Illegal             immigrants are detrimental to our society because they hurt our economy             and take jobs. They cost the federal government a lot of money each             year. They also take jobs away from American workers.
             Because of their sheer numbers illegal immigrants put a great strain on             the American economy. It costs the government billions of dollars a year             to house these illegal immigrants, and because they don't pay taxes we             never get a single cent of that money returned to our government. They             also cost around 200 billion dollars a year in depressed wages. Another             thing is that many illegal immigrants end up in prisons, around 30% of             all the inmates in prisons are illegal immigrants. Because of those             reasons and others illegal immigrants are hurtful to the U.S. economy.
             Illegal immigrants take jobs away from low skilled American workers.             They will work for less pay and little to no benefits which incentives             employers to hire them since it will save the company money; employers             want the cheaper employee so they will have a net increase in income.             They take away jobs in the agriculture, construction, restaurants, and             hotels that jobless Americans would gladly fill. Also American high             school dropouts would earn as much as 8% more if illegal immigrants             didn't take those jobs for less. Isn't it a responsibility of America to             care for its own people first? If that is true we must crack down on             illegal immigrants so our low skilled citizens can have the best quality             of life possible             
                                       Congress is considering major immigration reform, in large part to             enable employers to bring more immigrant workers into the country to             fill critical positions. Rather than present the reasons why this is             necessary, below is a perfectly articulated rendition of why immigration             is good for the U.S. economy. Leon Sequeira is the current Assistant             Secretary for Policy for the U.S. Department of Labor. He testified             before the House of Representatives on May 3, 2007 about the impact of             immigration on our economy, and said in part:             
             "While the number of immigrants as a percentage of the population might             seem large, it is in fact far lower than other periods of heavy             immigration in our history. Over the past ten years, 8.8 million             immigrants added about 3.4 percent to the population. In contrast,             throughout the 19th century, immigration added 6.2 percent to the             population each decade, rising above 9 percent during the 1850s and             1880s, and immigration peaked at 10.4 percent of the population during             the decade between 1901 and 1910. After 1910, immigration rates fell             dramatically, merely adding 5.7 percent to the population during the             1911-1919 decade, further falling to 0.4 percent in the 1930s, and then             slowly rising to a still low 2.0 percent in the 1970s. Immigration rates             rose in the 1980s (3 percent) and 1990s (3.4 percent) and have since             remained stable.             
             The growth of the foreign-born workforce has not produced significant             adverse effects on native-born workers. During the last ten years, the             unemployment rate for native-born workers fell from 5.4 percent to 4.7             percent. The unemployment rate for African-Americans has declined from             10.5 percent in 1996 to 8.3 percent today. While unemployment has gone             down, wages have gone up. Over the last decade, as the foreign born             workforce increased, average hourly earnings of production and             non-supervisory workers increased 8.7 percent after adjustment for             inflation. In 2006, the median usual weekly earnings of foreign-born             full-time wage and salary workers were $532, compared with $698 for the             native-born.             
             There are three fundamental reasons why immigrants are important to our             economy. First, the U.S. workforce is aging. Second, continued             immigration will allow us to maintain a higher ratio of workers to             retirees than other major economies such as China, Japan and Germany.             Third, immigrants contribute significantly to innovation and             entrepreneurship in our economy.