As Nicholas Dauphine, an American of Hispanic origin from San Antonio, whose essay won the first prize in ‘Civil Rights Today’ contest in 2014, wrote that probably it was time for Hispanics residing in the US to be proud and grateful to their ancestors for having played a very important role in shaping the world of civil rights that they enjoyed nowadays, even in spite of the fact that not too many people talked about such merits of the Hispanic minority (Nicholas Dauphine 2014).
Another big issue connected to the Hispanic minority in the USA is the high pace of increasing of the population of the Hispanic origin. The US Census Bureau (2013) claims that by 2060 the population of Hispanics of the USA will be around 158 million people, making up over
…show more content…
The illegal immigration, for instance, is hard to be controlled, as people can find ways of escaping to the US from Mexico and other countries even despite numerous legal control systems at the borders. The birth-rate, on the other hand, would not have been a problem if particular demographic and statistical measures of the Hispanic minority in the US would have been slightly better. For instance, according to Pew Research Center website (2013), the number of Hispanics in the US who lack health insurance is around 30%, with more than 25% of Hispanics living in poverty and the recent drop of employment rate within their minority group. These numbers imply both officially and unofficially that the average welfare level of the Hispanic minority is lower than the average level of White-Americans. In addition to those numbers, only slightly above 10% of all Hispanics in the US have obtained a Bachelor’s degree (Gonzalez-Barrera and Lopez 2013). These measures testify that even though Hispanics in the US lead a much better life then they would have had in their home countries, this minority group increase in number might be