The Pros And Cons Of The Cuban Adjustment Act

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The 1966 Cuban Adjustment Act grants Cubans a unique place in U.S. Immigration Law and Policy by declaring that all those who arrive in the United States are accepted as political refugees, and are eligible to become legal permanent residents after one year (Marc R.). It was created to offer protection to Cubans escaping oppression from their Communist government. As might be expected, this law is always the debate of Cubans who think about coming to America seeking freedom and a better life. For many Cubans to reach American territory is all a dream, mostly because of the chances of attaining a better economic situation for themselves and their families. A lot of them also pursue to reunite with their families in the United States after many years of separation. Some others are opponents of the Castro regime. Because they don’t have freedom of speech and can see their lives threatened if they speak out against the government, seek for more political freedom and a democratic form of government, in a land of capitalism where there are fewer restrictions and more opportunities.
By so doing, this Law exempts Cubans from those aspects of the Immigration and Naturalization Act that render inadmissible and deportable all other aliens arriving in the United States illegally — surreptitiously, outside a designated port of entry, or without valid documentation such as a passport or entry visa — and who cannot sustain an individualized claim of asylum or well-founded fear of persecution. De facto, the Act turns each and every Cuban reaching the U.S. shore into a meritorious asylee. This is treatment afforded people of absolutely no other

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