Extra: How Much Do You Know About Immigration?

Episode Summary

In the bonus episode titled "Extra How Much Do You Know About Immigration" from Freakonomics Radio, listeners are treated to an enlightening quiz that challenges common perceptions about immigration in the United States. Host Stephen Dubner, alongside Zeke Hernandez, a business professor at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School and author of the forthcoming book "The Truth About Immigration," engages with listeners to test their knowledge on various immigration facts and statistics. The episode serves as an extension of the series "The True Story of America's Supremely Messed Up Immigration System," aiming to shed light on the complexities and misconceptions surrounding immigration. Throughout the episode, participants from different backgrounds, including a United States Marine Corps officer and a couple from the suburbs of Chicago, attempt to answer questions related to the percentage of the world's population that are immigrants, the proportion of the U.S. workforce composed of immigrants, and the average duration undocumented immigrants have lived in the U.S., among others. The quiz reveals a common trend of overestimation regarding the impact and scale of immigration, influenced perhaps by media portrayal and personal experiences. For instance, one participant guessed that 33% of the world's population are immigrants, while the actual figure is only 3.6%. Another common misconception addressed is the assimilation rate of today's immigrants compared to those from 100 years ago, with the correct answer being that the rate remains the same. The episode not only tests listeners' knowledge but also provides insightful commentary on the reasons behind their answers, exploring how personal backgrounds, experiences, and media influence shape perceptions of immigration. Zeke Hernandez reflects on the importance of understanding the reasoning behind people's thoughts on immigration, emphasizing the need to consider personal narratives alongside empirical data. This approach underscores the complexity of immigration issues and the necessity of a nuanced understanding that goes beyond stereotypes and statistics. By engaging with real people and confronting common misconceptions, "Extra How Much Do You Know About Immigration" offers a compelling look into the gaps in public knowledge about immigration. It highlights the importance of informed discussion and the role of education in dispelling myths, ultimately contributing to a more comprehensive and empathetic understanding of immigration in the United States.

Episode Show Notes

The political debates over immigration can generate a lot of fuzzy facts. We wanted to test Americans’ knowledge — so, to wrap up our special series on immigration, we called some Freakonomics Radio listeners and quizzed them.

Episode Transcript

SPEAKER_02: Freakonomics Radio is sponsored by Dell.Your ideas don't have to wait.Now they have everything they need to come to life.Dell Technologies and Intel are creating technology that loves ideas, expanding your business and evolving your passions.Dell pushes what technology can do so great ideas can happen right now.Find out how to bring your ideas to life at Dell.com.Welcome to now. Freeconomics Radio is sponsored by Capital One Bank.With no fees or minimums, banking with Capital One is the easiest decision in the history of decisions.Even easier than deciding to listen to another episode of your favorite podcast. And with no overdraft fees, is it even a decision?That's banking reimagined.What's in your wallet?Terms apply.See CapitalOne.com slash bank.Capital One N.A.Member FDIC. Hey there, it's Stephen Dubner, and this is a bonus episode.It's one last addition to our series called The True Story of America's Supremely Messed Up Immigration System.I learned a lot making this series, including how little most of us know about immigration. One of the main voices in those episodes was Zeke Hernandez, a business professor at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School.He came to our attention because of a book he has got coming out soon called The Truth About Immigration.The book includes a quiz, and we thought it might be interesting to have some Freakonomics Radio listeners take this quiz.So that's what we're hearing today.Let's see how they did. Hello.Hi, this is Jacob.Jacob, hey, this is Stephen Dubner.How are you?Good, Stephen. How are you doing, man?I'm doing great, thank you.I'm here with Zeke Hernandez, who's