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Essay About Immigration Plan

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The United States of America is a country full of many diverse people. In this day of age, the differences between everyone is clearly seen, and they are all judged. That is the main problem that The Immigration Plan would solve. The Immigration Plan consists of three major steps. First, make immigration laws easier to understand and more available to the public. Second, create a housing facility, similar to apartments, in every state near a school for families with children to stay in while the process and paperwork is in progress. Third, have integrated classes with U.S. citizens and immigrants to learn and get to know each other. Starting with creating a simplified version of the immigration laws would benefit everyone. Most U.S. citizens …show more content…

There would be a small fee every month the families stay in the facility so the bills could be paid. Having this facility could stop hotels from being “jails” for women and children. Edwidge Danticat wrote in “Not Your Homeland” that she visited “a Comfort Suites hotel in Miami where several Haitian women and children are jailed”. Creating these facilities would help stop that problem. Third, the integrated classes would help the U.S. citizens understand and accept the immigrants and vise versa. In “Our Fear of Immigrants”, Jeremy Smith wrote that a elementary school teacher suggests that we “sit down and have supper with immigrants [...] ask them their stories“. Xenophobia is the fear of people from other countries. Therefore, U.S. citizens and the immigrants might need these classes to get to know each other and accept each other. In opposition of this plan, some people might say that it will cost too much money. The Immigration Plan should not cost more than $8,058,488,000, the budget for the EPA in 2017. In the end, this entire plan will benefit everyone it comes in contact with, immigrant or

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