The Pros And Cons Of Immigration Restriction

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The Immigration Restriction Fluctuations The United States has always been worshiped as the symbol or freedom and the land of opportunities. Ever since the victory of the Revolutionary War, the immigrants from all over the globe came to the Promised Land and contributed to the development of this nation. The country, with a smaller population base at the time being, granted entry for those who were coming to become a part the culture. However, the immigrants did not win much of the popularity and were treat with more hostility and misunderstanding. The United States is still considered as the most desired country for immigration today, and it has the highest rate of being the destination for immigrants. However, under the current regulations …show more content…

According to America’s history, the first Chinese immigrants arrived in late1840 during the California gold rush. The treaty between the U.S and China granted a pathway for people to escape from the terrible poverty in China. However, on the other side of the Pacific Ocean, there was something just as brutal as poverty—racism. Most Chinses immigrants were settled in the coastal states and began pouring in for low-pay works. The ability to adapt extreme conditions was particularly strong within Chinses immigrants. Despite discrimination, extortion, and beatin up by the mafia, Chinese immigrants still managed to make huge profits in their businesses and established Chinatown all across the U.S. They focused heavily on food business and laundry services and gradually formed a dominant strategy within those markets. In order to reduce the domestic pressure brought by the Chinese businesses, the Congress decided to respond with political power. The Chinese Exclusion act was passed by the congress in spring 1882. President Chester A. Arthur (1881-1885) signed the act, which imposed many restrictions to the Chinese-Americans and future Chinese immigrants. According to the document, the act provided an absolute 10-year moratorium on Chinese labor migration, and when it expired in 1982, Congress extended for 10 more years in the form of the Geary Act (Chinese Exclusion Act 1). If any Chinese resident entered the United States without registration or a certificate, the response would be deportation and detailed inspection upon next arrival. Furthermore, the domestic discrimination against Chinese escalated to a higher level as to classify Chinese into the first illegal immigrants. A lot of Chinese immigrants fled the U.S. to enter Mexico and sought reentry as Mexicans. This would, later on, affect the Japanese and Korean immigrants to be rejected

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