My Bill – Law for Illegal ImmigrantsEssay Preview: My Bill – Law for Illegal ImmigrantsReport this essayMy BillIf I were a person elected by the legislature, the bill that I would present would be a law for illegal immigrants. This law would be based on all the problems that exist today with illegal immigrants. As we all know, an immigrant in this country does not have any right to anything. In consequence, all the time they suffer persecution of being caught and deported to their countries, no matter what they have or not. These people do not enjoy any privileges, even though they contribute to the country in labor and taxes. They are discriminated against because they do not have “papers” that say that they are fit to work. When for the most of these illegal the eagerness to work is better than the one of the people living in the country.
• Article VI: Prohibiting Adoption and/or the Determination of Children by ParentsIn most part, as we have already seen, when our society becomes a more developed one, more children come in because we are more interested in social progress than about preserving that progress in the name of our children. And yet, many in government are more interested in our children than doing anything to improve their well-being, because so many children are born into families that do nothing about the issues that the parents of children are trying to raise. The problem of children is not simply that we spend so much time focusing on social problems; the problem goes deeper that we only focus on these problems. Moreover, some of these young people are very well off and even less likely than the others to live in families with parents who are working for free and paying for their school, the local community’s and government’s health care. But this is not an anomaly! The main reason that children do not go to school is that their mother was an illegal alien in the United States and her children have been born illegally to foreign parents. The problem with this is that the children become quite ill as well, and when their mothers die, they have very few resources to feed their old parents. Yet, after decades of poverty, the government gets back what it had when it was working for working adults. It takes a lot of money to maintain the economy, and the government must take a lot of the money away from child support and the very public services that it has always cared about. We must create a system of paid parental leave and free school breaks for the children while also guaranteeing parents the right to take back all of their money and make money off of their children. That makes sense. But what about the families? It is a complicated picture. But let me give you a simple example of a family in which the father is an illegal alien. There were a lot of problems with him in our society because of his illegal immigration. These problems include the fact that he did not have a chance against some government government or the family which has been created through his illegal immigration. A third of his family was at the lowest position, as was he in the previous generations. While he never had the opportunity to overcome these issues, he did have a chance to overcome these people. If some of his family members had been prevented from getting through an illegal immigration, he would have been able to escape by making contact with the United States legal legal aliens from other regions. This would have taken a very long time for his family. In fact, it probably took him three years to accomplish his goal: get to the United States legally, at the very least. A third of the people that have ever been brought to The United States have not been able to make contact with the government or have any knowledge of the United States that they need to make contacts with at least some. That is a very complicated picture for both father and son. If he is not able to do at least some contact with the federal government, we are in a situation where all of the children of every generation suffer from an impossible situation where their parents are the only ones affected. And what about my wife? We were trying to get her to stop thinking about the United States as she was having a difficult childhood with lots of bad habits and low IQs and not being able to find work.
[quote=Gavin]I’ve been here a couple of times. It used to take me awhile to find my way there. But, I’ve come back and it’s now the best place for me, too, since I have an excellent opportunity to start up. I love Texas in all parts of the country. I’m coming to Texas to make it a better place for people. The Texas Legislature has done very well, and I really want to help get the word out there so the Legislature can act on it. I’ve seen many other places here that have similar and exciting things going on because of the people and the energy and support they get. It was an incredible experience for me. The governor’s office is wonderful in Texas, and I’m the governor. The state legislature and I have this very clear view how to create policy. And I think, as of right now, the bill goes through the Legislature. I was the first person to come here last year and I met with a lot of Texas’ leaders. I’d love to help make the state a better place for people. It’s really important to me that those people are elected because it takes a lot. What we have is a very focused and engaged legislature with a lot of people. We haven’t seen that kind of focus before. When in California this year there was a lot of community organizations with leadership in a lot of areas, and I wanted to bring that and we just got there. That brought me the opportunity.
I went with the group the Lone Star Women’s Association, the women’s business, which I like very much. It was a very young group to start with because it was established right after the fact, so it really has been growing very quickly. We’ve had about 10 organizations with over 300 members. We have about $50 per group. My message is what we need and what it takes to help it grow.
[quote=Kirsten]I live in Texas because of the people that I’ve touched on with my work here. In California in 2015 there was also an economic downturn that resulted from the recession caused by the loss of our manufacturing jobs. It’s been just amazing to have the support from the women, children, the elderly, the black, Hispanic and other members of our community that there is work being done and it’s making everybody’s job easier for every single one of them. I think that it’s the job security that’s the best. That just makes it easier for our families, our children and even our communities. People from all walks of life and no religion, it makes it easier to raise them. That’s why we’re here to help them.
Kirsten Binder and Tom Klamas, on the need to connect
[quote=Kirsten]I always thought that women and gays and the LGBT community had a stronger culture. For me, it gives me hope that we can all be successful. We have to become self-sufficient in everything we do in this country. But we have to try to balance that with caring for ourselves with all the money you put into the country. And I don’t want to leave many of the same kinds of people behind, just to feel like we can move forward like I do.
Kirsten Binder and Tom Klamas, on the need to connect
[quote=Kirsten]I always thought that women and gays and the LGBT community had a stronger culture. For me, it gives me hope that we can all be successful. We have to become self-sufficient in everything we do in this country. But we have to try to balance that with caring for ourselves with all the money you put into the country. And I don’t want to leave many of the same kinds of people behind, just to feel like we can move forward like I do.
We’re fortunate, in a sense, because many of us already have some kind of economic security that we don’t yet have. That’s true of everything, but not everything. We still pay a lot more than women and straight women for the same work. Our child care costs are still higher too. Or we still take care of our veterans when needed and we still send them home. It doesn’t make sense for us to work on all of this on our own. It’s so difficult if we’re working on different things where it really does make more sense to raise more money to take care of yourself. But the fact that you’re raising money for a different group of families that works to keep you and your family together is not only unfair, but it’s also really unfair.
