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New citizens: Give migrants a chance (Moratorium Time!!!)
Miami Herald ^ | Jun. 18, 2007 | ALFONSO CHARDY

Posted on 06/18/2007 7:02:17 AM PDT by GFritsch

Almost forgotten in the debate over fixing the nation's broken immigration system are the millions of immigrants who waited patiently outside America to legally walk through its doors.

It's people like Claudia Mellado, who waited six years in her native Peru for a U.S. visa. Or Kent Padmore, who emigrated from Trinidad and Tobago 16 years ago as a green-cardholder. And there's Patricia Mendes Noriega who legally came to this country as a child from Brazil with her parents.

These immigrants took the final step in becoming naturalized U.S. citizens on Thursday when they joined more than 6,000 immigrants who swore allegiance to the United States during two mass citizenship ceremonies at the Miami Beach Convention Center.

Despite their long bureaucratic journey to get to the United States, these newly naturalized citizens and others voiced no objections to legalizing the estimated 12 million undocumented immigrants who broke U.S. immigration laws.

The views expressed by these new Americans comes at a time when Congress is poised to resume debate on a stalled immigration reform bill. The legislation, soon to be reintroduced in the Senate, includes a controversial provision that would give millions of undocumented immigrants a path to citizenship.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Nevada Democrat, yanked the bill from the Senate floor June 7 when Republican senators refused to limit debate. Late last week, at the urging of President Bush, senators agreed to bring back the bill -- perhaps as early as this week.

The finer points of the legislation were not in dispute at last week's naturalization ceremonies in Miami Beach.

''If people have earned the right to be here, they should be given the opportunity to be here,'' said Padmore, Marine of the Year last year after being wounded by a roadside bomb in Iraq and serving two tours of combat duty. ``If people are going to make positive contributions to the nation, if they don't have any pertinent negatives in their background, they should be given the opportunity.''

Padmore, a 40-year-old Miami firefighter, recited the pledge of allegiance during the afternoon naturalization ceremony and sat at the dais with Michael P. Jackson, deputy secretary of Homeland Security, and Emilio González, head of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.

Padmore's sentiments were echoed by other new Americans interviewed at random after the ceremonies. Their views reflect the results of recent polls conducted nationwide and statewide. A poll of 801 likely Florida voters conducted for The Miami Herald and other Florida media outlets two weeks ago showed that 60 percent of those surveyed endorsed legalization for undocumented immigrants.

Each of the new citizens interviewed Thursday had a different view on why the undocumented should get status. But all agreed the bipartisan Senate bill was something they could support. Fears the legislation will encourage more illegal immigration, a factor cited by bill opponents, were not raised by the new citizens.

The closest any of them came to expressing concern was Mellado, the 25-year-old Peruvian. She said border controls should be tightened to end illegal immigration once and for all.

''The people who are already here, inside the country, should be given an opportunity to stay, but they should reinforce the border, so the same problem [of illegal immigration] doesn't happen again,'' said Mellado, a computer technology student at Miami Dade College.

All the others expressed no reservations about the undocumented.

''I'm glad we are addressing it because we do need [immigration] reform,'' said Mendes Noriega, 39, a Fort Lauderdale financial services executive.

But she said the high fines and fees contemplated in the bill could bar many poor migrants from obtaining status.

Under the plan, an illegal worker would pay $1,000 to obtain a Z visa and then pay an additional $4,000 to apply for permanent residence. A family of four could end up spending $20,000. Z visa holders, however, would not be required to apply for permanent residence in case they don't want to become citizens.

''We have a very large, very poor [migrant] population,'' Noriega said. ``A lot of the migrant workers that we have here in South Florida, in Homestead, make minimum wage. So how can they really afford it?.''

Genevieve Delisma, a 32-year-old Haiti-born social worker, said legalization ''would be a great opportunity'' for the undocumented.

''This is a country of opportunity,'' she said. Delisma obtained a green card after marrying a U.S. citizen.

Teresa Ghilardi, a 46-year-old Peruvian-born translator, was so excited about becoming an American that she went up to González, the Cuban-born director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, and asked him to pose for a picture with her. He gladly obliged.

''I'm so proud to be an American today,'' she said, waving the small U.S. flag she was holding in her right hand.

``Every immigrant, like I am, has a right to have an opportunity like I had, and this is certainly the land of opportunity. They should be given an opportunity.''