a business professor at Wharton.Hey, Jacob.How are you?Good, man.Now, Jacob, tell us your last name and how old you are. SPEAKER_06: Cebulski, and I'm 30 years old. SPEAKER_02: Where do you live and what do you do? SPEAKER_06: I'm a United States Marine Corps officer.I live in Wilmington, North Carolina, and I work as a combat engineer officer on Camp Lejeune, North Carolina. SPEAKER_02: Now, Jacob, would you consider yourself an expert on immigration to the U.S.by any chance?No, sir, not really.I am from Texas originally, but no.Have you lived outside the U.S., whether on Marine Corps duty or otherwise?Yes, sir.I lived in Japan, Okinawa, Japan, for four years. Well, Zeke, as I mentioned, is a business professor at Wharton, but he's also an expert in immigration and has written a book called The Truth About Immigration, which was one of the foundations for a series that we are getting ready to put out very soon. And we wanted to run this quiz with listeners.This will come out after the series has aired. But in order to make sure you, Jacob, wouldn't cheat, we're asking the questions before the series aired. SPEAKER_06: That's smart, Stephen, because I definitely would. SPEAKER_02: I appreciate the candor. SPEAKER_01: Okay, so Zeke has some questions for you.All right, Jacob, you ready?Yes, sir.Okay, here's the first question.What percentage of the world's population are immigrants, that is, people who live in countries they weren't born in? SPEAKER_06: I'll say 33%.You said 33%, right?Yes, sir.So the right answer is 3.6%.Dang! SPEAKER_01: Oh, my God.Okay. SPEAKER_02: But Jacob, Jacob, can I tell you what?You shouldn't feel bad because when I first read that number in Zeke's book, 3.6%, I literally put my thumb on the ink to smudge it to see if it was a typo.I thought, there's no way.And my guess was around 30% too. SPEAKER_06: I still feel bad though, but if I'm in the same ballpark as Stephen Dunder, I feel like I'm okay.I'll get the next one, I promise. SPEAKER_01: All right, here comes the next question.Let's ask you the same question, but for the U.S.That is, what percentage of the U.S.population is foreign-born? SPEAKER_06: I'll say 9%. SPEAKER_01: 9%, okay.So I'm sure you adjusted down because of the answer you just gave.The right answer is 14%.Yeah, okay. SPEAKER_06: I don't feel as bad. SPEAKER_02: Hey, Jacob, I know it's impossible to go back in your mind, but pretend that we had asked you those two questions in tandem, the percentage of the world's population, and you thought 33%, and then percentage of the U.S.population that are immigrants, foreign-born.What do you think you would have said? SPEAKER_06: Just looking at the headlines I read about immigration crisis and things like that, I think I'd still be around 33% to a quarter of the population, just from the headlines I'm reading. SPEAKER_01: Yeah, and that's the common, I think, reason why people always on average overestimate is just that the headlines make it seem like this is an issue or a problem, depending on how you see it, that is much bigger than it actually is. SPEAKER_02: Zeke, I wonder if maybe Jacob being in the Marine Corps may also influence his thinking a little bit because, you know, the military is one of the most integrated institutions in this country.Do you know anything about how people either in universities, the military, you know, sports teams are another institution that tend to be more diverse than a lot of other populations?Do you know anything about the difference in how different groups like that answer questions like these?Yeah. SPEAKER_01: You know, I don't.I would love to know, but I don't.Okay, Zeke, I have one more question for Jacob.Yeah, let's ask you this question.So the average undocumented immigrant in the U.S.has lived in this country for approximately how long?I have four options for you.Three months, two years, 10 years, or 25 years?I'm going to go with 25 years. Yeah, so the correct answer is a bit over 10 years. Somewhere between 10 to 14 years is about the average.I will say this. SPEAKER_02: Jacob has gotten slightly less wrong with every question, which I think is a sign of an intelligent person.He's adjusting.I think we need to give him one more, and I think he's going to nail it, Zeke. SPEAKER_06: I appreciate the opportunity, gentlemen. SPEAKER_01: All right, so 21% of the children born to U.S.parents, that is native parents, are high-income earners, meaning they're above the middle class, okay, 21%.What is that percentage for the children that are born to immigrant