Thursday, April 29, 2010

Legalization must be part of immigration reform

This opinion piece talks about how assimilation of all immigrants is important to them, and to the country. - - Donna Poisl

A path to citizenship for those already here illegally is crucial.

Tomás R. Jiménez

Opponents of comprehensive immigration reform argue that legalization rewards bad behavior. They contend that illegal immigration is a crime that merits punishment and expulsion, not amnesty. The logic is that if we respond with tough enforcement, illegal immigrants will finally get that they aren't welcome here and go back to their home countries. This kind of reasoning is what's behind laws like the one recently passed in Arizona, which requires law enforcement personnel to determine whenever possible the immigration status of suspected illegal immigrants.

But immigrants aren't going home. We know this from experience. Despite high-profile raids, beefed-up border enforcement and the worst economy since the Depression, the size of the illegal immigrant population has declined by only a small fraction.
Click on the headline to read the rest of this story! This is only a small part of it.

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