Jump to content
[[Template core/front/custom/_customHeader is throwing an error. This theme may be out of date. Run the support tool in the AdminCP to restore the default theme.]]

Another Immigration Propaganda Piece


SEC=UGA
 Share

Recommended Posts

Gotta admire the work ethic, but I feel no pity for the circumstances illegal immigrants find themselves in and yes, due to my cold and black heart, that even includes the children that were brought here not of their own volition. We have got to change the laws with regard to birthright citizenship and have got to document these people...

 

Atlanta, Georgia (CNN) -- Javier is a clean-cut high school senior, a 17-year-old who sports a gelled faux-hawk, an Abercrombie shirt and Puma sneakers. He looks like your typical American teen.

 

His English is almost impeccable as he recounts his achievements. You have to listen closely to hear his accent, one of the few remnants of a bygone life, before he left Mexico and illegally crossed the border at the age of 8.

 

The crowded apartment where he lives with his family in Atlanta, Georgia, is evidence of his relentless drive: Report cards reflect a 4.125 grade point average. Certificates boast he's in the top of his class. Piles of brightly colored T-shirts from volunteer events reveal his altruistic personality.

 

Glossy yearbook photos depict him as a teenager who has it all: Junior class president. Captain of the cross country and swim teams. A decorated soccer player.

 

Javier's little sister, Emily, is a bubbly 10-year-old with a round face and crooked grin. She has big aspirations, too. Today, she'd like to become a doctor, she tells her mother. She admires her big brother, but even at her naive age, she knows his academic future is bleak because of his undocumented status.

 

She starts crying when she explains that she has "the papers."

 

And Javier does not.

 

Born in the United States, Emily's "papers" are her birth certificate and Social Security card.

 

There are at least 400,000 families in the U.S. like Javier's and Emily's, where there is a combination of documented and undocumented siblings in the household, according to the Pew Hispanic Research Center. They are commonly called "mixed-status families."

 

Javier's family agreed to let CNN interview them to share their views on their contrasting statuses, as long as their last names remained anonymous for safety reasons.

 

The family says the differences between Emily and her five siblings, including Javier, amount to a few sheets of paper. But only Emily has the keys to accessing federal loans and scholarships to college in Georgia, a state that has recently cracked down on undocumented students attending public universities.

 

"Making good grades?" Javier says. "That's not the problem. Anybody can do it as long as you apply yourself. The problem is the money you need to acquire after the 12th grade. You want to live the dream and do better, but the reality is if you don't have legal status, [going to college is] like winning the lottery."

 

This month, Javier faced a new barrier in his quest to attend college -- something Emily will never have to worry about. He had just celebrated completing his application to Georgia State University when he learned the University System of Georgia passeda policy that prohibits five public universities from taking undocumented students.

 

Georgia State University is one of them.

 

Georgia law also bars undocumented students from receiving in-state tuition.

 

Georgia is one of three states that prohibit undocumented students from accessing in-state tuition rates, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. One state, South Carolina, completely bans undocumented students from all public universities.

 

In contrast, 11 states make access to college easier for illegal immigrants by allowing them to receive in-state tuition. New Mexico and Texas also help undocumented students by providing state financial aid, the state legislatures group reported.

 

The news of Georgia's new university policies was shattering for Javier, particularly after learning the Senate stalled the long-awaited yet contentious DREAM Act, which would grant certain illegal citizens legal status if they were to complete some college.

 

The DREAM Act would create a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants who entered the United States as children. Under the bill, an individual would have to be of "good moral character" and complete at least two years of U.S. military service or college. As a citizen, Javier could apply for federal financial aid for college.

 

The DREAM Act has been introduced in Congress -- but has failed to pass. Last month, a group of Senators threatened a filibuster.

 

At least 2.1 million would be eligible for citizenship if the bill were to pass, estimates the Migration Policy Institute, and that's a hard number for critics to swallow.

 

"It's detrimental for undocumented students wanting to learn and wanting to go to school," Javier says. "I don't think they are going to see a purpose. Now, they're going to think, "What's the point of doing well if they are going cut us off afterward?"

 

The last border: College

 

Javier thinks he can do just about anything if he works hard enough.

 

When he was 8, he crossed the border by foot without his family or money. He hid in ditches along the border until he could join other illegal immigrants packed into a van like sardines.