Turning to González, who was next to her, she quoted a passage in his speech to the new citizens in the morning ceremony.

'As he said, `This is a country that gives you an opportunity. It doesn't guarantee you any success, but it gives an opportunity. And if you take it, you can go as far as the sky.' ''

González told The Miami Herald after the morning ceremony that the proposed changes are not dead.

''I'm very optimistic that we still have an opportunity for immigration reform this year,'' he said. ``Obviously, we would have preferred to have gotten something out a couple of weeks ago. The fact the Senate is going to take a step back, take a respite, is going to be very positive.''

Jackson, the deputy homeland security secretary, echoed Gonzalez's view in an interview after the afternoon ceremony.

''I think the debate will continue,'' he said. ``I'm hopeful that they'll find a way to converge in the middle and find a bill that is sensible and acceptable to enough of the Congress to be able to pass.''


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS:
...these newly naturalized citizens and others voiced no objections to legalizing the estimated 12 million undocumented immigrants who broke U.S. immigration laws.

Of course they have no objections. Breaking the law would seem nataural to them now that they are "in." Besides, they want more people who feel like they do to vote any vestige of conservatism out of the flawed system.

1 posted on 06/18/2007 7:02:25 AM PDT by GFritsch
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To: GFritsch
(singing)

"All we are saying...
is Give Crime a Chance!"

2 posted on 06/18/2007 7:09:47 AM PDT by theDentist (Qwerty ergo typo : I type, therefore I misspelll.)
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To: theDentist

Are they going to pay for their “friends”.... Nope, but they don’t mind if we all pay for them.


3 posted on 06/18/2007 7:11:53 AM PDT by thebaron512
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To: GFritsch

And anybody who stated otherwise would not be quoted. this is cherry-picked as usual.

Also I believe that mopst of the people who would be legalized have no intention of becoming American citizens.

Why should they? It would be expensive and they have all they want anyway. spanish-language media, completely Hispanic neighborhoods, schools, medical care, etc.


4 posted on 06/18/2007 7:12:11 AM PDT by squarebarb
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To: GFritsch

It is the intention of the Hispanic groups such as La Raza, Mecha, etc., to retake the American southwest.

They are succeeding beyond their wildest dreams and so see no reason not to extend that beyond the southwest.


5 posted on 06/18/2007 7:14:24 AM PDT by Basheva
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To: GFritsch

Lock down the damn borders, both north and south.


6 posted on 06/18/2007 7:15:43 AM PDT by wastedyears (Check my profile for links to anti-illegal immigration T-shirts.)
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To: wastedyears

AND, declare a complete moratorium on ANY immigration from ANYWHERE (including the new Iraqi immigrants our benevolent administration is planning to foist upon us..they’re probably already here!) until this entire mess is sorted out and the illegals are deported the hell out of this country!


7 posted on 06/18/2007 7:19:49 AM PDT by GFritsch ('All men will hate you because of me, but he who stands firm to the end will be saved'." -)
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To: GFritsch
Almost forgotten in the debate over fixing the nation's broken immigration system are the millions of immigrants who waited patiently outside America to legally walk through its doors.

Kinda' sends the wrong message to these folks, doesn't it?

8 posted on 06/18/2007 7:53:32 AM PDT by Inquisitive1 (I know nothing except the fact of my ignorance - Socrates)
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To: GFritsch

Meanwhile, my daughter-in-law’s family (as well as herself) still waits for official status and a real green card. They have been here 7 years and still only get temporary status, constantly having to renew and restart the process all over because of corrupt lawyers and judges. And this doesn’t need to be fixed? I doubt they’d be given a green card automatically because they are stuck in the system and would have to wait to be processed naturally, while the ones here illegally get them handed to them. Sheesh! What a system!


9 posted on 06/18/2007 8:30:59 AM PDT by Shery (in APO Land)
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To: Inquisitive1
Kinda' sends the wrong message to these folks, doesn't it?

Right. They'll be looking at how our Elite Political Class handles things here and shrug and say "What the hell. Where I'm coming from wasn't so bad after all. These poor, deluded Americans are going to be in deep crap in a short period of time."

10 posted on 06/19/2007 6:33:14 AM PDT by GFritsch ('All men will hate you because of me, but he who stands firm to the end will be saved'." -)
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