The Pros And Cons Of Immigrants

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The United States has always been perceived as a country of wealth and power; anything that would reflect otherwise was taken out. "Latinos constitute the largest minority group in the United States" (348) whether they are legal or not. Over the years immigration kept increasing, and after the September 11, 2001, "the war on immigrants was increasingly conflated with the war one terror." Anything that does not reflect on the White elites, is seen as terror and detrimental to society. America's flaws are never blamed on America but on others. Immigrants, throughout history have been "blamed for joblessness, low wages, and high social spending while being framed as threats to national security." Black people, fall within the same category of minorities as Latinos, but …show more content…

Immigrants are not granted equal access to earning legal status as visa holding expatriates, because they were not born on U.S. soil. "Aliens do not enjoy all the privileges of citizenship" (211), but because they reside on American soil, not born, they are protected under the Fourteenth Amendment; which in civil society immigrants have the same rights as citizens. Immigrants have been thought to either contribute or deteriorate the country, and those who are here legally with good intentions can achieve citizenship by naturalization. The citizenship process is not based on equality, since only people who have been in this country with a five year residence with no criminal record and legally are granted the opportunity of a citizenship. There are people that believe that "the