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Immigration

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Immigration Many immigrants are working in menial low-wage jobs that native-born Americans shun. They re not depriving anyone of work. Today: DREAM: Development ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Immigration


1
Immigration
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Statue of Liberty
  • give us your tired, your poor, your huddled
    masses yearning to breathe free.

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  • Immigration restrictions 1800s
  • paupers, ex-convicts, mental defectives and
    Chinese
  • 18 million new citizens came in and U.S. became a
    melting pot

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  • Currently brings in 1 million new residents a
    year
  • More than 1 in 10 U.S residents are immigrants
  • 1890-1910 it had been 15 population

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  • Most new immigrants come from Latin America and
    Asia
  • Will fundamentally change America (like it did in
    the early 1900s)
  • How close is Immigration and Naturalization
    Service guarding nations borders?

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  • 3 of the 19 hijackers from Sept 11 attacks were
    here in the U.S. with expired visas
  • Other 16 were able to roam country at will even
    though they should have raised suspicions
  • 2 were on a watch list

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  • After 9/11 immigration regulations were looked at
    to try to combat domestic terrorism
  • Government tired to bolster border security,
    detain young Middle Eastern men for questioning
    and deportation on immigation violations

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  • Was it fair to immediately focus suspicion on
    immigrants? Did the detention of young Middle
    Eastern men amount to racial profiling?

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  • Immigration Act of 1965
  • Emphasis on reuniting families and granting
    asylum to refugees, favoring immigrants with
    desired job skills and ending the longstanding
    preference for Western Europeans

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  • Increased rate of legal immigration 297,000 in
    1965 to 850,000 in 2000
  • Prior to 1965, 9 out of 10 legal immigrants to
    the U.S. were from Europe or Canada
  • More than half come from Asia or Mexico now

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  • Figures dont include rate of illegal immigration
  • At least 275,000 a year are illegal
  • Some say illegal immigrants exact a high cost on
    society without making a contribution
  • Others say illegal immigrants take jobs many
    Americans dont want, urban areas and
    agricultural states

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  • Now, the concern is not about how many immigrants
    are in the country, but about whether those
    immigrants are being properly screen
  • Illegal Immigration Reform and Responsibility Act
    of 1996 restricted benefits for illegal
    benefits, raised income requirements for those
    who sponsor, doubled Border Patrol agents

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  • 1996 Welfare reform law excluded legal
    immigrants from many federal benefits, such as
    food stamps and Supplemental Security Income for
    the disabled
  • State governments were in control of whether
    legal immigrants could receive welfare and
    Medicaid

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  • Disability and food stamps benefits were restored
    to some legal immigrants who were in the U.S.
    before 1996
  • Every state but Wyoming is permitting immigrants
    to get Medicaid after a 5 year waiting period

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  • Every state but Alabama is permitting immigrants
    who arrived before 1996 to get welfare
  • Bush proposed restoring food stamp benefits for
    an estimated 363,000 low income legal immigrants
    who have been in the U.S. for at least 5 years

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  • Californias Proposition 187, passed by voters in
    1994, would have denied almost all benefits to
    illegal immigrants, including public education
  • Many of the restrictions were overturned in
    court, state officials eventually dropped their
    appeals

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  • Most Americans (63) think majority of immigrants
    came here illegally
  • Half of American say the country is too open to
    immigrants
  • Since Sept 11, there has been an increase in the
    number who want to reduce immigration

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  • 58 want a reduction in immigration
  • We dont know if this is a long term shift in
    attitudes or a short term reaction to the shock
    of the terrorist attacks

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  • Most Americans say they support detaining
    noncitizens indefinitely without charging them
    with a crime if they are believed to be a threat
    to national security
  • 86 say government is justified in detaining
    immigrants who had overstayed their visas or
    violated immigration law

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Perspective 1
  • Honor our commitment to newcomers
  • Nation of immigrants
  • Makes us different from so many other societies
  • Obligation to welcome newcomers

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  • Humanitarian concern and our commitment to the
    plight of refugees
  • Benefits from immigration
  • Hard working immigrants start businesses, create
    jobs, help economy grow

