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The United States Should Stringently Enforce Immigration Law

Although our president and Congress are preoccupied with the economy, health care, and two wars, the domestic threat of illegal immigration is one that deserves attention.

Along with the concrete costs of allowing illegal aliens to take refuge in the United States, there is also the moral issue of these aliens taking the jobs that would otherwise be filled by legal, taxpaying U.S. citizens.  According to The Christian Science Monitor, in 2004 undocumented workers accounted for 25% of construction workers, 20% of cooks, 22% of maids/ housekeepers, and a whopping 29% of agricultural workers.  This is not only filling in jobs that many qualified Americans would love to have (especially in these economic times), but it also distorts the role of supply and demand.  Normally, if only a few American workers want to, say, pick carrots in a field, but there is a huge market demand for carrots, employers would require more employees than are willing to work under the current conditions.  Therefore, wages and compensations would rise to meet those demands, and more American workers would be willing to labor in the fields picking carrots.  In this example I referred to American workers because illegal aliens are destroying the above concept.  Because these illegal immigrants are willing to work for below minimum wage, with no compensation whatsoever, this puts U.S. workers in a rock and a hard place.  On one hand, they cannot work in the carrot fields in those conditions per federal law, but they also won’t be hired to work in positions that they are not qualified for.  The result is skyrocketing unemployment in lower class demographics (like we have right now), which has historically been the backbone of American commerce.  Therefore, though illegal aliens may be benefiting large-scale employers, it ultimately hurts the Americans that deserve those jobs.

Lax Immigration Enforcement Makes the United States Less Safe

Granting amnesty to illegal immigrant is perhaps the biggest national security threat our country is facing.  It was discovered shortly after 9/11 that five of the nineteen hijackers had violated national immigration laws.  Four have those five had been pulled over at one time or another for speeding.  However, no arrests were ever made.  If people are able and even allowed to enter and live in the United States undocumented, how easy does it make for our enemies to wreak havoc on U.S. soil?  Even if it is not terrorists, illegal immigration has resulted in a huge crime problem. Edwin Ramon, an illegal alien, was living in San Francisco, but was never arrested because of the left-leaning city’s sanctuary law, which shields illegal immigrants from deportation.  In July of 2008, Ramon’s car a traffic conflict with the car of the Anthony Bologna and his two sons, Michael and Matthew.  The Bolognas are in the U.S. legally.  A heated argument led to Ramon pulling out an AK-47 and shooting all three of the Bolognas.  This drew public outrage, and Ramon is facing a possible death penalty, but it was an incident that could have been prevented if immigration laws were enforced.  This cannot be stressed enough.  If steps aren’t taken to close the immigration loopholes in our country, our mistakes will not be taken seriously until it is too late.

 

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  1. Leonardo da Vinci E.

    On November 3, 2009 at 2:15 pm


    Actually we should nationalize the current aliens we have and thank them for causing a situation so that we are completely aware how vunerable our borders are. Next, we should apologize for our business leaders (the immoral foxes) who lured them in with low paying jobs to do the hardest work of all virtually for nothing. The immoral foxes know you’ll blame the immigrants instead of realizing you have been betrayed by the ones controling business and money.

  2. ?

    On November 5, 2009 at 10:25 pm


    Millions of illegal immigrants pay taxes to government year after year and does not receive one cent of that money.

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