ipl-logo

Pros And Cons Of Undocumented Aliens

492 Words2 Pages

Undocumented Aliens are defined by the IRS (Internal Service Revenue), which is an agency responsible for the collection and enforcement of taxes, as individuals who are not United States citizens or United States Nationals. As of 2012, the population of immigrants in the United states is roughly 11.43 million people and approximately 59% of these illegal immigrants in the United States come from Mexico. (ProCon.org) Nobody really knows how to treat them or what they should even do with them. They affect society, businesses and people including: many parents, low-skill workers, schools, employers, politicians, and even children. If parents were undocumented aliens then they would have to deal with getting paperwork and if they did not, then they would have to stay “undercover” for a while, maybe even for the rest of their life. …show more content…

Then the children would be legal but they wouldn’t be able to do much because their parents are limited to what they can and can’t do so they don’t get caught. Schools would also have an issue because some children may be undocumented attending their school, and if those children got caught then they would have to deal with a big problem. Similarly, employers might have undocumented workers and run into the same problem. In this same aspect low-skill workers who have been working for a business might lose their job to an illegal immigrant, which puts real citizens out of work. Lastly on a much larger scale, everyone expects politicians to do something about illegal immigration, which puts a lot of pressure on politicians. In these ways illegal immigration has been detrimental to businesses, society, and

Open Document