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Illegal Immigrants

Decent Essays

Most immigrants in the United States can either be part of the middle class or live in poverty. Based on the results from Ruark and Graham, low-skilled immigrants are more likely to live poverty and lack of health insurance. In their research, immigrants and their children made up about 32% of those who lives in America who does not have health insurance (Ruark and Graham “Immigration, Poverty and Low-Wage Earners”) Without statistic data, one could easily draw out a conclusion: since immigrants cannot obtain a health insurance, they cannot go to the doctor whenever they’re ill. Without proper treatment for critical diseases such as cancer, the immigrants would suffer more than they should have. Besides the lack of health insurance, there are numerous of cases of deportation of illegal immigrants. Luis H. Zayas and Mollie H. Bradlee’s article “Exiling Children, Creating Orphans: When Immigration Policies Hurt Citizens” explores the impact of deportation on the immigrant’s families and their children. According to the article, in 2012, the government had deported about 409,849 illegal immigrants back to their country. If the deportation only involved the entire family then the issue is not very serious, but it is serious when the illegal immigrant have a child with an American citizen, thus making the child an American citizen. At this point, the child’s family have to decide whether to leave the child in the United States or bring the child with them. If the parents choose

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