Indian immigrant engineer Jagdish Patel really likes America, remarking recently, “I am so glad that I came to America . . . I brought everyone here.”

He certainly did — “more than 90” over the years since the 1970s according to the diversity-enthralled New York Times. (Apparently the precise number has become too large to know precisely.) But chain migration makes multiplication easy — any legal immigrant can welcome an unlimited number of family members and they can soon do likewise. Last year, the White House released a report showing that 9.3 million new immigrants were admitted based on family ties between 2005 and 2015.

Jagdish came as a legal immigrant but the disastrous math is the same as shown in the chart below:

Chain migration has fueled the explosive growth of Indian immigrants now residing in the United States:

One result has been that nearly three-fourths of Silicon Valley tech workers are foreign, many of whom were born in India. Some of the top executives are Indians — so how welcoming are such companies to young American tech workers when there are still Indian cousins who need a job?

The Times article was reprinted in the Toronto Star: