will be in the end no increase of people. . . . Nor is it necessary to bring in foreigners to fill up any occasional vacancy in a country; for... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Immigration and Naturalization - 1935 - 60 strani
...provisions for subsistence will bear, will in the end produce no increase of people unless newcomers have more industry and frugality than the natives...country ; but they will gradually eat the natives out. That is Chinese competition and also the Japanese in a nutshelL Put a white man alongside of a Chinaman... | |
| Eric Richards - 2004 - 420 strani
...Importation of Foreigners into a Country, that has as many Inhabitants as the present Employments and the Provisions for Subsistence will bear, will be in the...the Country; but they will gradually eat the natives out.1" He argued that immigrants were unnecessary because the colonial population was reproducing so... | |
| Benjamin Franklin - 2004 - 446 strani
...as the presem Employmeuts and Provisions for Suhsistence will hear; will he in the End no Inerease of People; unless the New Comers have more Industry...than the Natives, and then they will provide more Suhsistence, and inerease in the Couutry; hut they will gradually eat the Natives out. Nor is it necessary... | |
| Aristide R. Zolberg - 2006 - 686 strani
...readers undoubtedly noted, he specifies as a condition for this proposition that the receiving country "has as many inhabitants as the present Employments and Provisions for Subsistence will bear." Given his statement regarding the abundance of land, it is evident that this is not the case in the... | |
| |