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- Immigration
- Immigration & Americas Future
-
- The world has gone through a revolution and it has changed a lot. We
- have cut the death rates around the world with modern medicine and new
- farming methods. For example, we sprayed to destroy mosquitoes in Sri
- Lanka in the 1950s. In one year, the average life of everyone in Sri
- Lanka was extended by eight years because the number of people dying
- from malaria suddenly declined.
- This was a great human achievement. But we cut the death rate without
- cutting the birth rate. Now population is soaring. There were about
- one billion people living in the world when the Statue of Liberty was
- built. There are 4.5 billion today. World population is growing at an
- enormous rate. The world is going to add a billion people in the next
- eleven years, thatÆs 224,000 every day! Experts say there will be at
- least 1.65 billion more people living in the world in the next twenty
- years.
- We must understand what these numbers mean for the U.S. LetÆs look at
- the question of jobs. The International Labor organization projects a
- twenty-year increase of 600 to 700 million people who will be seeking
- jobs.
- Eighty-eight percent of the worldÆs population growth takes place in the
- Third World. More than a billion people today are paid about 150
- dollars a year, which is less than the average American earns in a
- week. And growing numbers of these poorly paid Third World citizens
- want to come to the United States.
- In the 1970s, all other countries that accept immigrants started
- controlling the number of people they would allow into their countries.
- The United States did not. This means that the huge numbers of
- immigrants who are turned down elsewhere will turn to the United States.
- The number of immigrants is staggering. The human suffering they
- represent is a nightmare.
- Latin AmericaÆs population is now 390 million people. It will be 800
- million in the year 2025. MexicoÆs population has tripled since the
- Second World War. One third of the population of Mexico is under ten
- years of age, as a result, in just ten years, MexicoÆs unemployment rate
- will increase 30 percent, as these children become young adults, in
- search of work. There were in 1990 an estimated four million illegal
- aliens in the United States, and about 55 percent of them were from
- Mexico.
- These people look to the United States. Human population has always
- moved, like waves, to fresh lands. But for the first time in human
- history, there are no fresh lands, no new continents. We will have to
- think and decide with great care what our policy should be toward
- immigration. At this point in history, American immigration policies
- are in a mess.
- Our borders are totally out of control. Our border patrol arrests 3000
- illegal immigrants per day, or 1.2 million per year, and Two illegal
- immigrants get in for every one caught. And those caught just try
- again!
- More than 1 million people are entering the U.S. legally every year.
- >From 1983 through 1992, 8.7 million of these newcomers arrived -- the
- highest number in any 10-year period since 1910. A record 1.8 million
- were granted permanent residence in 1991. Because present law stresses
- family unification, these arrivals can bring over their spouses, sons
- and daughters: some 3.5 million are now in line to come in. Once here,
- they can bring in their direct relatives. As a result, there exists no
- visible limit to the number of legal entries.
- Until a few years ago, immigrants seeking asylum were rare. In 1975, a
- total of 200 applications were received in the U.S. Suddenly, asylum is
- the plea of choice in the U.S., and around the world, often as a cover
- for economic migration. U.S. applications were up to 103,000 last year,
- and the backlog tops 300,000 cases. Under the present asylum rules,
- practically anyone who declares that he or she is fleeing political
- oppression has a good chance to enter the U.S. Chinese are almost always
- admitted, for example, if they claim that ChinaÆs birth-control policies
- have limited the number of children they can have.
