Ethical Issues In U.S. Immigra
The sun seems unrelenting as it beats down on the two families huddled together in a rickety makeshift boat. The rafters have been floating in the open sea for what seems to them like years. Their food and water supplies have run out and the littlest ones cry out of hunger. But the keep going. Because they know that once their feet touch the land of opportunity their prayers will be answered. Finally, their raft makes it to the ankle-deep waters and they are only a few short steps away from dry land and freedom. As quickly as the wave of relief and happiness rushes over the rafters, so does it disappear. The Coast Guard is there and telling them that they will be shipped back. So close to ...
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was built by immigrants, many seeking a new life in a new land. Before 1882, anyone could move to the United States. As the population grew, however, the Federal government decided to control immigration. But they have done this in a very inconsistent manner, letting some people in from one country more than others from another country. The current U.S. immigration policy is immoral, unethical and inconsistent in its dealings with immigrants. Early immigration laws aimed to preserve the racial, religious, and ethnic composition of the United States, which was then largely European (Wilbanks, 1993, p.1). The first immigration laws were aimed at nonwhites. In 1882, for example, the Chinese Exclusion Act suspended immigration from China for sixty years. In addition, in 1907, President Roosevelt, negotiated an informal �gentleman�s agreement� with Japan, under which the United States promised to desegregate its California schools in exchange for the promise from the Japanese ...
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and adds fences to the most heavily trafficked areas of the U.S.-Mexico border. The controversy over immigration emerges between advocates of the open door policy and those who support restrictions on immigration. Those Americans who support restrictions on the number of immigrants allowed into the United States annually feel that our country is �running out of room� (Carr, 199, p.2). They also feel that we are being overrun by immigrants who intent on draining our resources. On the other hand, those who support an open-door policy, feel that the unethical treatment of immigrants must stop. These open-door supporters argue that the 700,000 immigrants allowed into the country annually is ...
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Ethical Issues In U.S. Immigra. (2006, January 26). Retrieved November 30, 2024, from http://www.essayworld.com/essays/Ethical-Issues-In-U-S-Immigra/40230
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"Ethical Issues In U.S. Immigra." Essayworld.com. January 26, 2006. Accessed November 30, 2024. http://www.essayworld.com/essays/Ethical-Issues-In-U-S-Immigra/40230.
"Ethical Issues In U.S. Immigra." Essayworld.com. January 26, 2006. Accessed November 30, 2024. http://www.essayworld.com/essays/Ethical-Issues-In-U-S-Immigra/40230.
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