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When it comes to population growth, the United States has two regions. The Frontier (gray-colored states in the West and the Southeast) attracts native-born U.S. citizens from other states. The Gateway (blue-colored states in the Northeast and California) depends on international immigration for population growth. The Great Interior (orange-colored states) gets relatively few newcomers, and population growth depends on the birth rate.
Politics & SocietyFeatures
Robert David Sullivan
Both the church and the nation will steadily shrink without newcomers from beyond our national borders. But there are big differences in how immigration plays out in different parts of the U.S.
George Grantham Bain collection, Library of Congress
Politics & SocietyFeatures
Terry Golway
Running for president in 1928, Al Smith argued it was possible to be both a good Catholic and a faithful servant of the American people, writes Terry Golway. Even in losing, he changed U.S. history.
FaithFeatures
Eve Tushnet
Healing teeth can be a first step in restoring hope and giving us a chance to tell a new story with our lives.
Politics & SocietyFeatures
John W. Miller
Everybody would get this money, regardless of their wealth or income: you, your mom, Bill Gates. The payments would be made for life.
FaithFeatures
Pádraig Ó Tuama
To listen carefully to an arguing group is to gain a peculiar glimpse into the desires and anxieties of that group.
FaithFeatures
J.D. Long García
Some Catholic schools are implementing dual-language programs, part of an effort to reflect the reality of life in the church in the United States.