Thursday, June 28, 2012

Take your stand on Immigration

There is much talk lately of immigration. I can hardly pick up a copy of the news without reading some story title for the last position of the government on immigration issues our country is facing. Every political leader has a different perspective on how our country should be the management of the issues before us.

I, for example, have a hard time seeing our country become so divided over things that clearly do not matter when there are far more important things happening in the world. I feel frustrated to see our nation divided on immigration, when there are hundreds of thousands of people starving and dying of preventable diseases in many countries. We like our American society just like that and no outsider is allowed to enter and stop as we like.

As a columnist for my local newspaper, many people have asked me to write a column about my opinion on the immigration debate that is happening lately. I have been hesitant to write on this issue, simply because it was difficult to get into a debate that I'm not sure it qualifies as a real debate. On the one hand I can understand why immigration is an issue that we face. I fully agree that we must do everything possible to protect the citizens of America. On the other hand, I think that would do well to remember at one point or Another That, of all the families that call at American Were Some point for immigrants Our land.

How then, can we take a country that is relatively young and one to which all citizens came from other lands and all of a sudden has a standard on who can and can not enter and live in our land? When we as American citizens and even the U.S. government, earning the right to choose who should be allowed to become part of our nation and who can not?

If we look serious effects on society today, we will probably see as many as you can see the benefits of immigration problems. There is no doubt that people who come to America through the immigration process to run that many Americans are not willing to make. These jobs are vital to our national economy and welfare, and we need to think before acting strictly on immigration.

The bottom line for me is that people value. We need to care more about the health and lives of people that we care even if it disturbs us. We need to give everyone, whether through immigration or less the same chance to enjoy the freedoms we love.

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