Creating a Solution to Survive Pass the American Border
Wake up America! Did you know that “Immigration accounts directly and indirectly for approximately two-thirds of current U.S. population growth…,” as John O’Sullivan states in his article “Tearing up the Country?” Our country is filled with people who leave their countries with the hopes of receiving an education and gaining more money to support their families. After introducing US aid to the farmers in third world countries many of them were assured a set price for their beans only to receive much less then promised causing farmers to become discouraged and unable to provide for their families and therefore, causing them to leave their countries coming to the America with the hopes of surviving. Many will argue that having them enter the United States is affecting our economy. Most of our daily necessities like coffee, cocoa, and coltan come from the countries they are leaving. To generate less immigration to the U.S. we as Americans should develop a fair, respectable solution that will ensure a direct connection from worker to buyer and that would benefit the citizens of these other countries like Belize, Guatemala, and Congo, directly. Perhaps if we open a direct line from the U.S to coffee producing farms, allowing the major companies here to choose which source they get their beans from and who produces them. Coffee is “the second largest world
Immigration has become an extremely debatable topic in the United States over the past 15 years. The United States has earned the term "the melting pot of the world" due to the country 's history as an immigrant nation. The United States was founded by immigrants seeking a better life from the foreign countries they once called home. Over the past two-hundred years Ellis Island and Angel Island have been open doorways for countless immigrants entering the country. Often the glories of America 's long and rich history of immigration cover up the struggles and problems that immigrants faced and the burden it places on everyday citizens in society. Today citizens must face numerous challenges and obstacles brought on by both legal and
Immigration has always been a complex issue in the United States. Previous and current administrations have had great difficulties in setting policies and programs in place to address this problem. During the course of American history, laws were enacted to address such issues. There were numerous legislative milestones in regards to immigration in the United States. In order to understand the current issues regarding immigration, we have to look back at the policies that were in place along with the goals that they intended to serve. According to (Barusch, 2012), the United States had an open immigration policy; which means that anyone could relocate to this country. As a result of this policy, the government had to redefine
Immigrants are basic facts of a strong U.S. economy, fulfilling the intrinsic need of the labor force for workers. We as immigrants have more of a tendency of working for our money to survive and to make our children have a better life, in a tough economy and in a country that isn’t even ours. How can immigration and immigrants life overcome? What difference can we do to fix the immigration dilemma occurring in the United States? This are some questions that many people may have asked someday. Immigration is a huge dilemma in the United States and we want to make a difference. This subject relates to me because as my parents, I am also an immigrant. We all want to make a difference in this world but why don’t we start by finding answers to help people who are immigrants? It is estimated that around $94 Billion dollars are spent on deporting immigrants. The government is spending an exorbitant amount of money, instead, that money could be better spent on other purposes, such as health plans for everyone or help the society build more shelters and livings for the amount of homeless that there are. Not only in the United States but in other countries in the world.
According to Coleman & Kocher (2011), after the horrific events of 9/11 there was a significant shift in US immigrant enforcement. There was a widespread fear and many Americans made a connection between terrorists and ‘other’ undocumented labourers who they believed freely infiltrated the country. In the post-9/11 world, detention and deportation became routinized as a potential aspect of everyday life for millions of undocumented immigrant residents. Historically, minor infractions had not implicated an immigration status check. After the events of 9/11, this practice became incorporated into the US detention and deportation strategy. This explains why Tarek, who innocently struggles to get through a subway turnstile, is questioned and detained as a result. Coleman and Kocher explain that, “the nation-state […] requires periodic expulsion and dispossession of its national minorities in order to gain a legitimating ground for itself” (p.235). In this case, the United States’ heightened, unjust security measures that discriminated against all Muslims as a response to the collective trauma of 9/11 intended to show both its own citizens and the rest of the world that they will remain in control.
In order, for immigrants who come to the United State to work they must have documents in order to prove to their employers they are eligible to work. If they are not able to prove that they are eligible to work in the United States, they must take in a cash only paycheck where they have the possibility of being mistreated as workers and are being paid under federal minimum wage. The major key, in order to work in the United States is to have a Social Security number or have a work visa. If those immigrants have neither of those things they have to find a way to get the documents they need in order to work, even if it means that they have to get illegal and fake documents to provide for their family. As the tightening of the United States border has continued over the years. It has been getting harder and harder to prove that fake documents are the real deal, and many immigrants are trying to find documents that are allowing them to work as well not getting caught by the United States government. “A decade ago one could purchase simply ‘identify kits’- a driver’s license, a green card, and social security card-for only $100, but since the United States sealed it borders undocumented residents are willing to pay up to $5,000 for the mandatory national ID cards implemented by the DHS last year and hailed as a breakthrough in surveillance technology” (Romero, 2008). As the more and more things, the United States does to tighten up the border from illegal immigrants. The prices
Many immigrant children are coming from different countries to the US and entering schools here that do not provide them with the support they need in order to be successful. Schools in America that accept these immigrant children in their school should provide more support to them. Newcomers should have a counselor that could help them with problems in school such as Bullying and discrimination. Also school districts should invest money in special programs that could focus on these children to help them succeed academically in school.
