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Deportation is a word that most think of Mexicans when they hear it, but deportation includes Asians, Africans, and many more. Deportation is a huge problem in the United States. During Obamas run as president, over five million people were deported. Now President Trump is trying to deport all immigrants. Even if his numbers are low compared to Obamas, it is not because he is not trying. Immigrants should not be deported because immigrants are mostly workers, families are being separated, and costs for deportation are extremely high. Immigrants are people too, they should not be treated any differently because of their ethnicity, religion, or skin color.
Deportation is not easy, it costs money, a lot of money. President Trump has asked for 7.5 billion dollars to expand immigration enforcement and deportation system. That sounds ridiculously high, right? The average estimated cost for deporting a single immigrant ranges from eight thousand to 23 thousand dollars. Is it really worth it? Some people may say it is. Some people have the belief that immigrants should be taken back to their country. What they do not know is that this country would break if they deport all these people. Mass deportation, which is estimated to take five years, would end up costing two hundred eighty-five billion dollars. This country would end up broke. According to the US Debt Clock, the United States is over 20 trillion dollars in debt. Imagine if the United States pays dollar after dollar just to deport immigrants. Will this turn into another Great Depression?
Criminals. Criminals are what immigrants are called, but they are not, most all immigrants are workers. Immigrants are hardworking, self-starters. They seek gainful employment to support their families and themselves. Remittances to Latin America and the Caribbean last year were an estimated 63 billion dollars. These remittances grew faster than the United States economy as a whole. Households, textile apparel and leather, and agriculture are the top three jobs for immigrants. Immigrants may not have the best jobs, but they work hard at them to be able to live that amazing life that is talked about. They may be sore, but they try their hardest to succeed.
Immigrants have families. When something happens to one family member, it affects everyone. How do you think it is for a child to lose their mother or father? Well, it happens, and Lucia H. and her family have experienced it, and it has destroyed them. Lucia was deported, she has two sons, a five and a fourteen-year-old, on a phone call with her youngest son, her son told her he would not eat until she came home. This child stopped eating and had to be hospitalized because of it. His father had to leave his job to be able to take care of his son, but another tragedy struck: the eldest son had a breakdown and now has to go to therapy. This family has been destroyed because of the loss of one parent. Half a million children have experienced apprehension, detention, or deportation of a parent between 2011 to 2013. From 2009 to 2013, 4.1 million US citizen children under 18 lived with at least one immigrant parent. While 5.9 million children lived with an undocumented family member. Millions of kids were affected, imagine if all immigrants were deported. Kids are affected by mental illnesses too, such as depression, anxiety, and severe psychological problems. PTSD symptoms were also significantly higher for children who had at least one detained or deported parent. Children suffer the consequences when their parents are deported. It is not fair to hurt children because you may not like the way they are. They did not choose where they were born and what skin color they have, it is not right to punish them because of it.
Immigrants should not be deported because they are so beneficial to this country. They work jobs others will not, they make this country diverse, and they even boost the earnings for American workers. Now, is not trying to round up over 11 million people just foolish. Families are being destroyed because of people who believe immigrants are less than them. The cost of mass deportation is insane. It would just put this country in even more debt. Immigrants are hardworking people, and other people are ruining their lives because they are not as good as others, now that is just selfish. These immigrants come to the United States because of necessity, hope for a better life, and to give their children the opportunities they did not receive. We should stop discriminating and start accepting.
Works Cited
- Camarota, Steven A. Deportation vs. the Cost of Letting Illegal Immigrants Stay. CIS.org, Center for Immigrant Studies, 3 Aug. 2017, http://cis.org/Report/Deportation-vs-Cost-Letting-Illegal-Immigrants-Stay
- Chishti, Muzaffar, et al. The Obama Record on Deportations: Deporter in Chief or Not?. Migrationpolicy.org, Migration Policy Institute, 22 Mar. 2017, www.migrationpolicy.org/article/obama-record-deportations-deporter-chief-or-not
- Dickerson, Caitlin, and Ron Nixon. Trump Administration Considers Separating Families to Combat Illegal Immigration. The New York Times, 21 Dec. 2017, www.nytimes.com/2017/12/21/us/trump-immigrant-families-separate.html
- Lind, Dara. Fewer Immigrants Are Being Deported under Trump than under Obama. Vox, 10 Aug. 2017, www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2017/8/10/16119910/trump-deportations-obama
- Meyers, Jim. 16 Reasons Donald Trump Is Not Wrong on Immigration. Newsmax Inc., 8 July 2015, www.newsmax.com/thewire/donald-trump-immigration-reasons-not-wrong/2015/07/08/id/654086/
- Rogers, Tim. 11.3 Million Reasons Why Trump Is Wrong about Immigration. Splinternews.com, 11 Aug. 2015, http://splinternews.com/11-3-million-reasons-why-trump-is-wrong-about-immigration-1793849885
- The Deported| Immigrants Uprooted from the Country They Call Home. Human Rights Watch, 6 Dec. 2017, www.hrw.org/report/2017/12/05/deported/immigrants-uprooted-country-they-call-home
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