parents in the United States?I have four options for you here.So A, 15%, B, 21%, C, 28%, and D, 35%.Man. SPEAKER_06: I'm going to say C, 28%. SPEAKER_01: You were close.The correct answer is 35%, but you were on the higher end.Most people would guess below that.Most people would think that the children of immigrants are poorer than the children of Native parents, but it's the opposite. SPEAKER_06: That makes me think of The Millionaire Next Door, that book.You know, all these immigrant parents that come in, make their kids wealthy, and then they blow it all by the second generation.Yeah. SPEAKER_02: Are you telling that as a cautionary tale or as a personal story from your past?I'm curious. SPEAKER_06: I have blown no money.No, I grew up ridiculously poor.But now, you know, Captain of the Marine Corps, we have a house.So this is we're doing OK. SPEAKER_02: Congratulations, Jacob.It was great to speak with you.Thanks a million. SPEAKER_06: Awesome.Thanks, guys.Appreciate you.Thank you. SPEAKER_02: Hi, this is Steven.Can you hear me? SPEAKER_07: Hi, I can.What's your name? SPEAKER_02: Lindsay Priggy, and I'm here with my husband, Brian.Hi, Brian.So, Lindsay and Brian, is Brian going to take the quiz as well?Yes.I want a prediction right now.Who do you think will do better, Lindsay, you or Brian? SPEAKER_07: Ooh, can I get a hint about what the topic is? SPEAKER_02: Nope. SPEAKER_07: I'm going to say me only because he had no idea I put his name on the list. SPEAKER_02: Nice.Okay.Where do you live and what do you do? SPEAKER_07: We live in the suburbs of Chicago.He works in health tech and I primarily am at home with our kids. SPEAKER_02: Would either of you consider yourself an expert on immigration to the United States?No.Excellent.Lindsay and Brian, I'd like you to meet Zeke Hernandez.Zeke has written a forthcoming book called The Truth About Immigration, and he is going to quiz you on some immigration facts and statistics.Does that sound okay? SPEAKER_01: Okay. All right, Lindsay, here it goes.As of 2021, about 8% of Americans lived in poverty.What percentage of immigrants lived in poverty in the United States? SPEAKER_07: Ooh, I would say significantly greater than 8%.Maybe... SPEAKER_01: 45?Turns out the correct answer is 13%.So you were right that it's higher than 8%, but you significantly overestimated. SPEAKER_02: Hey, Zeke, I don't blame Lindsay for overestimating.I think the way that immigration is in the news would lead most people to do that.I am curious what most people answer when you ask that question.Was Lindsay about average in that regard? I would say that's still a bit high.So you're saying Lindsay is slightly more wrong than even the average person? SPEAKER_01: In this particular case, yes.I'm sure that that's not true for all aspects of her life. SPEAKER_02: All right, Lindsay, do you want to put Brian on and we'll see how wrong he can be on the next one? SPEAKER_07: Sure, he can take the next one. SPEAKER_01: Hello.All right, Brian.Immigrants are responsible for what percentage of all patents in the United States? SPEAKER_05: Now, are you calling that named inventor or is that just responsible in general? SPEAKER_01: Yeah, responsible in general.So it could be named inventor or it could be patents that others file because they work with immigrants. SPEAKER_02: Brian, the fact that you asked that question makes me wonder if you are responsible for any patents. SPEAKER_05: I do have one pending. SPEAKER_02: Congratulations.What is your patent pending? SPEAKER_05: It is in pharmacy management software in clawback management from PBMs. SPEAKER_02: This would be software that's used by the PBMs, the pharmacy benefit managers, or by the independent pharmacies? SPEAKER_05: Used by the independent pharmacy to defend against PBM clawbacks. SPEAKER_02: I like it, Brian.Okay.What's your guess then? SPEAKER_05: I'm going to say 40%. SPEAKER_01: Brian, that is a very good guess.The correct answer is 36%.And let me break that down a little bit since you asked a sophisticated question.So in 23% of patents, immigrants are the inventors on record.And the additional 13% that gets us to 36% is that without immigrants, native-born inventors would file fewer patents. SPEAKER_02: Brian, were you born in this country or did you immigrate to this country?I was born in this country.Who in your family immigrated?How many generations back? SPEAKER_05: During the Revolutionary War. SPEAKER_02: So, Zeke, do you think that if Brian were a much more recent immigrant, or maybe if just his