Monday, October 6, 2014

BLOG 5 - Illegal Aliens And The Making Of America


Under federal law, any non-U.S. citizen is an alien. Aliens who have entered the United States without permission, or who have violated the terms of their admission, are identified under the law as illegal aliens. That is a fact, not an issue for debate.

With over 11 million immigrants in the United States illegally (as of 2012), the issue of illegal immigration continues to divide Americans. 

Some people say that illegal immigration benefits the US economy through additional tax revenue, expansion of the low-cost labor pool, and increased money in circulation. They contend that immigrants bring good values, have motivations consistent with the American dream, perform jobs that Americans won’t take, and that opposition to immigration stems from racism. 

Opponents of illegal immigration say that people who break the law by crossing the US border without proper documentation or by overstaying their visas should be deported and not rewarded with a path to citizenship and access to social services. They argue that people in the country illegally are criminals and social and economic burdens to law-abiding, tax-paying Americans. 


Aliens do not enjoy all the privileges of citizenship, but outside of the immigration domain, and in civil society generally, they have the same rights as citizens to equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment. Legal and political theorists also dispute the implications of the Constitution’s protection of aliens.  While some cite it as evidence of the nation’s inclusive traditions, others worry that the extension of so many rights to aliens diminishes the value of citizenship.  With this dispute evolve the dilemma of deportation of alien parent of an American born baby.
When nursing mothers are torn from their babies, when children come home from school to find their parents missing ... when all this is happening, the system just isn't working and we need to change it.
- U.S. President Barack Obama

A question thousands of other families are wrestling with as a record number of deportations means record numbers of American children being left without a parent. And it comes despite President Barack Obama's promise that his administration would focus on removing only criminals, not breaking up families even if a parent is here illegally.
Nearly 45,000 such parents were removed in the first six months of this year, according to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
Behind the statistics are the stories: a crying baby taken from her mother's arms and handed to social workers as the mother is handcuffed and taken away, her parental rights terminated by a U.S. judge; teenage children watching as parents are dragged from the family home; immigrant parents disappearing into a maze-like detention system where they are routinely locked up hundreds of miles from their homes, separated from their families for months and denied contact with the welfare agencies deciding their children's' fate.
At least 5,100 U.S. citizen children in 22 states live in foster care, according to an estimate by the Applied Research Center, a New York-based advocacy organization, which first reported on such cases last year.
And an unknown number of those children are being put up for adoption against the wishes of their parents, who, once deported, are often helpless to fight when a U.S. judge decides that their children are better off here.



Unfortunately, everyone seems to agree that the current system is broken, but people don't seem to understand that it breaks families too.



Reference:
Paula Rothenberg – Race, Class, and Gender in the United States.

1 comment:

  1. Wow! What an interesting insight. I am ashamed to say that I never even thought of this angle before...I was aware of the predicament that faces families who have children born in the USA to illegal immigrants, therefore the children are legal citizens, but never thought that immigrant children would be torn from their families. How traumatizing for everyone involved!

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