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Why Immigrants Come to America - Braceros, Indocumentados, and the Migra (Hardcover)
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Why Immigrants Come to America - Braceros, Indocumentados, and the Migra (Hardcover)
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Stout plunges the reader into the social and political upheaval
that the immigration question exerts on 21st century America.
Personal encounters, conversations, interviews and newspaper
accounts provide a vivid and accurate picture of indocumentado
life, both in the workplace and at home. They highlight the
successes and failures of immigrants, as well as the challenges and
contradictions that those who pursue them and deport them face. He
chronicles the effects of 60 years of political seesawing that has
granted citizenship to over 3 million former Mexican nationals and
left another 7 million in limbo. And in addition, he examines why
six decades of surveillance, pursuit, raids, fences and
deportations have only slightly altered, but not stemmed, the
immigrant flow. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents
sweep through factories, farms and construction sites from Maine to
California herding handcuffed illegals into detention facilities.
Immigrants and their supporters block highways, repudiating a House
of Representatives proposal to make undocumented entry into the
United States a felony. National Guardsmen head towards the U. S.-
Mexico frontier where hundreds of men, women and children die every
year of heat stroke, dehydration, and starvation. Few other issues
have provoked such national outrage since integration and
opposition to the war in Vietnam crested in the 1960s. Despite the
clamor, the rhetoric, the accusations and the arrests, few people
really understand who the undocumented immigrants are, how they get
into the United States and why they keep coming. Stout explains in
vivid detail why Spanish-speaking workers leave their homes-and
often risk their lives-to seek employment north of the border. The
book includes hundreds of interviews and experiences he has shared
with migrants, politicians, law officers and farm and sweatshop
employers. It's a battleground-it never was before, Mexican-born
immigrant Jesus Francisco Reyes told Stout as he watched Border
Patrol officers follow helicopter searchlights across a brambled
mountainside 80 miles east of San Diego, California. The
indocumentados the migra apprehend and send back across the border
will add to already overwhelming statistics: over 1 million
deportations every year, an estimated 600,000 successful new
arrivals, and expenditures on so-called border security topping
billions of dollars a year. More than 23 million Americans of
Mexican descent live in the United States, 7 million of whom do not
have valid work or residency papers. Millions of these immigrants
live in poverty but more than 90 percent find employment and over
60 percent send portions of their earnings to their families south
of the border. Their remittances provide nearly 70 percent of the
incomes of thousands of towns and villages throughout northern and
central Mexico and much of Central America. Without them, the
economies of those countries would have foundered.
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