parents' generation immigrated, that he would have more than one lousy patent pending? SPEAKER_01: More than... Obviously, that's what the statistics say.You know, I think statistically, if you had, you know, probably the level of education that you have or you were in an inventive field, it's probable that you would. SPEAKER_02: Hey, Brian, I am just curious.You gave us either a remarkably good guess or you kind of had a good feel for this or you just figured out what was about right.Which of those is most true? SPEAKER_05: It was a guess based on working in tech and knowing the number of H-1B visas that are issued and figuring there was probably a correlation there. SPEAKER_02: Okay.So, Brian, you did better than your wife, at least on the first question, but I think we need to have another round.So would you put Lindsay back on, please?Yep.All right. All right, Lindsay, you witnessed that, I know.Yes.You have a little bit of a hole to dig out of, but I know you can. SPEAKER_01: So Zeke, let's have another question for Lindsay.All right, Lindsay.So on any given year, the U.S.gives a lot of green cards.What percentage of those green cards or permanent resident cards go to immigrants that are here to reunite with their families, that is family-based immigrants? And that would be as opposed to employment-based, humanitarian, or other kinds of green cards.I'm looking specifically for what percentage goes to family-based migrants. SPEAKER_07: For family-based, I would probably say that it is easier to come in if you have somebody that is here and can sponsor you.So, oh man, I'm going to go half, 50-50. SPEAKER_01: 50-50.It's a pretty good guess.The right answer is two-thirds, 66% go to family-based migrants.But your reasoning is very good reasoning.It's not uncommon that people underestimate that number because I think the average person thinks that the U.S.gives a lot more work-related green cards than it actually does.But our law... very, very strongly favors family reunification since 1965.And so we don't have as big of a employment-based program as other countries do. SPEAKER_02: So, Lindsay, you definitely did a lot better on question number two than question number one.We need to put Brian back on and see if we can equilibrate here.He's either going to emerge as the total family champion or you will have pulled him down from the pedestal. SPEAKER_07: It'll give us something to discuss over our anniversary dinner this evening. SPEAKER_02: Congratulations.Congratulations. SPEAKER_07: Thank you. SPEAKER_02: What number?13.What is the material for 13?It's probably like a funhouse mirror or something terrible. SPEAKER_07: Oh, man.I don't actually know. SPEAKER_02: Oh, I'll tell you.It's lace.Oh.Does that give you any ideas? SPEAKER_07: Maybe you should have looked that one up, dear. SPEAKER_02: Have you received a gift yet? SPEAKER_07: We like to gift each other more the gift of time.And so we made time for each other tonight and we're going to go... Be childless and grab a bite to eat. SPEAKER_02: I expect Brian to be wearing lace.That's all I'm saying.All right.Let's get one more question for Brian.Zeke, please. SPEAKER_01: All right, Brian, here we go.So about 100 years ago, most immigrants into the U.S.came from Europe, especially southern and eastern Europe.Today, most of them come from Latin America and Asia.So here's a question. Today's immigrants, are they assimilating at a slower rate, at a faster rate, or at the same rate as immigrants from 100 years ago? SPEAKER_05: I'm going to say that this is where The rosy painting of history would lead me to say slower, but I think the answer is actually that they are assimilating faster than 100 years ago. SPEAKER_01: It turns out the answer is actually at the same rate.And that means that when you look at the rate at which immigrants, in terms of their income, catch up with native workers or the rate at which they adopt cultural values, and there's various ways to measure that, the rate is the same today as it ever was. SPEAKER_02: But Brian, I'm really curious about the way that you gave your answer and the way you thought it through.Can you just talk a little bit more about your impression of the history of U.S.immigration 100 years ago? SPEAKER_05: Yes, I think there's a whole lot fewer places where you would see a large concentration of immigrants from the same place. If you look at Chicago, there was a high population of Polish immigrants.South Boston had a high population of Irish immigrants.I just don't see those sort of centers