Posted on 09/18/2003 9:38:43 AM PDT by bedolido
IMMIGRANT RESEARCH
Poor language skills and pride in national origin are two reasons why nearly eight million foreign residents eligible for U.S. citizenship have not applied, according to a study released Wednesday.
Mexicans and Canadians are among the nationalities least likely to apply for citizenship, the report by the Washington-based Urban Institute found. Historically, there have been millions of immigrants with green cards who have not sought citizenship for various reasons, but this is the first time a study has focused on the issue.
''Despite rising naturalization rates, the pool of legal immigrants eligible to naturalize remains strikingly large,'' the study said.
OFFICE CREATED
To encourage more applications, the Bush administration this week announced the creation of the Office of Citizenship.
Eduardo Aguirre, director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, said in a recent interview with The Herald that his goal is to eventually naturalize one million new citizens per year. In 2002, about 573,000 foreigners became citizens.
''We share many of the same concerns in the Urban Institute brief,'' said Dan Kane, a spokesman for Citizenship and Immigration Services.
Typically, surges in naturalization applications follow changes in federal immigration law. A record 1.4 million applications were submitted in 1997, a year after Congress tightened immigration laws. Applications soared again after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks when more restrictions were introduced.
OTHER REASONS
Other reasons that dissuade foreigners from seeking citizenship are fear of rejection and for some Canadians and Mexicans proximity to their homeland.
Of the 7.9 million eligible foreign residents, 2.3 million are from Mexico, according to the report. The report did not include a breakdown for Canadians.
The rate of Mexicans seeking citizenship has climbed from 19 percent in 1995 to 34 percent in 2001, the report said.
The number of Canadians seeking citizenship has remained at about 50 percent in recent years.
''Canadians are more likely than Mexicans to naturalize, but less likely than others to naturalize,'' said Jeffrey S. Passel, demographer and principal research associate at the Urban Institute. By comparison, the percentage of Asian nationals seeking citizenship is about 67 percent.
Foreign nationals seeking asylum or fleeing from dictatorship were among the most likely to want to become American, Passel said. Seventy three percent of Cubans seek citizenship, he said.
Oh I don't know, I've got Republicans running my state and most of the south. BTW, you lost here because I assure you my Canadian friend is staying, perhaps just to spite you! ;-)
OH and we've won more than we've lost, we also had family at Valley Forge, in the Texas Revolution, Cuba, WWI, WWII .......
Spoken like a true moral relativist. One should always choose to do the higher moral good. It's not rocket science. Most situations are clear cut, only a very small percentage involve vague moral situations, and in those situation, one does the greater moral good. Don't hand me that crappy comparison with Osama Bin Laden - it will make me believe you are an anti-Christian bigot! It's bad enough you want to take over hte world! Hail Caesar!
Obviously, you are a moral midget. Killing in war is not necessarily murder. You need some study on the defintion and meaning of a "just war". In the case of the case of hiding Jews, yes it is the right thing and there is almost an exact example of this from the bible - Rahab hid the hebrew spies in Jericho and was rewarded by God. She did the greater moral good. Murder is when you unjustifiably kill an innocent person - like an unborn baby. Killing a criminal is JUSTICE, not murder. You need some work on your morals pal - you are seriously confused. Y
I am now convinced that you make up your own morals as you go along - moral relativist. Psychologists have a label for people who make up their own moral rules - SOCIOPATH!
Only if you consider Augustine a catholic which is highly debatable. In any case, the "just war" theory is biblical and correct. Turning the other cheek applies on a personal level not a national level, and does not apply to self defense of one's life or another's life.
Therefore it is an excellent example of the resolution of ethical dilemmas and providing guidance at a stage beyond a literal reading of the Bible. A similar case is the church's teaching on abortion. This is not, of course, moral relativism.
When catholicism disagrees with the bible, it is catholicism that is wrong, not the bible. Catholic church is not the standard, scripture is, and there are many divergences. Traditions are from men and men are corrupt. Jesus Christ spoke against the traditions of the Pharisees.
There is no explicit statement or group of them in the Bible that spell out the concept of a "Just War", not is there an unambiguous denunciation of abortion.
It's not explicit but it's there. Wars of Israel against its the Canaanites and Philistines just to name 2 examples. The bible is clear about abortion - Jer. 1:5, Psalm 119:13ff. Sure, you are not going to say that the catholic church takes precedence over Holy scripture, are you? That is one primary reason for the Reformation.
Ungodly people are not capable of doing the right thing - they have nor moral compass outside of themselves. That is why Godly people must make the laws becuase if they don't,the ungodly will. It was for this reason that the American founding father, John Jay, said that citizens should prefer ONLY Christians for public office.
Psalm 139:14: I will praise thee; for I am fearfully [and] wonderfully made: marvellous [are] thy works; and [that] my soul knoweth right well. 15. My substance was not hid from thee, when I was made in secret, [and] curiously wrought in the lowest parts of the earth. 16. Thine eyes did see my substance, yet being unperfect; and in thy book all [my members] were written, [which] in continuance were fashioned, when [as yet there was] none of them.
Jer. 1:5 Before I formed thee in the belly I knew thee; and before thou camest forth out of the womb I sanctified thee, [and] I ordained thee a prophet unto the nations.
Then there's the passage in Luke when Elizabeth's unborn "BABY" heard Mary's voice and leaped in her womb.
It's abundantly clear isn't it? God forms us in the womb and has a plan for our lives BEFORE WE ARE BORN. Abortion is murder. I think you are not that familiar with scripture, are you?
But where does it say this in the 10 Commandments? I don't see a definition of a Just War anywhere in the TC. What you are doing, my friend, is interpreting the TC and applying them to certain moral situations. You said earlier that the TC were absolute, but now you're finding exceptions to the absolute rules laid down in the TC.
That's what I'm talking about when I say that any moral absolutes, such as the TC, need to be interpreted and applied to situations that exist in real life. That's what humans beings do when it comes to creating morality.
The classical Greeks, who did not worship the Judeo-Christian God, had a very strong concept of right and wrong-our concept of democracy and the relationship between the state and the individual is drawn heavily from pagan philosophers.
To say that morality and right and wrong did not exist before Christianity is historically completely wrong. Any society, whatever god or gods it worships, develops a code of morality that, in most case, is surprisingly similar to Judeo-Christian teachings.
The Bible is an inanimate object. In fact, without human beings, the bible is completely meaningless because there would be nobody to apply its teachings.
I'd like to see somebody try to apply the Bible to real estate zoning laws, or to alternate-side parking rules, or to any of the other thousand laws that are morally neutral but necessary for the smooth functioning of a modern society.
Hmmm... I can see how you could find a moral dimension behind the concept of zoning, if you stretch it- zoning laws exist to prevent one type of property use, like a chemical plant, from impacting on another, like a private residence.
I still would argue, though, that the Bible is probably silent on this issue.
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