| Y: Armstrong Williams Where is the Immigration Debate? |
| Written by Armstrong Williams |
| Tuesday, 26 January 2010 17:50 |
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California’s immigration story is a bitter sweet heart palpitating tale incapable of arriving upon any hard lined conclusions. An example of this is that in one hand, immigrants from India and China are upholding Silicon Valley as our American children still refuse to embrace the math and sciences –in essence they are keeping America competitive. While in the other hand, illegal immigrants weigh an enormous economic burden on states services such as: hospital care, education and prison systems.
To illustrate this point further, in one hand, illegal immigrants contribute 9.5 billion dollars annually to social security. While in the other hand, in California alone –which is the national choice for immigrants, they cost California’s roughly some 10.5 billion a year. These numbers are astounding and could well equip any contrarian, on either side of the immigration debate, with enough ammunition to attack their equally armed foe.
I believe what most people forget is that at some point we were all immigrants. And, in most cases, those who have immigrated to the United States have done so under similar motives to one another. As Americans, we have an immigration legacy which has perpetuated itself to this day and age. Our ancestors, the Puritans, came to this country out of religious persecution. However, their motive for being here was just as much financial, as corporations funded their trips in hope to make a profit.
There is without doubt that anyone entering this country should have no special or exceptional right that we as Natural Born Americans don't possess. Everyone citizen regardless of their plight and circumstance should become a legal and tax paying resident of this nation. We must always respect and honor the rule of law, which separates this country from every sovereign nation in the world. We can accomplish this while at the same time understanding and respecting that we are all the immigrants where the majority migrated from somewhere other than our America. It is this migration that make this country the symbol and beacon of the world that billions of people look to as the good shepherd and certainly the land of prosperity and uninterrupted freedom. |

Jamal P. Oliver makes this comment
Wednesday, 27 January 2010
Tony makes this comment
Tuesday, 02 February 2010