Perianne
01-29-2015, 08:04 AM
How many immigrants should we allow each year? Where should they come from? Should they be required to have skills?
I was born Pierrette Anni Paasivirta in 1957. My mother and I immigrated from Finland to America in 1960, two of 265,398 immigrants allowed that year. We both were blue-eyed blondes, a very different look than current immigrants, which are mostly dark-skinned people. If immigrants had been required to have skills which would benefit this country, we would not have been allowed.
We lived in extreme poverty for much of my childhood, yet my mother refused to take one penny or one bite of food from the government. She said we did not come here to be a burden on anyone else.
I left home at 18 and set out on my own. For two nights I slept behind a dumpster and then got into a homeless shelter funded by a church. From there I got various jobs to support myself until I finally married a man who was just as poor as I was. We both were determined to succeed in life. I entered college to become a nurse while continuing to work full time. My husband, through determination and hard work, succeeded in construction. Through all of this we never took a penny from the government or state.
My daughter is now working on her BSN, again, all paid for without any government assistance.
I say all of this to point out the difficult conditions immigrants used to overcome to become true American citizens. Surviving makes a person strong. Nowadays we seem to hand them (immigrants) all they need to succeed. Regardless, they will not suffer by coming here, legally or not.
Your views on immigration?
I was born Pierrette Anni Paasivirta in 1957. My mother and I immigrated from Finland to America in 1960, two of 265,398 immigrants allowed that year. We both were blue-eyed blondes, a very different look than current immigrants, which are mostly dark-skinned people. If immigrants had been required to have skills which would benefit this country, we would not have been allowed.
We lived in extreme poverty for much of my childhood, yet my mother refused to take one penny or one bite of food from the government. She said we did not come here to be a burden on anyone else.
I left home at 18 and set out on my own. For two nights I slept behind a dumpster and then got into a homeless shelter funded by a church. From there I got various jobs to support myself until I finally married a man who was just as poor as I was. We both were determined to succeed in life. I entered college to become a nurse while continuing to work full time. My husband, through determination and hard work, succeeded in construction. Through all of this we never took a penny from the government or state.
My daughter is now working on her BSN, again, all paid for without any government assistance.
I say all of this to point out the difficult conditions immigrants used to overcome to become true American citizens. Surviving makes a person strong. Nowadays we seem to hand them (immigrants) all they need to succeed. Regardless, they will not suffer by coming here, legally or not.
Your views on immigration?