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  • Enrich America with arts, traditions, and
    languages
  • US has always gained more by immigration than we
    have lost, no reason to think that will change

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  • Maintain legal immigration at current levels
  • Give guest worker visas to illegal immigrants
    who have jobs
  • Keep native languages and customs if they choose
    to

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  • Continue to be a refuge for individuals who face
    political oppression in their home countries
  • Ensure that all legal immigrants get the benefits
    that come with citizenship

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Argument for Approach
  • Cultural and economic benefit we get from
    immigrants more than outweigh the short-term
    costs
  • Decency ought to require us to take in people
    feeling political and social persecution
  • Immigrants are highly motivated

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  • Concern about language and culture are overblown
  • Weve always had ethnic neighborhoods and people
    who cling to their home language- America has
    coped with this before and we can do so again

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Argument Against This Approach
  • Our first obligation is to provide jobs and
    social services for people already living in this
    country. We cannot afford to help everyone who
    want to come.

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  • In the past, large waves of immigration were
    followed by period where the rules were tightened
    up. We need a breathing space to absorb the
    immigrants we already have.
  • Sept. 11 shows that we need better border
    security.

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  • Amnesty programs reward people for breaking the
    law. Thats not only a bad precedent, its also
    an insult to the many immigrants who followed the
    rules and went through the red tape to get here
    legally.

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Perspective 2
  • Cutting back to preserve our security and culture
  • Tighten visa requirements. Increase funding to
    improve border security, upgrade computers, and
    hire immigration agents.

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  • Sharply reduce legal immigration, including
    student and word visas. Accept only as many
    immigrants as can be checked out by authorities.
  • Reform bilingual education and require immigrant
    students to learn English as quickly as possible

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  • Deport immigrants who commit crimes in the U.S.
    and pursue illegal immigrants more aggressively

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Arguments for this Approach
  • In an age of terrorism, we cannot allow lax
    immigration policy that allows terrorists to
    enter the country unchallenged
  • We cant keep allowing more immigrants in than
    authorities can check out, or more than we can
    integrate into society

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  • Most countries insist that immigrants enter the
    culture mainstream by learning their language
  • If trends continue, English will no longer be our
    common language. Without a common language, the
    U.S. will fracture into separate cultures

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Arguments Against This Approach
  • Historically, there have always been dire
    predictions that immigrants are too different and
    wont integrate into society- they were wrong
    before and theyre wrong now

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  • Experience shows that while some first generation
    immigrants dont master English, the second
    generation is almost always fluent and
    Americanized
  • This favors white Europeans and excludes the rest
    of the world

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  • This punishes the vast majority of immigrants,
    who only want a better life, out of fear of a few
    radicals and terrorists

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Perspective 3
  • Cutting back in response to economic realities
  • Concern should be economic cost imposed by the
    huge influx of immigrants and their effects on
    wages and jobs

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  • We need to educate and employ the people we have
    here already before we can worry about paying for
    the education, welfare, and health care of
    hundreds of thousands of newcomers each year

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  • Burden isnt spread evenly- most immigrants
    settle in big cities and Sun Belt states
  • Should restrict the number of newcomers, and look
    more closely at how their arrival affects us

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  • The immigrants we do accept should either have
    jobs waiting here or have the skills to support
    themselves
  • Nations first obligation is to protect the
    welfare and well being of those who are already
    American citizens

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  • Cut the total number of legal immigrants
  • Accept immigrants only if they can support
    themselves here
  • Favor newcomers who either have useful skills or
    who are willing to take jobs Americans dont want

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  • Require sponsors of legal immigrants to earn
    substantially more than poverty level wages
  • Grant political asylum only to individuals who
    can prove that they face persecution

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Arguments for this Approach
  • Influx is straining public schools, hospitals,
    and over services
  • Many Americans are struggling economically- the
    government should not make things worse by
    inviting immigrants to compete for jobs
  • Take care of our citizens first- in public
    services, jobs, and education

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Arguments Against This Approach
  • Immigrants open businesses, create jobs, and
    bring needed skills to U.S. companies
  • Relatively few immigrants receive public
    assistance
  • Legal immigrants pay taxes. They ought to be
    able to benefit from the public services their
    taxes pay for.

