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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
6 pages in length. The United States represents political, religious and cultural refuge for myriad third world war torn citizens. To move so many desperate people into the country as an answer to providing physical and emotional solace only stands to exacerbate America's long-standing overpopulation problem. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCMoveAmer.rtf
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to providing physical and emotional solace only stands to exacerbate Americas long-standing overpopulation problem. II. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND America has long been the refuge of choice for those who have
been able to escape religious and political persecution in their third world war torn countries. To experience life in the United States is to live free of any encumbrances
that Americans take for granted: Walking down the street without being shot, eating regular meals instead of scrounging for sporadic rations and taking each breath without the ever-present knots of
fear occupying ones stomach. Since the time of the Jamestown settlement back in 1607, America has held a steadfast tradition of cradling immigrants
within its bosom as though they were its own citizens. These past four hundred years established such a precedent of open heart/open door mentality, the melting pot is finally
boiling over; in fact, it has been overflowing for several decades now. It has come to the point that political officials are working toward legislature to immediately cease the
dramatic impact so many people are having on the overcrowded country. To counter this long-standing reputation of Americas multicultural roots, Amselle (1995) contends the U.S. "is not now and
never has been a remotely multi-cultural society. The American nation has always had a specific ethnic core. And the core has been White" (Amselle, 1995, p. 60).
According to Amselle (1995), the United States population was far over capacity by a staggering one-hundred million in the mid 1990s; as such, the
lax attitude of overpopulation in the past as it relates to immigration has changed to one of peril that must be avoided at all costs. In the past, there
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