Despite President Obama’s three-year reprieve from deportation of undocumented immigrants that does not involve legalizing them nor giving them a path to citizenship, Reason magazine Alabama US Senator Jeff Sessions has decided to go all out to block any kind of immigration reform. Apparently, Sessions has declared immigrants to be the primary driver of income inequality and joblessness.

And it’s not merely “low wage workers” he finds distasteful. He calls the high-tech industry’s pleas to expand the cap on H-1B visas, which is reached within a few weeks after becoming available in boom years, the “Silicon Valley Stem Hoax.”

“[T]here is no shortage of qualified Americans ready, able and eager to fill these jobs” he declares. And Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg, whose chicanery he singles out by name, are hoaxsters for claiming that there is.

Sessions is marketing his memo as the “best academic evidence” on the subject – which apparently includes such august sources as the Center for Immigration Studies whose most original contribution to the immigration debate is that immigration raises global greenhouse gas emissions.

The Reason article’s author, Shikha Dalmia, not only points to studies refuting immigration restrictionists, she also points out that the Cato Institute’s Alex Nowrasteh authored a point-by-point debunking of Senator Session’s allegations.

Again we see the influence of the Center for Immigration Studies (CIS) who, instead of claiming that immigrants (both legal and illegal) take jobs away from Americans, also states that immigration and US population growth overall contributes to global warming. The basis of groups like CIS, NumbersUSA and Federation for American Immigration Reform is environmentalism. All three organizations were started by John Tanton and environmentalist and retired opthamologist from Michigan. And all three groups subscribe to the same anti-human ethic as their creator.