Dream Act Pros And Cons

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Good Morning, I’m John David Salazar. My teammates are Amarillys Romero, Jonathan Manipadam, and Peter Steffey. Together, we argue for the DREAM Act. Our team is delighted and honored to debate with our opponents.
The Development, Relief, and Education of Alien Minors Act would provide security and innovation to the American Republic. It encourages undocumented immigrants, specifically those who were brought to US as minors, to return the favor of an high school educations to the American public. Through the DREAM Act, these undocumented immigrants are given the opportunity to legally serve in our military, or they are given the ability to educated themselves and then contribute to the US economy.
Furthermore, the DREAM Act immigrants will
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Indeed, the Dreamers will pay $5.6 billion in federal and state income tax between 2010 and 2030 according to a study by the Center for American Progress.
The number of undocumented immigrants will not increase because of the DREAM Act. Undocumented immigrants come to the United States because of economic conditions. The Dream Act does not provide pecuniary support for all who come to the US; instead, the Dream Act allows those who were brought to the US without their accord to become fully-functioning members of the United States.
Dreamers do not chose to come the United States; they are brought here by parents as infants. The Dreamers as President Obama has said, “... grew up in this country, love this country, and know no other place as home.” The Dreamers instead seek to be American; they work toward the American Dream. The Dreamer seek their college education. Dreamers -- some might argue -- will take the jobs of American citizens -- those born and raised in the US; however, these critics start out with a flawed presupposition. The critics presuppose that US economy is a zero-sum game. The US economy isn’t a zero sum game: there is no arbitrary limit to the US economy. Instead, it can grow without worry of reaching a ceiling. Immigrants in the top twenty-five metropolitan areas in the US, like the Dreamers, account for 22 percent of proprietors earnings: entrepreneurial immigrants make slightly more (percentage wise) of their metro’s earnings than their share of the