The Importance Of Mexican Migration To America

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Migration is what made the United States into what it is today. One of the biggest migrations in history is the Mexican migration to America, which is still going on today. During the early twentieth century, Mexico had a population of approximately 13.5 million people. A majority of the immigrants came from Michoacán, Guanajuato, and Jalisco. Many people in today’s society believe in President Trump’s idea of building a giant wall on the Mexican border. Nobody says it, but the belief that Mexico should pay for this wall makes it seem like we are blaming them for all of the immigrants that managed to make it to America. After many hours of research, I have found that their beliefs are far from the truth. It is the United States that practically …show more content…

Two months after this, 1,500 braceros were sent to Stockton, California, and here they worked in sugar beet fields. In the original agreement, one of the demands of Mexico was to not Include Texas in the program, because in the past workers were treated very poorly there. In May 1943, about 2,000 Mexicans joined at the border in El Paso and the INS let them in illegally then they were contracted as braceros. Over time, more and more people came legally and illegally. Braceros ended up working in twenty-four states. Most of them were in California and some ended up in the Northwest like Washington, Idaho, and Oregon. Here they planted and harvested vegetables and sugar beets, and picked cotton and fruits. After being in the U.S. for so long, they began to learn our way of life and slowly became used to it. The Bracero Program ultimately led to the not so temporary stay of documented and even more undocumented immigrants. Soon they branched out of agriculture and found themselves doing other minimum wage jobs. Later in 1986, Congress passed the Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA), as an attempt to gain control over the still rising number of immigrants. This increased border control and gave a one-time amnesty for the immigrants that were undocumented that had been in the country since 1982. About 3.3 million of them were legalized under IRCA. This made wives and their kids want to join and once again migration increased. By the 1990s families were attempting to permanently stay all over

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