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The arguement of illegals doing the jobs that americans won't do. If we start letting them come here AND giving them money for college, that will enable them to get better p[aying jobs, so who is going to pick the fruit and clean the toilets then.....huh?

2006-09-06 11:35:13 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Immigration

4 answers

First of all American was born by hard working people who did manual labor...this crap where all the illegals saying this is bullsh**! It is ridiciculous...my dads first job was being a bus boy and all the illegals that are working in fast food joints are taking jobs away from the teens today. I think they sould all leave... they dont f***ing belong here to begin with. They are IIIEGAL damnit as in NOT LEGAL, and this crap where they give them everything...screw them...they got to deal with their government before they take advantage of ours. All the sluts come here and have their babies here so they can stay here legally, ugh it pisses me off! Now dont get me wrong I love the hispanic culture...my mom is from Guatemala so I love the hispanic race...but the fact that they are taking advantage of the US and that the US is letting that happen...The US is the rebellious teen of the world, and Mexico is the bully...asswipes.

2006-09-06 11:49:11 · answer #1 · answered by "Chanel-o" 3 · 3 0

If America is ever to make immigration work for our economy again, it must reject policies shaped by advocacy groups trying to turn immigration into the next civil rights cause or by a tiny minority of businesses seeking cheap labor subsidized by the taxpayers. Instead, we must look to other developed nations that have focused on luring workers who have skills that are in demand and who have the best chance of assimilating. Australia, for instance, gives preferences to workers grouped into four skilled categories: managers, professionals, associates of professionals, and skilled laborers. Using a straightforward “points calculator” to determine who gets in, Australia favors immigrants between the ages of 18 and 45 who speak English, have a post–high school degree or training in a trade, and have at least six months’ work experience as everything from laboratory technicians to architects and surveyors to information-technology workers. Such an immigration policy goes far beyond America’s employment-based immigration categories, like the H1-B visas, which account for about 10 percent of our legal immigration and essentially serve the needs of a few Silicon Valley industries.

Immigration reform must also tackle our family-preference visa program, which today accounts for two-thirds of all legal immigration and has helped create a 40-year waiting list. Lawmakers should narrow the family-preference visa program down to spouses and minor children of U.S. citizens and should exclude adult siblings and parents.

America benefits even today from many of its immigrants, from the Asian entrepreneurs who have helped revive inner-city Los Angeles business districts to Haitians and Jamaicans who have stabilized neighborhoods in Queens and Brooklyn to Indian programmers who have spurred so much innovation in places like Silicon Valley and Boston’s Route 128. But increasingly over the last 25 years, such immigration has become the exception. It needs once again to become the rule.

2006-09-06 18:44:44 · answer #2 · answered by ibelieve 4 · 0 2

Actually, only 1% of the illegal work force works in farming fields, stop stereotyping hombre

2006-09-06 18:44:30 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

We did it before and we will do it again, but they have to be sent home first, not taking the college funding that we don't get much of now.

2006-09-06 18:43:59 · answer #4 · answered by 51ain'tbad 3 · 2 0

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