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Welcome to AIC

About AIC

  • AIC is an American non-partisan grassroots activist organization with more than a quarter of a million members - citizens of all races, creeds, and colors.
  • AIC, founded in 1983, is about stopping the millions of illegal aliens who sneak across our border from Mexico every year.
  • AIC is about deporting those illegal aliens already in the U.S.
  • AIC is about opposing all amnesties & new guest worker legislation.
  • AIC is about strictly enforcing the current immigration laws and increasing penalties for those who knowingly transport, recruit, solicit, or hire illegal aliens.
  • AIC is about demanding that our federal government immediately use maximum manpower and support equipment to secure our nation from terrorists, drug smugglers, and illegals.
  • AIC is about reducing annual legal immigration to numbers which can be readily assimilated.
  • AIC is about actively promoting grassroots influence on legislators by means of letters, petitions, and postcard campaigns to promote secure border control.
  • AIC is about educating motivating and activating citizens with our newsletter Immigration Watch.
  • AIC is about our staff members who appear as guests on radio talk shows and TV programs to help alert the nation to the immigration crisis.
  • AIC is about encouraging all concerned citizens to join our efforts to secure America's borders.

To contact AIC: Mailing Address: Box 738, Monterey, VA 24465; Tele: (540) 468-2023; E-mail: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it


AIC BLOG 5/17/12

Illegal Immigration Harms Young Americans

With summer approaching, a lot of young people will be looking for summer jobs. Unfortunately, quite a few of them won’t find any. It now appears that only 25 percent of 16-to-19 year olds will have jobs within the next month, compared with 51 percent in June of 2000.

 

The major reason for the decline is the continuing recession, even if the government doesn’t call it a recession. Because of the shortage of jobs many adults are taking jobs that teenagers otherwise would be doing.

 

This is a bad thing for the future of our young people, notes Andrew Sum, an economist at Northeastern University who has studied the problem of teen unemployment  extensively. . . .

 

 

Read More   
 

 

 

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