Immigration is a highly controversial and big problem in the United States today. “While some characterize our immigration crisis as solely an issue of the 11 to 12 million unauthorized immigrants living in this country, our problems extend beyond the number of undocumented people to a broader range of issues. The lack of a comprehensive federal solution has created a slew of lopsided, enforcement-only initiatives that have cost the country billions of dollars while failing to end unauthorized immigration.” The bigger issue with immigration is that we do not have a system in place to stop it on all the levels federal, state, and local the only system we have is when we find them we deport them which ends up costing billions of dollars.
Immigration has emerged as a hot topic of concern over the last couple of decades but in reality the problem of immigration goes far beyond the realms of recent decades. With President Trump’s intentions to build a wall to stop Mexicans from entering U.S. to the proposed ban of 7 nations, immigration has never been a more prevalent problem. The recent years however have given birth to a form of immigration that was not considered to be dominant before, refugees and displaced people are viewed differently from people who colonized various parts of the world in the early 17th, 18th and 19th century. Today when one thinks of immigrants, Middle Eastern, Indians and Africans spring mind but British and French people never do. Why is that so?
In my opinion immigration is a problem within the United States, and it desperately needs to be reformed by our government. So much tax money is used to help those who decide to immigrate while some of our native people are denied the same advantages that are given immigrants. Immigration from Mexico into the United States has been a phenomenon that has been ongoing for quite some time now. There is always an increasing number of immigrants who come into the United States to make a living for themselves (Creek and Yoder 680). People from Mexico are attracted to the United States because of the promise of a better life and opportunity. This opportunity is one of the principles that America is founded on, but I think we should not provide this opportunity when we have so many Americans already in need. There are various ways through which the Mexicans immigrate into the United States. Additionally, there are also various ways through which the Mexican immigration into America has impacted on America. Currently, there are more immigrants going into America from Mexico more than any other country. The main reasons why the immigrants go into America, is so that they can exploit better opportunities that exist in the region and chase the “American dream” (Creek and Yoder 680). Most of the immigrants who go into America regardless of their financial status usually go into America so
Many of you are aware of the immigration issue we are facing on a day to day basis. There are many opinions regarding immigration and immigrants but it is time for some facts to be brought to the public eye. Firstly, who are immigrants? When most of us think of the term immigrants Latin American individuals come to our mind or cheap laborers who don’t speak our language. Technically speaking, all of our ancestors were immigrants. The English language itself is a derived from the Germanic language. Ethnic background should not matter in the quality of a person and all the racist comments and views on immigrants are really contradictory, seeing as everyone in the United States has a different amount of diversity in their ancestry. Every
With the 2016 presidential election right around the corner, it is only appropriate to write about a main issue that is a part of each candidate’s platform, immigration. It is ironic how America was once known as the land of opportunity where immigrants were welcome and how the U.S. was essentially built off of immigrants' contributions such as how the Chinese played a vital role in the building of the Central Pacific Railroad or how the Mexicans always showed their commitment to the U.S. military throughout the years. Throughout the years, immigration has been the backbone of the U.S., but what once set the U.S. apart from other nations is now being challenged and appears to be losing favor. The primary position of this paper is that immigration,
George W. Bush once said, “I’ve seen what immigrant families add to our country. They bring the values that made us a great nation to begin with.” In light of the recent presidential election, more and more attention has been brought to the question of what to do with the influx of illegal immigrants coming from the southern border. Most of America’s undocumented population has traveled a treacherous journey from Latin American countries and through the southern border. Many politicians have proposed a mass deportation of up to eleven million of these workers without thinking of the possible repercussions. Though it seems that illegal immigrants hurt the country from an economic standpoint, they are essential to the success of the American
Through all of the events in history that happened to the United States, the issue lurking around for over 250 years and counting, which began ages ago, is immigration. In the U.S daily, there are approximately 70,000 foreigners that travel here from various countries from different parts of the world. Within the 70,000 travelers, over 60,000 of them are tourists, businessmen, and students. In the United States currently, with every 2,000 legal immigrants, there are 5,000 illegal immigrants. Since the 1990’s, illegal immigrants have been tremendously outnumbering legal immigrants by millions. Because of this ruckus with illegal immigrants, U.S lawmakers have made many attempts to restructure the immigration laws so that we can actually
The United States of America, A country founded on the concept of immigration. Wether that was immigrating to the colonies in the early stages of the country, or the immigration of millions into Ellis Island from the late 1800’s to the mid 1900’s, Its been a strong part of the backbone of this country. The current immigration polices are not harming Americas social or economical wellbeing because those here illegally currently pay sales tax, bring families together and support the American dream, and the GDP benefits. With these combined reasons it allows us Americans to gain comfort in welcoming more hardworking people into out melting pot of a country we like to call home.
Would you like to take a few minutes and think about the effect that immigration has in the United States of America? There are certain people that believes America would be better off without immigrants when in fact, America need immigrants more than they would ever know. The reason for implying this, is because immigrants work hard and do the jobs that the majority of Americans would not do, immigrants help boost trade, and they help the U.S build and retain their human capital.