Mexican abuse Americans believe that many things are taken for granted. For most people, life is relatively calm. People are not usually rich, but they are neither poverty nor ecstasy nor are they too depressed. Some people say population is usually easier than in other countries. For this reason, many talents from other countries emigrated here. They are looking for a better life. However, they are often abused.
Mexican abuse is actually unnecessary. When people making stereotypes do not know anything about their culture and background, the stereotype is wrong. If Americans can attach stereotypes such as "wetback" or "trafficking" to Mexican immigrants, they must become free and fair land. The Statue of Liberty is said to be a symbol of the popularity of immigrants. Ellis Island is another problem as well. Americans are a true supercritical country. The United States should be called a country open to all cultures and religions. Why is it different from the poor immigrants in Mexico? This is because the keyword is "poor". For most people in this country, poorness means lazy people try to do better without doing anything. But in the case of Mexican immigrants it is not. They came here because they work hard to improve their lives for them and their families.
Immigrants in Mexico were mistakenly judged as illegally coming to the United States and stealing work from American citizens. Jimmy Santiago Baca discusses the abuse of American immigrants in the poem "Mexicans are receiving work from Americans" and then explains the reality of this situation. Fool uses images, symbols, words, and intonation to show American prejudice against Mexican immigrants. - Prior to independence, many Mexican people cultivated livestock with Rio Grande due to the Mexican Civil War. The US military urgently needed crops such as raw meat and corn, so the purpose of this trip was to reduce profits. This plan will bring a different style of illegal intuition (Carnes 79). As a result, by 1870, most border areas were occupied by Mexican and Mexican Americans (Matthews 61).