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The Politics of US series: Illegal immigration

Seventh in a 10-part weekly series. The Politics of US looks at polarizing topics to help deepen understanding of the issues 鈥 and respect for those with differing views. This installment looks at how feasible Trump's Wall is, what it symbolizes, and what the alternatives are.

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Warren Richey/海角大神
John Ladd, Arizona rancher, at the border fence.
Follow us on Twitter听.听Review the previous six installments, from guns to climate change,听here.
In this week's edition:
  1. Cover story: Trump's border wall
  2. By the numbers: See which US president deported the most unauthorized immigrants听
  3. The candidates: How Clinton and Trump differ on deportation raids, sanctuary cities, and more
  4. Profile: Behind the gavel of America's busiest judge
  5. Engage: Is the term 'illegals' derogatory or factual?
  6. Quizzes: Could you pass a US citizenship test?听
  7. Our picks: "The Economic Case for Welcoming Immigrant Entrepreneurs" 鈥 and more

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Trump's border wall: Would it work?

By Warren Richey, Staff writer

It is about a quarter-mile hike to reach the top of a ridge west of the fence. There, among the cactuses and the mesquite, lie several small clearings where it appears people have been sleeping. Discarded food cans litter the area, and a tangle of wire runs through the middle of it.

Welcome to the other US-Mexican border 鈥 the one without a barrier.听

The border here looks easy enough for anyone to cross. Donald Trump wants to change that. To address the problem, the Republican presidential candidate makes a bold pledge. 鈥淲e will build a great wall along the southern border,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd Mexico will pay for the wall.鈥

As if on cue, the crowds at his rallies respond with a now familiar mantra: 鈥淏uild that wall.... Build that wall.... Build that wall....鈥

In a presidential election campaign unlike any in US history, Trump鈥檚 Wall looms large. At this point it is merely a proposal, yet the very idea of it has split the American public, offended Mexico, alienated American Latinos, and drawn a razor-sharp contrast between Mr. Trump and Democratic rival Hillary Clinton on the thorny issue of illegal immigration.

In a larger sense, Trump鈥檚 Wall is an ultimatum for the hemisphere and perhaps for the world 鈥 that it is time for the most powerful and richest country on earth to turn its generosity inward.

鈥淭here is only one core issue in the immigration debate, and that issue is the well-being of the American people,鈥 Trump says.听

鈥淯nder a Trump administration, it鈥檚 called America first.鈥

But beneath all the rhetoric on both sides of the issue, practical questions loom: Could a wall actually be built? How much would it cost? And, most important, would it really keep people out?

Read more

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BY THE NUMBERS

Jacob Turcotte and Story Hinckley/Staff

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THE CANDIDATES: Where they stand on immigration issues

We encourage you to contact the Monitor on Twitter or by email csmpolitics@csmonitor.com if you can improve our chart!

Story Hinckley/Staff

Sources: the Jill Stein campaign, the Gary Johnson campaign, the , the , , , the , , the ,

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PROFILE: Behind the gavel of America's busiest judge

By Tom A. Peter, Correspondent

Ann Hermes/海角大神
Federal district Judge Robert C. Brack stands outside the United States Federal Courthouse on July 17, 2014 in Las Cruces, New Mexico. The number of defendants Judge Brack sentences is among the highest in the nation due to the volume of cases he oversees dealing with illegal immigrants reentering the United States.

LAS CRUCES, N.M. 鈥斕齃ess than an hour into one of his regular morning dockets, federal district Judge Robert Brack has already sentenced 14 felons, or roughly one-sixth the number of people the average federal judge sentences in an entire year. The 15th defendant of the morning, Jamie Pe帽a-Flores, stands before the judge shackled at the ankles, wrists, and waist.