 

He says it was never his choice to come to Atlanta to join his mother. Sometimes, he wants to tell her that when he feels paralyzed by his illegal status.

 

"You either make it or you die," he says. "You risk your life to come here."

 

Javier mastered English quickly in the public school system. By sixth grade, his grade cards show, he was placed into the gifted program. He earned top scores in his classes, beating U.S.-born students and documented Mexican classmates, he says.

 

He achieved this on his own in a single-parent household. His father died in Mexico when he was a baby.

 

The athletic and academic opportunities he's been afforded in the U.S. are almost nonexistent in his home country. Javier suspects he would have dropped out of elementary school and been picking strawberries and herding cattle like his mother when she was 9.

 

"You get to experience those little things that other people don't get to go through," he says. One of his favorites was a leadership camp last summer where he met other motivated students like himself.

 

Javier's drive is palpable. Each school day, he arrives an hour early to lead a student club or to study. He often doesn't return home until dark, usually exhausted from a cross-country practice or soccer game. When he talks about his Advanced Placement courses -- a total of four crammed into his senior class schedule -- he's grateful.

 

These classes may be the closest he can ever come to college.

 

Monique, 50, an English teacher at the high school who taught Javier, says he is one of the top students she has encountered in 24 years of teaching. Her last name was withheld to protect the family's identity.

 

"The frustration, it didn't seem to get him down," she says. "He knew if he put forth effort, things would work out for him. He had that positive outlook on life."

 

After all his efforts, Javier isn't picky about which college he'd like to attend. Just a school his family can afford.

 

Without legal status, he knows scholarships are rare and federal financial aid is impossible. Private school tuition can cost more than $45,000 a year.

 

So he set his eyes on Georgia State University. He learned about a private scholarship that would pay for the tuition, and he planned to apply for it. On the side of an information sheet for the scholarship, he scribbled "gotta get it!"

 

He was devastated to learn last week that Georgia State University is among the schools that will now bar undocumented students.

 

Officials with the Georgia University System say undocumented students can still attend other public universities in Georgia, but the five universities they selected have "capacity constraints."

 

"Everybody wants to go to the University of Georgia," says spokesman John Millsaps with the board of regents. The University of Georgia is another school that banned undocumented students. "They can't accept everybody every year -- now does that mean they can't go to other public universities in Georgia? There are plenty of options."

 

The board oversees 35 public institutions in Georgia, Millsaps says.

 

More than two dozen advocacy groups in Georgia disagreed with the board's decision. Azadeh Shahshahani, an attorney at the American Civil Liberties Union in Georgia, says the policy was short sighted.

 

"It's a matter of fundamental fairness to provide access to undocumented students to institutions of higher education," she says.

 

Legal or not, 'they are still family'

 

From the minute Emily was born in Atlanta -- at 8:11 p.m. on April 18, 2000 -- she was different from her five older siblings.

 

The 14th Amendment to the Constitution grants children born on American soil automatic U.S. citizenship. The number of children like Emily is growing: One out of every 12 babies born in the United States in 2008 was the child of an unauthorized immigrant, the Pew Hispanic Center says.

 

"I knew she was born here, and she was going to have more opportunities," Javier says.

 

The relationship between documented and undocumented siblings has been little-studied, says Michael Fix, co-director of the National Center on Immigrant Integration Policy at the Migration Policy Institute.

 

"We haven't had a large undocumented child population moving through the system in the past," Fix says. "We are running a huge national experiment on this issue."

 

Emily heard her family buzzing about her "papers" before she learned to walk. By the time she was 6, she'd learned to bring up the papers in petty arguments with her brothers and sisters.

 

"I've got papers, and you don't," she'd tell them.

 

But the teasing was just good fun. There is no jealousy or bitterness between Emily and Javier, despite their contrary statuses.

 

"It doesn't matter if they have papers or not," Emily says. "They are still family."

 

Like many of her siblings, school comes effortlessly to Emily. Emily brings home certificates recognizing her for earning A's. She cuts them out and puts them in a frame above her bed as a reminder that she is on her way to making college a reality.

 

Emily knows getting there has been a family goal.

 

Her two oldest sisters, Isabel and Gloria, quit elementary school to come to America with their mother. Rather than focusing on school, they worked in fast-food restaurants to earn enough money to bring Javier, their sister Mayra, and their brother Antonio over.