- Right now, once aliens enter the U.S., it is almost impossible to deport
- them, even if they have no valid documents. Thousands of those who enter
- illegally request asylum only if they are caught. The review process can
- take 10 years or more, and applicants often simply disappear while it is
- under way. Asylum cases are piling up faster than they can be cleared,
- with the Immigration and Naturalization Service falling farther behind
- every year. At her confirmation hearings at the end of September, Doris
- Meissner, ClintonÆs nominee as commissioner of the Immigration and
- Naturalization Services, conceded, æÆThe asylum system is broken, and we
- need to fix it.ÆÆ
- Adding the numbers of legal and illegal immigrants, 50 percent of all
- U.S. population growth comes from immigration. While Americans try to
- have smaller families, immigration threatens our nation. If immigration
- rates continue to be this high, more than seventy million people will be
- added to the United States population in just fifty years, with no end
- in sight. We are taking in more people than all of the rest of the
- world combined. As have all the other countries of the word, America
- needs to control its borders. As every house needs a door, so every
- country needs a border. And yet, our borders are full of holes. We
- have clearly lost control over our future. Our children will pay the
- price of uncontrolled immigration.
- The United States is no longer an empty continent. In 1886, when the
- Statue of Liberty was built, there were 58 million people in the United
- States. In 1984 there were 240 million people, thatÆs four times the
- total population in less then a century
- The U.S. cannot and should not be the home of last resort for all the
- world s poor, huddled masses. We are not doing a good job with our own
- poor, as we see more people without jobs.
- Supporters of immigration use many arguments to support their side.
- LetÆs look at a few of these arguments: Illegal immigrants take jobs no
- Americans want. The fact is that the average illegal immigrant arrested
- in Denver, Colorado, made more than seven dollars an hour. Many were
- making over 100 dollars per day. Denver identified 43 illegal aliens
- making 100 dollars per day as roofers, while 438 people were registered
- in their employment services who would have loved those jobs. The
- average illegal immigrant arrested in Chicago makes $5.65 an hour. More
- than thirty million American workers make less than that.
- A common belief is that aliens fulfill many of the least desirable
- jobs. However, most experts agree that in todayÆs economy, there is no
- shortage of Americans competing for many of these same jobs. Actually,
- many Americans already work in these low-paying jobs. For example: the
- poor black woman, who works as a seamstress, Her boss asked her to train
- a new employee, an illegal immigrant. As soon as she finished training
- her new charge, she was fired. Her position, of course, went to the
- illegal immigrant, who was willing to work for less pay, and under
- deplorable working conditions. This is one example of how illegal
- workers depress wages, and slow, stall or prevent unionization or
- improvements to working conditions.
- Another myth cited by supporters of immigration is that illegal
- immigrants work hard, pay taxes, and do not go on welfare. The sad
- truth is that these folks seem to learn the ropes of the welfare system
- with incredible speed.
- TodayÆs illegal immigrants apply for and receive benefits from the
- government that citizens need. According to Donald L. Huddle, an
- economist at Rice University in Texas, legal and illegal immigrants cost
- the nation a net 42.5 billion dollars in 1992. The Huddle study also
- found that in 1992, more than 2 million Americans were displaced from
- their jobs by illegal immigrants. This resulted in an additional 11.9
- billion dollars in public assistance.
- In California alone, they cost more than 18 billion dollars a year.
- California currently has an estimated 300,000 illegal immigrants now
- attending grades' 0-12. This will costs the California tax payers an
- estimated 1.5 billion dollars. This is 10 percent of the students
- currently enrolled in our elementary schools today! California has
- 49.8 percent of the countries illegal aliens, therefore, California pays
- multiple costs for its leaky borders.
- Providing health care for illegal immigrants costs California tax payers
- 400 million dollars annually. Illegals drain about two billion dollars
- a year for incarceration, schooling and Medicaid from the budgets of
- such major destination states as Texas, Florida and California. For
- California alone, a 1993 study by the California Legislature estimates
- criminal justice costs involving illegal immigrants to be 385 million
- dollars to the state, with an additional 112 million dollars to local or
- county government. This is a total cost of 497 million dollars, paid by
- the California tax payer, each and every year!
- Illinois did a study showing that it paid 66 million dollars in
- unemployment benefits to illegal immigrants in one year, despite a law
- that was supposed to stop illegal immigrants from getting unemployment
- benefits. Los Angeles estimates that it spends 269 million dollars in
- social services on illegal immigrants each year. Every person added to
- our population drains our natural resources and contributes to the
- destruction of our environment.