鈥淭his is a tragic case,鈥 says the man鈥檚 lawyer. Mr. Pe帽a-Flores, a Mexican national, has spent most of his life in the United States working as a certified diesel mechanic and welder. He was most recently living in Wyoming, where he was making $28 per hour. His three children are American citizens and his wife has been diagnosed with cancer. Until this moment in court, the defendant had a clean criminal record, except for one incident of driving under the influence, for which he鈥檇 already served jail time.听

Pe帽a-Flores, however, entered the country illegally. For at least the second time in his life, authorities caught him trying to cross from Mexico, where he had recently returned for a visit, into the US, an infraction that can be prosecuted as a felony and is part of a burgeoning American strategy to reduce illegal immigration.听

Read more

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ENGAGE: Living Room Conversations and AllSides.com

  • Some see the term as derogatory, others as factual.
  • 听Yes, follow this guide.
  • 听Here is a specialized lesson plan.

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QUIZZES: Test your knowledge on US citizenship听

1. Could you pass a US citizenship test?

In order to become a听US听citizen, immigrants must pass the Naturalization Test. American citizenship bestows the right to vote, improves the likelihood of family members living in other countries to come and live in the US, gives eligibility for federal jobs, and can be a way to demonstrate loyalty to the US. Applicants must get 6 answers out of 10 in an oral exam to pass the test. According to US Citizenship and Immigration services, 92 percent of applicants pass this test.

2. How American are you? Take the alternative citizenship quiz.

To become a听US听citizen, immigrants must past a test that includes questions on government, history, and geography.听But what really makes someone "American?"听Here are 23 questions on everything from movies and music to fiction and food, with a little US history thrown in too.听

3. How much do you know about literature by immigrants? Take our quiz.

How much do you know about literature by and about immigrants, old and new? Test your melting pot, tossed salad, multi-culti, all-American literary knowledge here 鈥 from A to Z.

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OUR PICKS: Recommended reading and viewing

1. "," by David Brooks, The New York Times

Donald Trump brings Republican crowds to their feet by bashing the supposed criminal hordes sneaking up from Mexico. The problem with this new orthodoxy is that it is ... based on a view of immigration that may have reflected 1980s realities, but that has little to do with reality today. The number of illegal immigrants flowing into this country is dropping, not rising....There are more Mexicans leaving the United States than coming in. According to the Pew Research Center, there was a net outflow of 140,000 from 2009 to 2014. If Trump builds his wall, he鈥檒l lock more Mexican immigrants in than he鈥檒l keep out.

2.听鈥,鈥 a VICE video

Here we are, they deport him, and we鈥檙e having to support his family that he was supporting. I don鈥檛 understand why they don鈥檛 check a little more what鈥檚 going on鈥. Because he was supporting his family, he had a good job, had a business, and there鈥檚 people here just living off us.

鈥 Jeff Kesler, conservative and longtime friend of Ray Jesus, on the cost of his deportation to US taxpayers (estimated by VICE to be $102,710)

3.听鈥,鈥 Boston Globe interactive graphic (2012), with context from a

Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, routinely releases dangerous detainees to the streets of America without warning the public. Over the past four years, immigration officials have largely without notice freed more than 8,500 detainees convicted of murder, rape, and other crimes, according to ICE鈥檚 own statistics, mainly because their home countries would not take them back. (This graphic provides data sortable by city and type of crime.)

4.听鈥,鈥 Kauffman Foundation (2015)

There鈥檚 something inherently entrepreneurial about leaving your home to start a new life in another country. Perhaps that is why immigrants tend to start businesses at a disproportionately higher rate than native-born Americans. From Alexander Graham Bell to Sergey Brin, immigrants have created some of. In fact, more than of the Fortune 500 companies in 2010 were founded by an immigrant or the child of an immigrant. Yet, despite their vast economic contributions, 听US law provides no dedicated means for immigrant entrepreneurs to launch innovative companies in the United States.

5.听鈥,鈥 book by Mark Krikorian (2012)

This is not a pessimistic or declinist argument. The problem is not that America has become decadent and weak and is thus unable to take full advantage of the blessings of mass immigration as it once did. Rather, a policy that served America鈥檚 interests during our national adolescence no longer serves those interests now, during our national maturity.

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