The Pros And Cons Of Undocumented Immigrants

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Have you ever guessed how many races we have in this country? If not lets tell you some of them: African American, Hispanic, White, Black, Latino, and there are many more. The problem with some of these races is that some of them may be undocumented and illegal that came to the U.S. without papers. Undocumented immigrants are people who came to the U.S. illegally which means they don’t have papers. And some families come to the U.S. for their kids so that they can be happy and have a good childhood. And the ones that don’t have families that are only a couple come here to have a better life and a better job in the U.S.. People may not know that some of the reasons why they came here. Also they came here to be free and to care for their loved …show more content…

According to Senator Charles Schumer upfront magazine in 2016, “trying to deport undocumented residents, rather than providing them with an illegal way of staying in the U.S. would tear apart families”. What Senator Charles Schumer is saying here in the U.S. must create a policy that avoids inflicting suffering pain in million of children and families. The alternatives would be un-american. Now, some might that these families are at fault for coming to the U.S. illegally, so the suffering shouldn’t drive government policy. But the argument that many immigrants have families that live in the U.S. is still true. They key point is that we should just keep illegal immigrants that have families and that don’t have families here in the U.S. because parents can’t just leave their child in a country while they’re in another …show more content…

As Senator Charles Schumer up front magazine in 2016, made clear, “without reform, our immigration laws threaten to tear apart families and force our government to expend precious resources to deport millions”. He is saying that if we put up laws for immigration that would tear apart families and make them live in fear. Reasoning: because since there are millions of undocumented immigrants in the U.S. who have families already it wouldn’t be a good idea to take the parents way to deport them. Of course, it is possible to disagree with the view that many of them have American families, and splitting them, and instead argue that it costs taxpayer money to keep them here. However, the weight of the evidence is on the other side. What must be remembered is that they should stay here because they came to the U.S. to be free and to have their own rights. This is fundamentally why Undocumented Immigrants should get a “pathway to

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