Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Zujey Galvan
Professor Nelson
ENGL 1302-104
2 November 2021
Immigration Concerns
According to most of the authors, immigrants who come into the United States in search
of a better life, just come to commit crimes. I definitely disagree because all immigrants want is
a better life for them and their family. Moreover, these immigrants come to the United States,
and they work more than actual US citizens, I have witnessed people that get help from the
government and that’s all they live by. Unlike immigrants who bust their backs to earn some
money, they will do anything, clean houses, clean cars, get into agriculture but they work hard.
Unlike U.S. citizens who only take advantage from the governments help, like the food stamps,
To begin with, Immigrants Contribute Greatly to the U.S Economy, according to the U.S
Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Immigrants without a four-year degree college
take part of 36% in farming, fishing, and forestry occupations in the U.S. Another 36% of
Immigrants are building and grounds cleaning and maintenance occupations, 24% of the
Immigrants are currently working on the construction industry. Almost all the construction
workers are immigrants, and to be specific they are Mexicans. I believe Mexicans are so hard
workers because they go day and night working just to give their families a good life. I
personally know Mexican immigrants that do everything for their families to have a safe place
during night, they could stay working for a total of three days and they don’t care. Finally, 24%
of the Immigrants are in the Administrative and support service Industry, and this one in specific
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is something that amazes me because even though these immigrants don’t have a college degree,
between Black Americans and Hispanic immigration ferocity in America. The main idea of this
paper was that Black violence is directly associated with the Hispanic-born population,
habituated by the victim’s ethnicity. Additionally, the most common reason why immigrants
commonly have reduced skills, which eventually cause violence and crime. McAlexander
(2020). Other studies also portray two undisputable truths concerning connections between
immigration and crime. They state that immigrants are unlikely to do serious offenses or stay
behind bard more than native-born. They also state that the high levels of property and violent
crime. In other words, most visitors are not lawbreakers by any characteristically meaning of the
connotation. Due to this purpose, punitive migration laws are not operative in ending crime.
In addition, most of the authors from the sources portray how illegal people come into the
United States just to commit crimes and rob the government. Although some people do take
advantage, most of the immigrants do something good for our country. Such as, agriculture,
working overtime with no benefits and risking their lives for money. McAlexander states that
immigrants go through many economic problems because they lack the money, and they don’t
Moreover, Owens and Bohn also explain throughout their paper that crime is committed
sometimes by immigrants, because they are in desperation of trying to find a good job to get
money for their families. There is a study that shows that Texas keeps immigrants’ data about
those who have committed any type of crime. There is data that helps get information together
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by linking activities that criminals have done in the state. (Nowrasteh, Forrester & Landgrave,
2020). All of this shows that native- born citizens have more criminal behaviors than immigrants
Additionally, it is proven that Native-born have stepped in jail more than immigrants
have. The American Community Survey states that about one point 6 percent of males in the
nation between ages of eighteen- and thirty-nine-year-old are found in jails compared to native
born which is way higher than that. This shows that immigrants do not necessarily commit
crimes the same way native-born do. The reason is because they only look for a better future for
their families, while the rest of them native-born they only look for easy money, like smuggling
In conclusion, I believe that immigrants are not necessarily bad, all they come for to the
United States is in search of a better life for them and their families. Research evidence from all
these peer-reviewed can show the audience that proves that immigration has nothing to do with
crime rates in the United States. If I were to need money and had kids, I would have probably
done the same thing, I personally come from Mexican parents and my mom sacrificed everything
for me to have a good life, luckily, I was born here in the United States but obviously it has not
been an easy road. We have struggled a lot, that is why I understand the sacrifices that these
immigrants make for their kids and families to be happy. Throughout these scholarly reviewed
articles, you can see that immigrants are very poor and that they struggle a lot when it comes to
money, like the Haitians that came to the United States, often times this also happens because
their government treats them poorly. Many types of governments abuse of their communities
because they think that because they have no money, their voice doesn’t deserve to be heard. All
in all, my stance is that immigrants are nowhere close to being bad persons, all they try to do is
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look for a better future for them and their kids. I am proud to say that most of the hardworking
people that I have met are Mexicans, my parents are Mexican, and they have worked so hard to
get me where I am, and I will always appreciate them for that. This lets the audience know that
not all immigrants are necessarily bad overall, some do come for a better future for them and
their kids.
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Works Cited
McAlexander, R. J. (2020). How are immigration and terrorism related? An analysis of right-and
Studies, 5(1), 179-195.
Nowrasteh, A., Forrester, A., & Landgrave, M. (2020). Illegal immigration and crime in Texas.
Freedman, M., Owens, E., & Bohn, S. (2018). Immigration, employment opportunities, and
Harris, C. T., Gruenewald, J., & Painter‐Davis, N. (2015, March). Hispanic Immigration and
Bush, Jeb, et al. “The Need for Comprehensive Immigration Reform.” U.S. Immigration Policy,
Council on Foreign Relations, 2009, pp. 44–82, http://www.jstor.org/stable/resrep29887.8.