The critical approach in intercultural communication on the issue of the immigration debate in United States could be illustrated by Americans viewpoint which often times is influenced by their social stance on the social ladder, social structure as well as their political party. These viewpoints often create a divide among …show more content…
Most of the complaints are that immigrants come to America illegally and more often live off the state and taxpayer money instead of pursuing legal citizenship. Only a few immigrants that come to the United States do it the legal way. The current status of Immigration to the U.S is a huge topic in the 2016 political race to the White House. Donald Trump is under fire for his controversial remarks on Immigration saying "We need strong borders. We need a wall". Donald Trump says that most of the people incarcerated for crimes are undocumented illegal immigrants who have migrated here and have been convicted numerous times of various crimes. He also states that The root cause of all the welfare payments to illegal aliens is because of the huge issue called the "anchor baby" which is when an illegal immigrant mother has a baby on American soil. Making that child automatically an American citizen. This then raises the issue of the Fourteenth Amendment, which states, "All citizens born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and the state wherein they reside." Trump argues that the clear purpose of the Fourteenth Amendment, was to guarantee full citizenship rights to now emancipated former slaves. It was not intended to guarantee untrammeled immigration to the United States ("2016 Presidential Candidates on Immigration - Ballotpedia."). Jeb Bush on the other hand another Republican candidate says that deporting twelve million illegal immigrants back to their homeland is just not possible. Jeb Bush said on September 22, 2015, that America “should not have a multicultural society,” calling it “the wrong approach.” He explained, “America is so much better than every other country because of the values that people share – it defines our national identity. Not race or ethnicity, not where you come from. When you create pockets of