Immigration Laws Research Paper

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Immigration Laws Devry University Professor Carnevale English 112 6/9/2012 Your name? Immigration Laws There are many immigrants that risk their lives crossing the desert, who are willing to work in the fields, pick fruits or do menial jobs that most Americans won’t do. It’s very sad that the people who are governing this wonderful country feels the need to remove immigrants, people that obviously came here for work to better themselves and their families. Immigrants are foreign-born persons (entitled)legal ones, yes. Not illegal ones, right? to live and work permanently in the United States and, after five years, to become naturalized U.S. citizens. Immigration laws should be revised so they can allow the less fortunate from struggling…show more content…
Eleven percent of these immigrants have been from Germany and 10 percent from Mexico. Two centuries of immigration and integration. The U.S. immigration system recognizes 800,000 to 1 million foreigners a year as legal immigrants and during that same period admits 35 million nonimmigrant tourist and business visitors and has another 300,000 to 400,000 unauthorized foreigners settle. Info from where? During the 1990s, there were often contentious debates over immigrants and their children as beneficiaries of the U.S. educational, welfare, and political systems, or, more broadly, over whether the immigration and integration system served U.S. national interests and at the same time enabled immigrants and their children to integrate successfully. U.S. immigration policy was not substantively changed by the September 11, 2001, acts of terrorism, even though the nineteen men who hijacked the planes were foreigners who had been in the United States for various lengths of time from one week to several…show more content…
Immigrants without access to work permits or visas are open to exploitation, and are often denied many of the rights, protections and benefits afforded to most US citizens, including safe working environments and Social Security benefits. Without their labor, much of it currently illegal, many US industries would simply collapse under the weight of high costs or foreign competition. And that does not mean just stereotypical worker in a fast food restaurant. It means the workers who pack the beef in the Midwest or the lettuce in California that is shipped to those restaurants. It means the nation's nannies, elder care, health care and transportation workers, and those at cleaning companies. Large corporations including Sun Microsystems, Microsoft, Oracle, and Intel have testified to the need for more skilled foreign labor. These corporations have argued that each new programming job filled in the US results in at least another two domestic jobs in sales and marketing. But as the US government has dragged its heels, allowing only a few "Band-Aid" amendments to US immigration policy in regard to the H-1B visas needed by high-tech workers, the jobs have increasingly flowed
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