- In a Pulitzer-Prize-winning study, the Des Moines Register found that
- for every person added to our population, 1.5 acres of the richest farm
- land goes out of production to make way for new houses, roads, and
- shopping centers. If this continues, the United States will stop
- shipping food to other countries shortly after the year 2000. How can
- the United States feed the hungry people of the world?
- The national majority now says it favors cutting back on legal
- immigration. A TIME/CNN poll determined last week that 77 percent of
- those surveyed felt the government was not doing enough to keep out
- illegal immigrants. For years now, the battle has raged between the
- federal authorities who are supposed to police the borders and the
- states who pay the price if they fail.
- In an attempt to reduce illegal immigration, Nevada Senator Harry Reid,
- has introduced a bill that would establish an annual limit of 300,000
- newcomers, including æÆimmediate relatives,ÆÆ and a national
- identification card. Congress passed legislation in 1986 that
- stipulates fines and other penalties for employers who knowingly hire
- illegal aliens. The bill includes provisions to grant amnesty to
- illegal aliens who were in the United States prior to January 1, 1982,
- and to aid farmers who have relied on illegal aliens to harvest their
- crops.
- Does anyone benefit from the rising tide of illegal immigration?
- Businesses that can profit from employing illegals at low wages do. And
- many illegals are better off here than in their own countries. But many
- others are exploited by dishonest employers and are treated like slaves.
- These immigrants are denied the rights and privileges we want every
- person in the United States to enjoy.
- In closing, we must all realize this issue will not go away. Other
- generations of Americans made great sacrifices so that we today can
- enjoy the freedom, the quality of life, and the standard of living that
- we have. When I think of what uncontrolled immigration will do to the
- dreams of my parents and grandparents, what it will mean to the future
- of my children, I realize that we will find a way to control
- immigration. Because we must.
- Primary And Secondary Sources
-
- (These listings are in order of their importance, in category.)
-
- "Immigration: Identifying Propaganda Techniques"
- ╖ Bonnie Szumski & JoAnne Buggey, Ph.D.
- College of Education, University of ` Minnesota
- (Greenhaven Press 1989)
-
- "Immigration-Opposing Viewpoints"
- ╖ David Bender & Bruno Leone, Series Editors
- ╖ William Dudley, Book Editor
- (Greenhaven Press 1990)
-
- "The Essential Immigrant"
- ╖ Dan Lacey
- (Hippocrene Books 1990)
-
- "Immigration"
- ╖ Kelly C. Anderson
- (Lucent Books 1993)
-
- "Immigration-A pictorial History of"
- ╖ Oscar Handlin
- (Crown Publishers 1972)
-
- "Immigrants, Refugees, and U.S. Policy"
- ╖ Grant S McClellan
- (H. W. Wilson Company 1981)
-
- "Immigration and Illegal Aliens"
- ╖ Mark A. Siegel, M.A., Ph.D.
- ╖ Nancy R. Jacobs, B.A., M.A.
- ╖ Patricia A. Von Brook, B.A., M.S.
- (Information Plus 1989)
- Newsprint Articles examined from
- the following publications:
-
- ╖ Des Moines Register
- ╖ Los Angeles Times
- ╖ Orange County Register
-
- America On Line
- Numerous Articles were reviewed.
- A word search was performed on the system,
- using the keywords:
-
- ╖ Immigration
- ╖ Borders
- ╖ Aliens
- ╖ Liberty
-
- All Articles Were Transmitted Within
- The Past 8 Months
-
- Excerpts from:
- ╖ Donald L. Huddle
- Economist, Rice University: Texas
- ╖ Doris Meissner
- (ClintonÆs nominee as
- Commissioner of the INS)
-
- Let me know what you think. Comments regarding this paper may be sent
- to:
- roadrunr@exo.com