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Mexican Immigrants in United States Essay

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Mexican Immigrants in United States

It is clear that the US is finding the constant flow of would-be Mexican immigrants an increasing problem, as is shown by the fact that their Border Patrol budget increased by 180% between 1993 and 1998, to reach a total of $4.2 billion by 1999. The USA will be employing 11,000 people to guard the border by September 2002, and 17,000 by 2008. But why does America see Mexican migrants as such a problem? And why do so many people consider it necessary to emigrate from Mexico to the US, sometimes employing desperate measures? How has such a situation arisen? These are questions I hope to address in this project, in which I will use a variety of sources to try and …show more content…

The eastern region of the border along the Rio Bravo (later called Rio Grande in the United States) was more hospitable, and attracted a larger population. The Rio Grande/Rio Bravo, a "symbol of separation" in Texas, males up more than half the length of the border. In the decades following the Mexican-American War (1850s), US farmers and agricultural workers came to dominate US-Mexican trade across this Texas river border. Shortly after their rise, these merchants became quite wealthy and bought large areas of land in Texas and became more powerful than the Mexican settlers on both sides of the border. This created an economic conflict that is still present today.

During the Mexican Revolution, which began in 1910, the border population increased significantly as many moved across the border from Mexico to the USA seeking refuge. Migration patterns were established between particular states in Mexico and particular regions or towns on the

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