In 2010, there were around 30.8 million immigrants in the United States, of those 30.8 million, 10.8 million of them were illegal immigrants. Most of whom were Spanish-speaking Mexicans. In the late election, the debate over illegal immigration is at an all-time high. According to state government, we need to act because there has been an absence of the federal government on this subject. There are also more than 400 laws in many of the states that have been proposed since 2005 to make immigration harder. The United States of America is one of the top three countries in the multinational corporation. In some parts of the U.S, you would be left wondering if you are still in the U.S since you see all these stores with different languages and with different cultures. Even in Ishmael Reed’s essay, he said, “On the day before Memorial Day, in 1903, a poet called me to describe a city I had visited… One section included mosques built by Islamic people… and a large number of Hispanic people.” He was not describing a mysterious city across the world, he was describing Detroit. This shows a couple of things, such as it shows that the United States of America is rich in culture, language, and ethnicity. It also shows that the United States of America is a multinational corporation. Detroit would not have mosques if there weren’t immigrants, …show more content…
A state is for regionalism, the federal government is for nationalism, and internationalism is for the entire world. An immigrant would come to the U.S, they could work and they could benefit the state which is regionalism, or they could work for the federal government and make weapons and that would be nationalism. If we ban immigration then these people who could benefit society on a larger scale, for example internationalism, then they won’t be there to work, and society won’t be