Why The Truth About Immigration Feels So Urgent Right Now

I picked up The Truth About Immigration by Zeke Hernandez because I was tired of feeling like every conversation about immigration was taking place in bad faith. No matter where you fall politically, the debate has become less about understanding reality and more about reinforcing fears. Reading this book, I felt something I hadn’t felt in a while on this topic: relief. Not because the issue is simple, but because Hernandez treats the reader like an adult—someone capable of holding facts, nuance, and complexity at the same time.

That feeling has stayed with me as I’ve watched the current situation in Minneapolis unfold. What stands out isn’t just the tension or the anger—it’s how quickly misinformation fills the vacuum. Immigration is once again pulled into the narrative, often without evidence, used as a shorthand explanation for economic stress, crime, or social instability. Hernandez’s book makes clear how predictable this pattern is—and how dangerous.

One of the book’s greatest strengths is how concretely it documents the positive contributions of immigrants, moving far beyond vague claims that they are “good for the economy.” Hernandez walks through the data carefully and repeatedly shows how immigrants strengthen societies in ways that are both measurable and deeply human.

For example, he highlights how immigrants are disproportionately likely to start businesses. These aren’t just tech unicorns or headline-grabbing startups, but the small and midsize firms that anchor local economies—restaurants, construction companies, logistics firms, care services. These businesses create jobs, expand local tax bases, and often revitalize neighborhoods that native-born populations have left behind.

Hernandez also digs into innovation. Immigrants are overrepresented among patent holders, engineers, scientists, and founders in high-growth sectors. The book makes a compelling case that immigration is not a drag on advanced economies but one of the engines that keeps them dynamic. Countries that shut themselves off don’t protect prosperity; they slowly suffocate it.

Another myth Hernandez dismantles is the idea that immigrants are a fiscal burden. He shows how, over time, immigrants contribute more in taxes than they consume in public services—especially when you account for the fact that many arrive in their prime working years, educated at someone else’s expense. They help stabilize aging societies, support pension systems, and fill critical labor gaps in healthcare, agriculture, and skilled trades.

Perhaps most striking is the section on crime, an area where misinformation does the most damage. Hernandez doesn’t hedge here: the evidence consistently shows that immigrants, including undocumented immigrants, commit crimes at lower rates than native-born citizens. Yet fear-driven narratives persist because they are emotionally powerful and politically useful.

This is where the book moves from economics into something more unsettling. Hernandez explains how economic anxiety and unconscious bias make populations vulnerable to manipulation. When people feel insecure—about wages, housing, or cultural change—it becomes easier for authoritarian figures to redirect that fear toward immigrants. Falsehoods become tools. Facts become threats. Division becomes a strategy for asserting power.

Reading this, it’s hard not to see the parallels in our own moment. When unrest surfaces, when institutions feel fragile, when people are hurting, misinformation spreads faster than truth. Immigration becomes a convenient distraction from deeper structural problems—ones that are harder to solve and less useful to exploit.

What The Truth About Immigration ultimately offers is not just information, but a model for how we should be talking about difficult issues. Hernandez doesn’t moralize or scold. He presents evidence, explains why our intuitions often mislead us, and trusts readers to draw responsible conclusions. In a society saturated with hot takes and outrage, that approach feels almost radical.

This book made me realize how starved we are for factual grounding. We cannot solve problems we refuse to understand. We cannot preserve a democratic society if we allow fear and falsehoods to define our debates. At a time when misinformation can inflame cities and empower authoritarians, The Truth About Immigration is not just a book I’d recommend—it’s one I think we need.

The Birth of Jesus: A Christmas Immigration Story

The story of Christmas, celebrated worldwide as the birth of Jesus Christ, carries profound themes of hope, resilience, and inclusion. It is also a narrative deeply rooted in the experiences of migration and displacement. Mary and Joseph, as key figures in the Nativity story, faced daunting obstacles, including a government-ordered journey and the inability to find shelter. Their experience resonates with the struggles of countless migrants throughout history, including those impacted by restrictive policies in modern times. In a profound irony, it seems unlikely there would be room for Jesus in a country run by christian nationalists.

If America is for Americans only, then a middle eastern Jew name Jesus has no place here.