of immigration like you would have years ago. SPEAKER_02: Zeke, is that the case, or is Brian just not seeing these newer centers of immigrant populations? SPEAKER_01: I don't know that we have great measures to compare exactly.What we do know is that Both in the past as today, immigrants often enter and settle into ethnic enclaves.So think of a Chinese immigrant settling near Chinatown.And within about 20 years, you find them in neighborhoods that have half the ethnic concentration as they did when they arrived.There's reasons why people settle in ethnic enclaves to begin with.And it's not just because they want to be around people who might speak the same language.It's also because they tend to be cheaper. And as they move up the income ladder, they can afford to move to, say, a slightly more expensive suburb or buy their first home.And then by the second generation, the children are well integrated. SPEAKER_02: Right, right.Brian and Lindsay, thank you both so much.And I hope you have a great anniversary dinner.Thanks for joining us.And we'll send you some Freakonomics Radio stuff, OK? SPEAKER_07: You're welcome.Thank you for having us. SPEAKER_02: Cheers.Bye. We will have more of our immigration quiz right after this break.I'm Stephen Dubner.This is Freakonomics Radio. Freakonomics Radio is sponsored by Mint Mobile.After years of fine print contracts and getting ripped off by overpriced wireless providers, if you've learned anything, it's that there's always a catch.So when you hear that Mint Mobile wireless plans are $15 a month when you purchase a three-month plan, you're probably thinking, what's the catch?Well, there isn't one.They cut out the cost of retail stores and pass those sweet savings directly to you. So say bye-bye to your overpriced wireless plans, jaw-dropping monthly bills and unexpected overages. To get this new customer offer and your new three month unlimited wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month, go to mintmobile.com slash freak.That's mintmobile.com slash freak.Cut your wireless bill to 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com slash freak.Additional taxes, fees and restrictions apply.See Mint Mobile for details. SPEAKER_00: What does it mean to be rich?Is it having more stories to share or time to give?Is it being able to keep your loved ones close or travel somewhere far away?At Edward Jones, we believe the key to being rich is knowing what counts.Your dedicated financial advisor will take a comprehensive approach to your financial strategy to help support what truly matters to you. SPEAKER_04: Take your business further with the smart and flexible American Express Business Gold Card.It's packed with benefits to help unlock more value from your business purchases.That's the powerful backing of American Express.Learn more at americanexpress.com slash business gold card. SPEAKER_02: Hi, Faye. SPEAKER_08: Yes, hi. SPEAKER_02: Hey, this is Stephen Dubner.Nice to meet you. SPEAKER_08: Nice to meet you. SPEAKER_02: Can you just tell us your full name and where you live? SPEAKER_08: Sure.My name is Faye Duffler, and I live on Long Island. SPEAKER_02: And what do you do? SPEAKER_08: I'm an associate director in an art gallery in the city. SPEAKER_02: Do you consider yourself an expert at all on immigration to the United States?Not at all. Perfect.Okay, perfect for our quiz.So we've got on the other line, Zeke Hernandez, who's a business professor at the Wharton School at Penn, and he's the author of a forthcoming book called The Truth About Immigration.And Zeke is going to ask you some questions, and we'll see how much you know.Does that sound okay?Okay, let's go.And let me just say, whether you answer beautifully or horribly, you're still going to get some Freakonomics Radio swag. SPEAKER_08: Awesome.I'm a little less nervous now. SPEAKER_01: Okay, good.Hey, Faye, nice to meet you.Here comes the first question.What percentage of the U.S.workforce is composed of immigrants? SPEAKER_08: Composed of immigrants?Hmm.I'm going to say 30%.30%. SPEAKER_01: That guess is on the high side.The right answer is 18%.Okay.You kind of went high, perhaps because in New York, immigrants are a higher percentage of the population or something.I'm just wondering. SPEAKER_08: Also, I was thinking tech, and I know that there are a lot of international employees doing that kind of work.And then I was also thinking about, like, not a legal immigration.Well, yes, a legal immigration, like farm workers and things like that, which I don't know if that