 

"It's always been us against the world," Gloria says one day after a long shift at a convenience store. She typically juggles two to three jobs.

 

While her siblings are barred from applying for most scholarships because of their unauthorized status, Emily will be eligible. She will also be able to rely on student loans and financial aid.

 

Meanwhile, Javier is thinking of a Plan B, now that he cannot attend Georgia State University. He is looking into private schools with scholarship opportunities that don't check citizenship. But he knows the chances of attending a private college will be slim.

 

Two years ago, his older sister Mayra, who is now 20 and also undocumented, applied to two private colleges. Mayra, an honor student, was accepted, but even with a quarter of her costs covered, she couldn't afford tuition, books and transportation.

 

She declined to attend the schools and is working to save up enough money for community college.

 

"Sometimes you say, "Why did I even bother to come here?" she says. "Why did I even dream of coming here?"

 

She keeps her college acceptance letters as a reminder of what could have been.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Two years ago, his older sister Mayra, who is now 20 and also undocumented, applied to two private colleges. Mayra, an honor student, was accepted, but even with a quarter of her costs covered, she couldn't afford tuition, books and transportation.

 

She declined to attend the schools and is working to save up enough money for community college.

 

"Sometimes you say, "Why did I even bother to come here?" she says. "Why did I even dream of coming here?"

 

She keeps her college acceptance letters as a reminder of what could have been.

 

I don't understand the point of this piece. If my daughter had applied to Harvard, she would probably have been accepted but what would have been the point since there was no way we could afford it without beggaring ourselves and/or robbing banks. Is the piece above supposed to make the reader feel guilty?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Javier is a clean-cut high school senior, a 17-year-old who sports a gelled faux-hawk, an Abercrombie shirt and Puma sneakers. He looks like your typical American teen.

 

No that's the typical American teen 10 years ago. Alot of teens are sporting the homeless look that their parents handed down to them when their house was gifted to the mortgage company.

Edited by WaterMan
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I would love to see the DREAM act passed . . . but instead of having college count, make military service complusory.

 

On a tangent here... It is my understanding, and it may be misinformed as I find people from other countries know less about their laws than many Americans do, that a male not born to Turkish parents can never become a Turkish citizen (there have been rare cases for athletes, hence the qualifier) because males must do military service, or pay a hefty fee to avoid said military service (this may be the way around it). Incidentally, no one who is not Turkish, or born of Turkish parents can serve in the Turkish military. Then again, who really wants to be a Turkish Citizen?

 

But, there is a lot to be said with regard to military service, why would you want someone from a foreign nation serving in your military, especially in a sensitive role? Might their alegiance not be to their native country and thus create the opportunity for espionage?

 

I say we simply make them register as guest workers, give em 6 motnhs from November 18th to do so... If they don't register and are caught here, ship their asses back to their country of origin and send said county a bill for the travel. That and get rid of the birthright citizenship if neither parent is a US citizen.

 

The solution sounds too easy, why wouldn't this work?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

But, there is a lot to be said with regard to military service, why would you want someone from a foreign nation serving in your military, especially in a sensitive role? Might their alegiance not be to their native country and thus create the opportunity for espionage?

 

There are about 30,000 foreigners in the US military, according to this.

 

This says 40,000, with 8,000 new entries a year.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

There are about 30,000 foreigners in the US military, according to this.

 

This says 40,000, with 8,000 new entries a year.

 

We're doomed!!!!

 

As soon as Mexico decides to invade... well, I'll let you decide on what's gonna happen.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I suppose a quick "Thanks" to these forrinuhs would be out of the question.

 

Ummm, they're about to set into motion the overthrow of our system of government to our New Mexican overlords, thank you very much...

 

Also, I wasn't stating that forners shouldn't be allowed to serve, I was contemplating why other countries, more specifically Turkey, wouldn't allow a forner to serve and was postulating that those might be the reasons.

 

I love me some forners, they work harder than most Americans, work for lower wages which keeps products I purchase affordable, make sure my neighborhood looks good and clean, spread communicable diseases that were all but eradicated in the US, tax our healthcare and prison system, keep government occupied with thinking up ways to allow them to vote in national elections, and provide a great deal of revenue to the SS system that they will never use so that our old people can suck off the government teat for a little longer. That and I get to hear that nifty little tone on automated phone systems, for service in English, press 1.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information