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  • Many immigrants are working in menial low-wage
    jobs that native-born Americans shun. Theyre
    not depriving anyone of work.

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Today
  • DREAM Development, Relief, and Education for
    Alien Minors

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  • This bill would provide conditional permanent
    residency to certain illegal aliens of good moral
    character who graduate from U.S. high schools,
    arrived in the United States as minors, and lived
    in the country continuously for at least five
    years prior to the bill's enactment.

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  • If they were to complete two years in the
    military or two years at a four-year institution
    of higher learning, they would obtain temporary
    residency for a six-year period.

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  • Within the six-year period, they may qualify if
    they have "acquired a degree from an institution
    of higher education in the United States or has
    completed at least 2 years, in good standing, in
    a program for a bachelor's degree or higher
    degree in the United States" or have "served in
    the armed services for at least 2 years and, if
    discharged, has received an honorable discharge

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  • Military enlistment contracts require an
    eight-year commitment, with active duty
    commitments typically between four and six years,
    but as low as two years.

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  • "Any alien whose permanent resident status is
    terminated... shall return to the immigration
    status the alien had immediately prior to
    receiving conditional permanent resident status
    under this Act."6 This bill would have included
    illegal immigrants as old as 35 years of age

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Criticism/Support
  • Opponents of the DREAM Act argue that it is an
    amnesty that encourages more illegal immigration
    and rewards immigrants.

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  • They also claim that the act will cause social
    and economic burdens such as taxpayers paying for
    immigrants education, diminishing both college
    admissions of native born students and
    opportunities of federal aid. Many also claim
    that if the DREAM Act is approved it would not
    have provisions to provide proof for students who
    are qualified.

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  • Advocates of the DREAM Act claim it will benefit
    the country in numerous ways. It will make the
    country more competitive in the global economy
    while at the same time having economic benefits
    by reducing the deficit and increasing government
    revenues.

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  • The act would help universities by increasing
    their revenues since more students will be
    enrolling yet it will not affect the admission
    rates of native-born students since 10 states
    already allow in-state tuition and many have done
    so in community colleges.43 Taxpayers will not
    pay for these students to attend universities
    because they will not be able to receive federal
    grants, they would only be qualified for federal
    student loans.

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Arizona SB 1070
  • Going to the Supreme Court to be decided
  • The Support Our Law Enforcement and Safe
    Neighborhoods Act

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  • (introduced as Arizona Senate Bill 1070 and thus
    often referred to simply as Arizona SB 1070) is a
    legislative Act in the U.S. state of Arizona that
    at the time of passage was the broadest and
    strictest anti-illegal immigration measure in
    recent U.S. history. It has received national and
    international attention and has spurred
    considerable controversy.

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  • The Arizona Act additionally makes it a state
    misdemeanor crime for an alien to be in Arizona
    without carrying the required documents,8
    requires that state law enforcement officers
    attempt to determine an individual's immigration
    status during a "lawful stop, detention or
    arrest" when there is reasonable suspicion that
    the individual is an illegal immigrant,

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  • bars state or local officials or agencies from
    restricting enforcement of federal immigration
    laws, and cracks down on those sheltering, hiring
    and transporting illegal aliens. The paragraph on
    intent in the legislation says it embodies an
    "attrition through enforcement" doctrine.

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  • Critics of the legislation say it encourages
    racial profiling, while supporters say the law
    prohibits the use of race as the sole basis for
    investigating immigration status.14 The law was
    modified by Arizona House Bill 2162 within a week
    of its signing with the goal of addressing some
    of these concerns.

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  • There have been protests in opposition to the law
    in over 70 U.S. cities, including boycotts and
    calls for boycotts of Arizona. Polling has found
    the law to have majority support in Arizona and
    nationwide. Passage of the measure has prompted
    other states to consider adopting similar
    legislation.
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