Re: ER Death: The Part No One Has Mentioned Yet
I am twenty two years old and a proud immigrant. I came from Cuba in 1995, leaving EVERYONE but my mother behind. It's been twelve years and i still have not seen my father. My mother is a Spanish and Russian teacher, my stepfather is a Medical Doctor specialized in Family Medicine (he works as an RN is the US), my father is a journalist and writer who recently published a book on Cuban politics and culture entiled Cuba el Delirio y la Historia (Cuba: Delirium and History); he also speaks three languages.
I write all this so that is is crystal clear: IMMIGRANTS ARE NOT ALL CRIMINALS. MOST IMMIGRANTS COME TO THIS COUNTRY TO CONTRIBUTE. MOST IMMIGRANTS LOVE THIS COUNTRY AND WOULD DO NOTHING TO HURT ITS PEOPLE.
The following is from my previous university Florida International University in Miami.
www.fiu.edu
FIU Research Institute on Social and Economic Policy releases new report on immigrants in Florida
MIAMI, FL (May 21, 2007) – The FIU Research Institute on Social and Economic Policy (RISEP) is releasing a new report using 2005 census data that shows changes in the immigrant population and workforce over the past five years in Florida.
Compared to those native to the U.S., recent immigrants to Florida:
- <LI class=bodytext>Are just as likely to have advanced degrees and nearly as likely to have Bachelor’s degrees, <LI class=bodytext>Are more likely to be entrepreneurs, and
- Contribute equally or more to the economy as measured by taxes paid and assistance received.
“This report shows that immigrants are not the burden to our economy that some people claim. They pay taxes in comparable amounts to non-immigrants and receive less in cash benefits and public assistance than non-immigrants. They are also contributing through entrepreneurship, and have provided needed labor for important Florida industries, in particular for the construction boom of the last several years,” states Emily Eisenhauer, one of the authors of the report.
The release of the report and community meeting on recent immigration reform developments will be on Monday, May 21, at 1:00pm at the Jacques Desalines Center on 8325 Northeast 2nd Avenue.
Florida is one of the nation’s six immigrant gateway states.
Immigrants in Florida: Characteristics and Contributions reports that immigrants have grown from 19% of the Florida labor force in 2000 to 23% in 2005.
In short, immigrants contribute more to the Florida economy than they cost. At the same time, they receive less for their education and work than do the native-born.It takes immigrants 20 years on average to economically catch up with the native-born.
Emily Eisenhauer, RISEP research associate and report co-author, and Alex Stepick, specialist in migration and professor of sociology and anthropology, as well as community members and Florida Immigrant Coalition members will be available for comment. Copies of the report will be available at the press conference and on the RISEP website afterward (
www.risep-fiu.org).
For questions or interviews:
Dr. Alex Stepick, specialist in migration, professor of sociology and anthropology (305) 348-1519
GRANTED THERE ARE IMMIGRANT ISSUES, IMPORTANT ISSUES THAT IMPPACT THE COMMUNITY THAT NEED TO BE ADDRESSED.
IN MY OPINION: IF THE IMMIGRANT IS A CRIMINAL, THEN SEND THEM BACK WHERE THEY CAME FROM. WE START OUT AS GUESTS IN THIS COUNTRY AND MUST BEHAVE AS SUCH, UNTIL WE RESIGN OURSELVES TO LIVE IN EXILE BECAUSE GOING BACK IS NO LONGER A POSSIBLITY.
The study does not mention whether immigrants are illegal or not, but i would not be surprised if a great percentage of them is illegal.
Nursing News