The Nativity as a Tale of Migration

The journey to Bethlehem, as recounted in the Gospel of Luke, begins with a government mandate. Emperor Augustus issued a decree requiring all citizens to register for a census, compelling Mary and Joseph to leave their home in Nazareth and travel to Bethlehem. Mary, pregnant and near term, undertook this arduous journey under circumstances of duress—a journey mirrored in the lives of refugees fleeing war, famine, or persecution in search of safety and stability.

Upon reaching Bethlehem, Mary and Joseph faced rejection and exclusion, as “there was no room in the inn.” This moment highlights the vulnerability of migrants who, despite their urgent need for shelter, are often met with indifference or hostility. Jesus, born in a stable among animals, entered the world as a figure of humility, solidarity, and resilience—qualities that resonate with the experiences of those forced to navigate the margins of society.

The narrative does not end there. After Jesus’ birth, King Herod’s violent decree to kill all male children under two years old forced the Holy Family to flee to Egypt. This act of political persecution transformed them into refugees, seeking asylum in a foreign land to escape violence. Their flight to Egypt mirrors the modern plight of asylum seekers fleeing oppressive regimes, seeking sanctuary in countries where they hope for safety and a chance to rebuild their lives.

Immigration Policies in the Trump Era

Fast forward to contemporary times, and the themes of the Nativity story take on new significance in the context of modern immigration policy. Under Donald Trump’s administration, a series of restrictive measures profoundly impacted migrants and refugees. The “zero-tolerance” policy led to the separation of thousands of families at the U.S.-Mexico border, creating a humanitarian crisis that drew widespread condemnation. The travel ban targeting predominantly Muslim-majority countries further restricted the movement of vulnerable populations, including refugees fleeing conflict zones.

These policies often invoked the language of national security and economic preservation, yet they also revealed a troubling lack of empathy for the human stories behind migration. The separation of families echoes the rejection and vulnerability faced by Mary and Joseph when seeking shelter. Refugees turned away from borders evoke the plight of the Holy Family fleeing Herod’s tyranny.

The Trump administration’s policies also stand in stark contrast to the central message of the Christmas story: a call to embrace the marginalized and provide refuge to those in need. The story of Jesus’ birth challenges societies to extend compassion to strangers, reflecting the biblical mandate to “welcome the stranger” (Matthew 25:35).

It seems the MAGA movement was not paying attention in Sunday school and do not recall the injustices of his first term. True Christ followers will treat any immigrant as their neighbor, because it is literally commanded by God in the Bible:

“Do not mistreat or oppress a foreigner, for you were foreigners in Egypt.” – Exodus 22:21

“Cursed is anyone who withholds justice from the foreigner, the fatherless or the widow.” – Deuteronomy 21:19

“Do not forget to show hospitality to strangers.” – Hebrews 13:2

And dozens more. It is ultimately clear that Christianity requires us to accept the immigrant, as there are no illegals in the eyes of God.

Bridging the Divide: Lessons from the Nativity

The Christmas story serves as a powerful reminder that migration is not a new phenomenon but a recurring theme in human history. It calls for empathy and an acknowledgment of shared humanity. Mary, Joseph, and Jesus were migrants seeking safety and shelter, much like today’s refugees and asylum seekers. The political barriers and hostile attitudes they faced are still evident in contemporary debates about immigration.

To reconcile these lessons with current policies, we must prioritize compassion and inclusion over fear and exclusion. Immigration systems should focus on protecting the dignity and rights of migrants, providing them with opportunities to thrive rather than barriers that perpetuate suffering.

The birth of Jesus and the story of Christmas offer profound lessons about migration, resilience, and hope. By drawing parallels between the experiences of the Holy Family and modern migrants, we are reminded of the moral imperative to treat all people with dignity and compassion. We are all the descendants of immigrants.

The Nativity story challenges us to envision a more just and inclusive world—one that honors the fundamental humanity of all, regardless of borders or circumstances.

I challenge all of us, particularly evangelical christians, to reflect over the holidays on how we can make room in our country for a young pregnant couple doing their best to make their way through life.

We need to make room in the inn. Or we need to stop pretending this holiday has any true meaning.

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