Violating immigrant childs' rights: Trump puts an end for American Dream
9/9/17
The most consequential decision President Donald
Trump made on immigration in his first year in office wasn’t about the wall, or
who’s going to pay for it, or anything else he talked about incessantly on the
campaign trail. It was his decision to announce, on September 5, that his
administration would be winding down the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals
program — a program he didn’t mention outright, that many people didn’t know
about and even fewer understood.
Donald Trump will thrust
the fate of nearly 800,000 young undocumented migrants into uncertainty on
Tuesday by terminating the Obama-era program that protects the so-called
Dreamers from deportation.
The Daca will be phased out by 5 March 2018, leaving
Congress with six months to enact new protections for Dreamers through
legislation. On Tuesday night, Trump suggestedthat
if Congress failed to “legalize Daca” he would “revisit” the program.
New applications will no longer be accepted, while
those currently in the program will all lose their status by March 2020, with
the first permits expiring in March 2018 – unless Congress passes legislation
allowing the young immigrants to stay.
There are about 800,000 Daca recipients living in
the US, who qualified by having been under the age of 31 as of 15 June 2012.
Those applying were vetted for any criminal history or threat to national
security and had to be students or have completed school or military service.
Their status must be renewed every two years.
Sessions repeatedly referred to the group of young,
undocumented immigrants as “illegal aliens” while declaring: “We are people of
compassion. But there’s nothing compassionate about the failure to enforce
immigration laws.”
The administration also declared that new
applications for Daca dated after 5 September will not be considered, shutting
down access to the program for those who are not already beneficiaries.
Trump’s decision was swiftly condemned by
immigration advocates, business leaders and Democrats.
Former President Barack Obama sharply
criticized the Trump administration's decision to end the DACA program that
protects young undocumented migrants from deportation, slamming the White
House's move as a "cruel," "self-defeating" and legally
unnecessary political decision.
"Ultimately, this is about basic decency. This
is about whether we are a people who kick hopeful young strivers out of
America, or whether we treat them the way we’d want our own kids to be
treated."
Many supporters of Daca pointed to the contributions
of Dreamers – named after failed legislation in Congress – and noted the
program already denied access to anyone who was convicted of a felony or deemed
a threat to national security or public safety.
“This is a sad day for our country,” Facebook
co-founder Mark Zuckerberg said. “The decision to end Daca is not just wrong.
It is particularly cruel to offer young people the American dream, encourage
them to come out of the shadows and trust our government, and then punish them
for it.”
House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi accused Trump
of committing “a deeply shameful act of political cowardice and a despicable
assault on innocent young people in communities across America. The president’s
cruel and heartless decision to start deporting Dreamers in six months demands
an immediate response from the Republican Congress.”
Senator Chris Murphy, a Democrat from Connecticut,
said: “It takes someone with a dark heart to do something as cruel and
pointless as this.”
In an attempt to force a decision, 10 state attorney
generals, led by Ken Paxton of Texas, imposed an arbitrary deadline of 5
September on which they threatened to take the administration to court. One of
those attorney generals, Tennessee’s Herbert Slatery, backed away
from the threat last week.
The American Civil Liberties Union, which has also pledged
to defend DACA in court, accused Trump of "manufacturing a crisis."
"Today is a cruel day for dreamers, our
families and all Americans," said Lorella Praeli, the ACLU's director
of immigration policy and campaigns.
"There is no humane way to end DACA before
having a permanent legislative fix in place. President Trump just threw the
lives and futures of 800,000 dreamers and their families, including my own,
into fearful disarray."
A leading campaign group has accused Donald Trump of
taking away “civil and human rights” and said would be guilty of child abuse as
the President appeared set to terminate an
immigration programme that has allowed up to 800,000
undocumented young people stay in the US.
In a series of tweets, the Anne Frank Centre for
Mutual Respect, a group that campaigns for the protection of human rights, said
Mr Trump was set to make a decision that would become notorious.
“Happy Labour Day - and remember that America works
successfully because of the 800,000 immigrants under DACA who are taking no one
else’s jobs,” it said.
“Generations
from now, children will read about a President who took away civil and human
rights.” ./.
All comments [ 12 ]
Now we know that there are childs who have no country in America but denied to be protected by the U.S. which always claims of symbol of human rights and democracy.
It affects American's jobs, their wages, essential public institutions, and the allocation of scarce public resources, and American are more selfish than we thought.
Stop dream about America! It is terrible nation for disadvantaged people.
Hundreds of Dreamers and activists also marched on Trump Tower in New York, stopping traffic along Fifth Avenue. The activists crowded the sidewalks and were corralled by metal barriers that police set up at the last minute to keep order.
Technology companies and executives of other industries criticized the Trump administration for its plan to undo protections for hundreds of thousands of young immigrants and called on Congress to help them.
God blesses immigrants! No mercy in the United States.
Eliminating daca is one of the more readily attainable of Trump’s anti-immigrant pledges.
Now the U.S. can not cry out for Amrican values of democracy and human rights anymore. They simply do not deserve!
I agree. America should keep their mouth shut in criticing other countries about human rights.
“You just feel like you are empty,” said a sobbing Paola Martinez, 23, who came to the U.S. from Colombia and recently graduated with a civil engineering degree from Florida International University
No dream, no hope, no future for anyone. America first!
It's time to awake. Those anti-Vietnam elements in America would have not anyone to lean on, they should stop praise the U.S. as a heaven now.
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