would even be counted as part of this. SPEAKER_01: It is. SPEAKER_02: It is.So, Zeke, I'm very much with Faye.I would have given a higher answer as well.And I do think it's because, Faye, you and I live in New York, which is, I mean, Zeke, can you just describe how anomalous a place like New York is in terms of immigration compared to the rest of the U.S.? SPEAKER_01: So 35 to 36 percent of New York's population is foreign born, which is quite a bit above the national average of 14 percent. Nice.Okay, let's give Faye another question.So, Faye, you just mentioned undocumented immigrants, so I'm going to ask you a question about that.How long do you think the average undocumented immigrant has lived in the United States? SPEAKER_08: I'll say 10 years. SPEAKER_01: Wow, very good guess.Very good guess.Spot on.It's somewhere between 10 and 14.Wow. SPEAKER_02: Faye, can you walk us through your thought process there?Are you just innately brilliant? SPEAKER_08: No, not at all.What my thought process was, when I think about people I know who have used undocumented workers, not me, like, but nannies or people who work landscaping or construction, you know, they're here for a while.It's not like they come and go.Maybe it would be different if it was, you know, picking fruits and vegetables.I don't know that process. landscape at all.But, you know, I know that people have jobs and stay here and do those jobs for a very long time.And it's not easy to get home.So they often stay here, obviously, because they can't go back and forth. SPEAKER_02: Good reasoning.Okay, Zeke, one more question for Faye. SPEAKER_01: So the average native-born American receives about $8,000 in welfare benefits.What is that number for immigrants in your estimation? SPEAKER_08: I bet it's low.I bet it's like. SPEAKER_02: Why do you think it's low? SPEAKER_08: Because now this might be falling into some sort of stereotype, but I think of immigrants as like extremely hardworking. SPEAKER_02: Is that reckoning based to some degree on having seen Hamilton?I have to ask. SPEAKER_08: No, no.It's because, you know, it's like anecdotal.Like, chatter that people say.And some of it's not always from the kind of people like I don't necessarily want to, you know, there's a lot of racism, but there are people who will say, you know, there are certain kinds of people that work really well in kitchen because they work really hard because they have nothing.They're hungry, not hungry, literally hungry, but they're like, you know, hungry to work.They care. you know, versus other people who are lazy.And so, like, this is the kind of thing that sort of gets stuck in my consciousness.Whether it's true or not, I don't know. But I think anyone who comes to this country to make it, I think of them as being hardworking.So I would think that they probably, even if they had to go, you know, on assistance, it wouldn't be for very long.I don't exactly know, but I'll say $3,000. SPEAKER_01: So, you know, very good reasoning.The number is 6,000, so it's a little bit higher than you thought.The number would be much lower for undocumented immigrants because, for one, they're not eligible for many benefits. SPEAKER_02: But directionally, Faye's answer was right.And her reasoning, Zeke, I thought was really good.Faye, I'm just curious, when you... form an opinion or an assessment of a given situation like you just did, and you put a number on it.I'm curious what you think are the sources for that assessment.In other words, would it be mostly personal experience and observation or anecdote, or would it be from consuming media and so on? SPEAKER_08: Oh, boy.I mean, who's to say?It's so hard to figure out where the streams are coming from.But it's true.Maybe all of these things.I don't know. I know that there are people who can be, I mean, this is terrible, but it can be abusive to undocumented workers that work for them because, you know, they have the leverage.But also, it's just there is this theory that, you know, people who are, again, who are immigrants just work really hard to get where they are now.That also could be because Like, my family was an immigrant at one point, and I know, you know, how they suffered and what they had to do. And a lot of people I know, I'm Jewish.So it's like, you know, the stories of those people and what they did when they came here and how, you know, they didn't want to be seen as dependent.They wanted to be independent.I guess that's probably part of it, too. SPEAKER_02: Faye, thank you so much.It was great to speak