The American Dream Act Pros And Cons

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Six hundred eighty-nine thousand eight hundred young people lived in dangerous, life threatening circumstances. Their parents rose to the duty of being mom and dad protected their children and ran away to escape their predicament. Brought to the Land of the Free as infants and children for a chance at a better life. The country founded by immigrants and whose Lady Liberty greets people of all races and ethnicities by saying, “give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses, yearning to breathe free (Aranda, 795).” These kids forced to leave a country they hardly knew and move to the United States of America without knowledge they committed a crime. They are the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals recipients. They are DACA. They are the Dreamers. …show more content…
At the time the public opinion about immigrants more specifically undocumented ones did not favor them exceptionally high. The 9/11 terrorist attack contributed to the fear of foreigners and put Americans into an anti-immigration mindset. Little to none of the public supported the bill, so it never passed and faded away into the sea of forgotten bills. Until nine years later in 2010 when in the House of Representatives, the DREAM Act tried to push through legislation with a new name called the American Dream Act (Lauby, 375). However, the bill still did not pass as a matter of fact, it did not even receive a proper vote (“H.R. 1751 — 111th Congress: American Dream Act.”). Ultimately a few years later in 2012 then President Barack Obama announced an executive order named the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals which in short is