
Chomsky demolishes 20 immigration myths with surgical precision. A transformative text that's shaped academic discourse across 22 editions, turning readers into informed activists. What deeply-rooted assumptions about immigration are you unknowingly perpetuating? Prepare to have your worldview challenged.
Aviva Chomsky, author of They Take Our Jobs! And 20 Other Myths About Immigration, is a distinguished historian and social justice advocate specializing in immigration, labor, and Latin American studies.
A professor of history and coordinator of Latin American studies at Salem State University, her work blends academic rigor with activism, informed by decades of research on global labor dynamics and U.S. foreign policy.
Chomsky’s expertise spans acclaimed titles like Undocumented: How Immigration Became Illegal and Linked Labor Histories: New England, Colombia, and the Making of a Global Working Class, which explore systemic inequities and migrant experiences. Her 1997 award-winning West Indian Workers and the United Fruit Company in Costa Rica established her as a leading voice in labor history.
A longtime immigrants’ rights activist, Chomsky’s critiques of immigration policy resonate in academic and advocacy circles. They Take Our Jobs! has been widely adopted in social sciences curricula and published in Spanish and Cuban editions, solidifying its role in contemporary debates on migration and inequality.
They Take Our Jobs! And 20 Other Myths About Immigration systematically dismantles common misconceptions about immigration in the U.S., arguing that myths like “immigrants steal jobs” or “immigrants don’t pay taxes” reinforce systemic inequality. Chomsky traces how immigration policies are shaped by racialized labor exploitation, historical patterns of U.S. intervention abroad, and corporate interests, urging readers to reframe migration as a human right rather than a criminal act.
This book is essential for educators, policymakers, activists, and anyone seeking to understand the structural forces behind immigration. Chomsky’s evidence-based approach makes it valuable for debunking stereotypes in classroom discussions, while her clear prose appeals to general readers interested in labor rights, racial justice, and the intersection of U.S. foreign policy with migration trends.
Chomsky challenges 21 pervasive myths, including:
As a historian of Latin America and labor, Chomsky grounds her analysis in centuries of U.S. economic exploitation in regions like Central America, showing how migration is often a direct consequence of policies like free-trade agreements and military interventions. Her activism in immigrant rights movements informs the book’s urgent call for systemic change.
With ongoing debates about border policies, climate displacement, and global labor shortages, Chomsky’s framework helps readers analyze how scapegoating immigrants distracts from corporate greed and environmental crises. Updated editions address post-2020 shifts, including pandemic-era essential worker struggles and anti-immigrant rhetoric in elections.
Chomsky advocates for decriminalizing migration, ending employer exploitation of undocumented workers, and addressing root causes like militarism and inequality. She emphasizes cross-border solidarity over nationalist “solutions,” arguing that open borders and labor rights are inseparable.
Unlike memoirs or policy-heavy texts, Chomsky’s myth-busting format offers accessible, conversational analysis. It complements works like Open Borders by Bryan Caplan (libertarian perspective) and The Devil’s Highway by Luis Urrea (narrative nonfiction) by focusing on systemic labor exploitation and historical context.
While the original 2007 edition focuses on labor, revised versions briefly discuss climate-driven displacement as an emerging crisis, noting how industrial polluters disproportionately harm regions that then face migration pressures—a theme expanded in Chomsky’s later work Is Science Enough?
Some conservatives reject Chomsky’s open-borders stance as unrealistic, while progressives critique the lack of LGBTQ+ intersectional analysis. However, the book is widely praised for its accessible synthesis of complex issues, with Publishers Weekly calling it “a vital corrective to mainstream narratives”.
The book’s myth-based structure provides ready-made debate topics for civics or history classes. Instructors pair it with primary sources like ICE enforcement data or timelines of U.S. interventions in Central America to teach critical media literacy and policy analysis.
Beacon Press offers free reading group guides on their website, featuring questions about structural racism, personal responsibility narratives, and comparisons to current events. Chomsky’s interviews and lectures on immigration rights also supplement book club discussions.
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Terminology matters profoundly and shapes both public discourse and policy outcomes.
Modern corporations operate across borders.
Restrictive immigration laws paradoxically contribute to this vulnerability.
The economy is fundamentally elastic.
The shift from 'illegal immigrant' to 'undocumented' reflects growing recognition of human dignity.
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Immigration has never been the simple melting pot story we've been told. While Ellis Island welcomed 25 million Europeans between 1880 and WWI with minimal restrictions, the same open-door policy never existed for non-Europeans. The Immigration Act of 1924 created America's first significant numerical restrictions on European immigration while completely excluding "aliens ineligible to citizenship"-effectively all non-whites. This legislation also established the Border Patrol specifically to prevent Mexican migration, creating a two-tiered system: regulated but possible immigration for Europeans, and near-total exclusion for others. Today's immigration law maintains this discrimination through a complex preference system that, while racially neutral on paper, functionally excludes most potential immigrants from developing nations. For many, there is literally no legal pathway to enter the U.S. Even immediate family members often wait 15-20 years for permission, with some Filipino and Mexican categories facing backlogs beyond two decades. The phrase "I'm not against immigration, just illegal immigration" ignores this reality. When most European ancestors came to America, they simply decided to make the journey-no visas, passports, or complex documentation required. They weren't "illegal" because no law existed to make their immigration illegal. They needed only to be healthy, able to work, and not obviously criminal. Today's system, by contrast, permanently excludes most people who want to immigrate.