Dan-El Padilla Peralta's Effects On Abortion

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Dan-el Padilla Peralta graduated Princeton University in 2006, and to further impress, he topped all of his classmates by earning the Latin Salutatorian title. Eight years later he got his Ph.D. at Stanford in Classics (Robbins). Both of his alumni are something most people could only dream of, but with extreme dedication and will-power Padilla possessed, he managed to rise to the top. It is easy to see he is an incredible man with great intellect, however, what sets him apart even further from his fellow graduates is the fact that he is an illegal Dominican immigrant. Being an immigrant has a great deal of difficulties accompanying it, but the illegal status magnifies those further. His mother came to New York for the end of her high-risk pregnancy …show more content…
There are a few requirements surrounding this process, and each one has an issue to accompany it. First, to even be able to apply, a person must have a Green Card for at least five years (USCIS). A person can do so through family, a job, or refugee status. All of these are excessively challenging and situational. To utilize a family member, they would have to be immediate family. If they are, the process is relatively quick. If they are not immediate, the process can take up to three or four years (depending on the country the person is from). Rachel Wilson, who is an immigration attorney, states that the wait is determined by The United States, if they feel like there are too many people trying to crowd in from one country (Wilson). While this may seem like a solution, it still does not solve the problem of first generation children, and it does not shorten the wait. Some may not have family here and are first generation immigrants. In fact, the population growth for first-generation immigrant children increased forty-three percent between 1990 and 2000 (Zong). That automatically crosses that option off, leaving only two more

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