Tom Klamas, on the need for “good marriage”
[quote=Tom]We are in the midst of a period when every time you have a new situation involving your family, whether it is a friend, spouse, son, daughter or son-in-law, or the young man in your life — all of the things that lead up to it — all of that is going to change. It’s going to bring you better outcomes for your children and for yourself.
We don’t live in a bubble. It’s not going to go away. We are living in a real world, and we aren’t living in an over-hyped bubble of a new world. So the big lesson for America — in that last period of
[quote=Richard]We believe in the idea that we can all succeed if we can unite our nation once again. This is the first year that our country is getting in this direction and it makes it easy for us all to learn from one another, because this is an election year. The people that are here today stand together and stand behind me. I’m going to help turn every issue that is in our minds behind me and create unity within this community, not only for the rest of the country, but for the country as whole, for everyone. If there’s a time and place for this as well we need it to be happening for everyone
[quote=Gavin]I’ve been here a couple of times. It used to take me awhile to find my way there. But, I’ve come back and it’s now the best place for me, too, since I have an excellent opportunity to start up. I love Texas in all parts of the country. I’m coming to Texas to make it a better place for people. The Texas Legislature has done very well, and I really want to help get the word out there so the Legislature can act on it. I’ve seen many other places here that have similar and exciting things going on because of the people and the energy and support they get. It was an incredible experience for me. The governor’s office is wonderful in Texas, and I’m the governor. The state legislature and I have this very clear view how to create policy. And I think, as of right now, the bill goes through the Legislature. I was the first person to come here last year and I met with a lot of Texas’ leaders. I’d love to help make the state a better place for people. It’s really important to me that those people are elected because it takes a lot. What we have is a very focused and engaged legislature with a lot of people. We haven’t seen that kind of focus before. When in California this year there was a lot of community organizations with leadership in a lot of areas, and I wanted to bring that and we just got there. That brought me the opportunity.
I went with the group the Lone Star Women’s Association, the women’s business, which I like very much. It was a very young group to start with because it was established right after the fact, so it really has been growing very quickly. We’ve had about 10 organizations with over 300 members. We have about $50 per group. My message is what we need and what it takes to help it grow.
[quote=Kirsten]I live in Texas because of the people that I’ve touched on with my work here. In California in 2015 there was also an economic downturn that resulted from the recession caused by the loss of our manufacturing jobs. It’s been just amazing to have the support from the women, children, the elderly, the black, Hispanic and other members of our community that there is work being done and it’s making everybody’s job easier for every single one of them. I think that it’s the job security that’s the best. That just makes it easier for our families, our children and even our communities. People from all walks of life and no religion, it makes it easier to raise them. That’s why we’re here to help them.
Kirsten Binder and Tom Klamas, on the need to connect
[quote=Kirsten]I always thought that women and gays and the LGBT community had a stronger culture. For me, it gives me hope that we can all be successful. We have to become self-sufficient in everything we do in this country. But we have to try to balance that with caring for ourselves with all the money you put into the country. And I don’t want to leave many of the same kinds of people behind, just to feel like we can move forward like I do.
Kirsten Binder and Tom Klamas, on the need to connect
[quote=Kirsten]I always thought that women and gays and the LGBT community had a stronger culture. For me, it gives me hope that we can all be successful. We have to become self-sufficient in everything we do in this country. But we have to try to balance that with caring for ourselves with all the money you put into the country. And I don’t want to leave many of the same kinds of people behind, just to feel like we can move forward like I do.
We’re fortunate, in a sense, because many of us already have some kind of economic security that we don’t yet have. That’s true of everything, but not everything. We still pay a lot more than women and straight women for the same work. Our child care costs are still higher too. Or we still take care of our veterans when needed and we still send them home. It doesn’t make sense for us to work on all of this on our own. It’s so difficult if we’re working on different things where it really does make more sense to raise more money to take care of yourself. But the fact that you’re raising money for a different group of families that works to keep you and your family together is not only unfair, but it’s also really unfair.
Tom Klamas, on the need for “good marriage”
[quote=Tom]We are in the midst of a period when every time you have a new situation involving your family, whether it is a friend, spouse, son, daughter or son-in-law, or the young man in your life — all of the things that lead up to it — all of that is going to change. It’s going to bring you better outcomes for your children and for yourself.
We don’t live in a bubble. It’s not going to go away. We are living in a real world, and we aren’t living in an over-hyped bubble of a new world. So the big lesson for America — in that last period of
[quote=Richard]We believe in the idea that we can all succeed if we can unite our nation once again. This is the first year that our country is getting in this direction and it makes it easy for us all to learn from one another, because this is an election year. The people that are here today stand together and stand behind me. I’m going to help turn every issue that is in our minds behind me and create unity within this community, not only for the rest of the country, but for the country as whole, for everyone. If there’s a time and place for this as well we need it to be happening for everyone
The law that I would present would be “No to the deportation of illegal immigrants.” It is one of the first things that happens when the police arrest an illegal immigrant. The illegal is deported to his country of origin with one hand behind and the other ahead. These people dont even have the right to take anything that they invested in this country. In consequence, if the illegal had a family, the family is helpless and alone in a country without rights.
This new law would support all those illegals who are being honest in the United States and are contributing to a better society. On the other hand, if the immigrant has a bad behavior before society, has contributed nothing, and has constantly been breaking laws they should not be forgiven by the American justice and must be deported immediately to the country of origin.
The illegal that was found by the police and has a clean record must be released to continue living like an American citizen. This person should have the right to be able to work freely and to continue contributing to the country as they have been doing. The illegal that continues to respect, behave, and has good values