with you.And thanks for listening to the show. SPEAKER_08: Thank you.I love the show.I'm so excited that you called and I got a chance to play this quiz and learn a lot too.So thanks. SPEAKER_02: Let me ask you one last question, Zeke.You know a lot about immigration to the U.S.You are an immigrant to the U.S.We told your story in our radio series.I'm curious whether these conversations today with listeners taught you anything or informed the way you may think further about studying immigration. SPEAKER_01: That's a good question.Thanks for asking me that.I think that they taught me that I need to not just understand what people think, but why they think what they think.And I think that they also taught me that I need to understand people's backgrounds more.Because as we interacted with the listeners and you asked, well, what do you do?Or they revealed things about their parents or their family experience or where they work. that was also very revealing.I think I need to do a lot more than that, more than just focus on facts.As a professor, as a researcher, I'm in love with facts and figures and evidence, and I think rightly so, but perhaps I'm not enough in love with how we get there.I'm in love with the scientific method, but perhaps I'm not in love enough with trying to understand how different people from different walks of life reason through these issues. SPEAKER_02: That's a really interesting answer, and it makes me think back to an answer you gave in one of the episodes in our series when I asked you whether your immigrant experience has influenced the way that you think about immigration.And you basically said, well, it's inevitable that everyone's experience will inform them to some degree, but that you have worked incredibly hard to be disinterested and dispassionate about your pursuit of the data.It sounds like you are not backing away from that, but adding something to that now, which is that as much as data and empirical thinking can do, that people are people and it's really hard to understand people often, but extremely important to do so.Yeah. SPEAKER_01: Absolutely.Yeah, I think I need to go and in my own way reflect and think about how I need to incorporate that because when I reflect on my own experience. Even though I am an immigrant, I didn't want to emigrate because I had negative stereotypes about immigrants.When I came here to the US, I made a very sharp distinction between me as a educated immigrant who was coming here on a student visa and all those other immigrants that I thought I wasn't like who perhaps don't come here for education or might cross the border without authorization. But as I started interacting with undocumented immigrants in the U.S.for a variety of reasons, whether it's my barber, who I tell a long story about him in the book, or others through, you know, church, family experiences, community, I started realizing it's just much more complicated.I had a very simplistic understanding of who these people are, why they made the decision to cross the border illegally.And so that led me to go to the data and think, okay, what are these immigrants doing?Who are they? And why do we have such a permanent population of undocumented immigrants?And so I guess this is my very long way to say that my own journey required decomposing the why of how I think about this topic.And so perhaps I've underestimated the need to do that myself with others and be more patient with them. SPEAKER_02: That again was Zeke Hernandez.Thanks to him and everyone who took Zeke's quiz today.And this concludes our series, The True Story of America's Supremely Messed Up Immigration System.Freakonomics Radio is produced by Stitcher and Renbud Radio.You can find our entire archive on any podcast app.Also at Freakonomics.com, where we publish transcripts and show notes.This episode was produced by Alina Kullman and Zach Lipinski. Our staff also includes Augusta Chapman, Eleanor Osborne, Elsa Hernandez, Gabriel Roth, Greg Rippin, Jasmine Klinger, Jeremy Johnston, Julie Canfor, Lyric Bowditch, Morgan Levy, Neil Caruth, Rebecca Lee Douglas, and Sarah Lilly.Our theme song is Mr. Fortune by the Hitchhikers.All the other music was composed by Luis Guerra. As always, thank you for listening. SPEAKER_01: We've started to do text searches of old newspapers for words of ethnic foods, like spaghetti, right?So we can see how spaghetti diffused spatially throughout the U.S. SPEAKER_02: Oh, that's a good idea. SPEAKER_03: The Freakonomics Radio Network.The hidden side of everything.Stitcher.