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Essay On Mexican Immigration

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“I know coming into the country illegally is a crime, but millions of people have done it, and now we come here asking for help,” said an illegal immigrant named Teresa who came to the United States of America (Yee, Vivian, Kenan Davis, and Jugal K. Patel.). Most Mexican immigrants who came during the depression came to join a family member. The goal to these Immigrants was to save money and go back to Mexico to purchase land ("Minority Groups and the Great Depression").To many of these workers, America became home. Today there is a total of 11 million immigrants in the U.S today (Yee, Vivian, Kenan Davis, and Jugal K. Patel). Sixty percent of immigrants live in six states: California, Texas, Florida, New York, New Jersey, and Illinois ("The Truth about America's Illegal Immigrants"). Nowadays it is different for immigrants than in the 1930 but, that doesn't mean they don't take risks. …show more content…

Over 1 million Mexican workers came to us from 1900-1930 ("Minority Groups and the Great Depression"). That is a big change from now due to the population increase.6.2 million unauthorized immigrants come from Mexico alone today.That is about six times more than in 1900-1930 today(Yee, Vivian, Kenan Davis, and Jugal K. Patel). Moving to America has become popular due to the job opportunities here that immigrants don't have there.
Speaking of differences, the way the immigrants entered America is another one. Mexican workers found that the railroad provided a cheap way to get to the north to live in urban cities (Mexican - Depression and the Struggle for Survival). Now more immigrants stay in the U.S with outdated visas than crossing the border ( "The Truth about America's Illegal Immigrants").Traveling and illegally staying in the U.S., Changed the way to get America.It really played a big role for the

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