I think his response was loaded with sarcasm in answer to a loaded question. He would've done better to lose the black descriptive, even if he was addressing that specific audience, rather than provide the spinners with any ammo.
Ok, you look up the stats that support your view and here's an excerpt from one that supports my argument written by Newsweek Aug10, '23:
Which States Are Most Affected?
The 13 states most affected by labor shortages, according to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, are Alabama, Arkansas, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Utah and Vermont.
Given, I don't know the extent of which these states have been affected by illegal immigration, California, New York, Illinois is conspicuously missing from this list.
I agree that the 'empowerment of woman's choice' has had adverse effects on the nation's population with the choice being presented in a manner that a pregnancy is the problem that needs solved, when the root problem is actually her initial choice in the men which she indiscriminately allows access to her body. But that goes both ways in regard to men, so I blame the national population as a whole being concerned aspiring to neither be mothers nor provisional protective fathers.
I don't think immigration is the actual issue, properly vetted.