Student’s Immigrant Checkmate
Student: I did not agree with many of the things that you said right ahead of this, but I don't think that's my point to discuss here. What I wanna ask It's okay. You are married to a woman who is not Christian.
In her Wikipedia, I mean, I just looked at, I wanted to know what her faith was. I didn't know this before, but she still calls herself Hindu.
You are raising two kids, three kids, in inter-racial, mm, cultural, racial, religious household. How are you maintaining or how are you teaching your kids not to keep your religion ahead of their mother's religion? Or how are you teaching them that your kind, their dad kind, who got here just few years or few hundred year, few decades ago, is different or is better than your mom's kind who got here just a generation before?
How are you balancing that? And when you talk about too many immigrant here, what is. When did you guys decide that number?
Why did you sell us a dream? You made us spent our youth, our wealth in this country, and gave us a dream. You don't owe us anything.
We have worked hard for it. Then how can you as a vice president stand there and say that we have too many of them now, and we are going to take them out, to people who are here rightfully so by paying the money that you guys asked us. You gave us the path, and now now, how can you stop it and tell us we don't belong here anymore?
So, And one more thing. I'm sorry. One more thing. Sure. Do you have to There's JD Vance: a lot there.
I don't know if I'm gonna remember all Yeah. But I will try. I'm Student: sorry. I'm sorry.
I had to say all of this, and please take it with due. I mean, I'm saying all of this with due respect. Of course. No, go ahead.
Please. I have no intention- Thank you. Of causing a scene here or anything. JD Vance: We're not close to causing a scene.
Yeah. Don't worry. But Student: we talked about Christianity, all of this. I'm not even Christian, and I'm here standing to show support. Why are we making Christianity one of the major thing that you have to have in common to be one of you guys?
To show that I love America just as you do. Why is that still a question? Why do I have to be a Christian or Okay.
JD Vance: So I. There was a lot there, and I'm gonna try to respond to as much of it as I can. So on the question of immigration. Mm. So first of all, I can believe that we should have lower immigration levels, but if the United States passed a law and made a promise to somebody, the United States, of course, has to honor that promise.
Nobody's talking about that. I'm talking about people who came in in violation of the laws of the United States of America, and I'm talking about in the future reducing the number, reducing the number of people. Sorry, what? Student: May I continue on that?
Because when you just said you are not stopping with the people who came here legally, right? But you are pushing out policies that hurt us, and these policies are not even solving the problems. These policies are just creating JD Vance: No, ma'am, ma'am.
Okay. So again, I'm gonna, I'm gonna, I'm gonna finish answering the question and then, if, you know, if I've answered all nine of your questions in less than 15 minutes, then we can keep on going. I. We gotta have a little fun, right? So here's, here's the thing.
I can believe that the United States should lower its levels of immigration in the future, while also respecting that there are people who have come here through immigration lawful immigration pathways that have contributed to the country.
But just because one person or 10 people or 100 people came in legally and contributed to the, to the United States of America, does that mean that we're thereby committed to let in a million or 10 million or 100 million people a year in the future? No, that's not right. We cannot I'll go and finish.
We cannot have an immigration policy where what was good for the country 50 or 60 years ago binds the country inevitably for the future. There's too many people who wanna come to the United States of America, and my job as vice president is not to look out for the interest of the whole world, it's to look out for the people of the United States.
Now, me. Now, you you asked, you asked a personal question about our interfaith household and yes, my wife did not grow up Christian. I think it's fair to say that she grew up in a Hindu family, but not in a particularly religious family in either direction. And in fact, when I met my wife, we were both.
I would consider myself an agnostic or an atheist, and that's what I think she would've considered herself as well. You know, everybody has to come to their own arrangement here. The way that we've come to our arrangement is she's my best friend, we talk to each other about this stuff.
So we decided to raise our kids Christian. Our two oldest kids who go to school, they go to a Christian school. Our eight-year-old did his his first communion about a year ago.
That's the way that we have come to our arrangement. But. Thank you. My eight-year-old was also very proud of his first communion. Thank you guys. I'll tell him that Ole Miss wishes him the best.
But I think everybody has to have this own conversation when you're in a marriage. I mean, it's true for friends, of mine who are in Protestant and Catholic marriages, friends of mine who are in, you know, atheist and Christian marriages. You just gotta talk to.
The only advice I can give is you just gotta talk to the person that God has put you with, and you've gotta make those decisions as a family unit. For us, it works out. Now, most Sundays, Usha will come with me to church.
As I've told her and I've said publicly and I'll say now in front of 10,000 of my closest friends, do I hope eventually that she is somehow By the same thing that I was moved in by church? Yeah, I honestly, I do wish that because I believe in the Christian gospel, and I hope eventually my wife comes to see it the same way.
But if she doesn't, then God says everybody has free will, and so that doesn't cause a problem for me. That's something you work out with your friends, with your family, with the person that you love. Again, the most. One of the most important Christian principles is that you respect free will.
Usha's closer to the priests who baptized me than maybe I am. They talk about this stuff. My attitude is, you figure this stuff out as a family, and you trust in God to have a plan, and you try to follow it as best as you can, and that's what I try to do.
I want to make a final point. So I don't want to cut you off. I want to be respectful to all the people behind you in line, but I want to make this point about immigration, okay?
If you ask the question, "What is the exact right number of immigrants for the United States to let in?" it is just very specific on the context. If you go back to the 1920s, the United States passed an immigration reform act that effectively cut down immigration to close to zero for forty years in this country.
And what happened over those forty years? The many people who had come from many different foreign countries and different foreign cultures, they assimilated into American culture, and there was an expectation that they would assimilate into American culture. I think we have two problems in our immigration system today.
And my guess is you're probably a slightly more leftist political persuasion, liberal political persuasion, maybe not. But here's the thing.
I remember back in my establishment GOP days when I was still very early getting involved in Republican politics, I remember a conservative think tank person who told me that one of the reasons why immigration was really good is that if you had enough diversity in a country, people would mistrust each other, and they wouldn't join labor unions.
Okay? So when I see a lot of left-wing people who theoretically support organized labor saying we need to flood the country with a limitless number of immigrants, they're unwilling to set any limitations on it, my response to that is, you are destroying the very social trust on which American freedom and prosperity was built. And that is really important to me.
So the honest answer to your question, what is the exact number of immigrants America should accept in the future? Right now, the answer is far less than we've been accepting. We have got to become a common community again, and you can't do that when you have such high numbers of immigration, which is one of the reasons why we have the immigration policy we do.
Thank you.