Hispanic Heresy: What is the Impact of America’s Largest Population of Immigrants?
December 7, 2008
Attorney and lecturer, Angel L. Reyes, III, has authored and released a book which examines how the immigration of Hispanics to the United States impacts the nation’s socio-economics. Entitled Hispanic Heresy: What is the Impact of America’s Largest Population of Immigrants?, the 120-page hardcover was published by Mead Publishing and is currently available on Mead’s website and on Amazon.com.
Along with Texas Tech University professors Bradley T. Ewing, Ph.D., and James C. Wetherbe, Ph.D., Mr. Reyes wrote the book from a descriptive point of view in effort to examine the issues of the nation’s Hispanic population without a specific political leaning or agenda. The book analyzes some of the most widely-discussed issues facing the Hispanic population in the United States: illegal immigration and its effects on education, the tax system, social welfare and medical care systems. The book balances the two basic views of these immigration issues, one being that of a “burden” and the other of an “opportunity.”
Kurt Eichenwald, author of The Informant and Conspiracy of Fools, describes Hispanic Heresy as “a comprehensive and important examination of the fastest growing population in this country. Hispanic Heresy discusses the history, future challenges and significance of Hispanic-Americans, and lays out the meaning of their growing role — something the book makes clear — that will have an impact akin to the great immigration era from the late 19th and early 20th centuries. A fascinating book.”
Mr. Reyes is a very active member of the Hispanic business community of Dallas, Texas and frequently writes and lectures on the topic of immigration, along with other legal and sociological issues facing the United States. Hispanic Heresy is a project Mr. Reyes had planned for several years and is the culmination of countless hours of research, analysis and discussion.

























