Thank you, McMieky for participating in this debate with me. It is fairly difficult to find respectful, clear-thinking debaters on this site. And I thank you for that, you provided a clear-minded, kind, and respectful response.
That being said, in almost every other sentence, you used the terms "research indicates," and "studies show." Your entire argument was backed up by research. But I can't take that research, or, for that matter, your argument seriously until you cite the studies that you have used and actually specify where you found those so-called "facts."
Taxes
You may be right about taxes, but I am having a very hard time finding any official government reports that support your "facts." I am not going to give a full response to that until you give me a good source that can actually back up what you said. And regarding language, I am not of the belief that they "stubbornly cling to their mother tongue." I simply said that that is one of the things that people need to do to become a functioning American citizen. I never said that they don't do it. It's also kind of funny that you're putting what I said under fire with the phrase "isn't born out of actual statistics," despite the fact that literally everything you have said is born out of statistics that I have yet to be shown, including your mysterious, unseen research that shows that today's immigrants are mastering English at the same rate or a faster clip than prior generations. Keep in mind that I am not saying that this research doesn't exist, just that I haven't seen it and therefore can not yet believe it.
Criminals & Terrorists
According to a report released by U.S. Customs & Border Protection (Works Cited 1) shows us that last year, there were 17,048 illegal immigrants arrested on counts of crimes such as assault, larceny, fraud, driving under the influence, homicide, illegal drug possession and trafficking, illegal entry, illegal weapons possession, and sexual offenses. Granted, many more US-born Americans commit crimes than illegal immigrants. That makes perfect sense. Do you know why? Because there are 11 million estimated illegal immigrants living in the US compared to an over 340 million population. It's a matter of proportion. There are more US-born citizens committing crimes because there are way more US-born citizens than illegal immigrants.
In response to what you said about terrorists, the idea that would-be terrorists and violent gang members legally enter the country is not true. Lately, the arrests of members of violent gangs and globally-designated terrorist organizations, such as MS-13 and Tren de Aragua, have been all over the news. Here's one ABC article (Works Cited 2) detailing the arrest of 25 members of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua, who are currently being punished for illegally entering the country and committing violent crimes. Sure, some terrorists and violent criminals enter the country legally. But it's much harder for terrorists who are already on FBI, DHS, and CBP watchlists to enter the country legally than illegally, and it is also impossible to argue that of the estimated 11 million illegals who currently reside in the United States (as stated in Works Cited 3), none of those who entered are dangerous criminals or terrorists. It is just common sense to know that when the border is open and available for anyone to cross, someone is going to take advantage and enter America not for the American dream, but to harm the country. This fact has been well-known by Republican leaders (such as Trump) and Democrat leaders (such as Obama & the Clintons) alike for a long time. There are plenty of Venezuelan nationals from Tren de Aragua who have entered this country to actively harm people.
I also notice that you didn't say anything in response to what I said about illegal narcotics being brought into this country by illegal immigrants. The CDC showed in report (Works Cited 4) that drug overdoses in the United States have significantly spiked over the past several years, particularly in males. That all-time high of drug overdoses seems to coincide with a spike in seizures of illegal narcotics at the border (Works Cited 5). Granted, that could just be wild speculation, but it does seem fairly suspicious that drug overdoses hit an all time high at the same time that drug seizures spiked at the border, and then both of those statistics lowered almost in sync at the start of 2023.
The Immigration System & Mass Deportations
I am with you all the way that the immigration system needs to be fixed so that the wait time isn't too long. It also needs to be fixed from the Biden-era open border that was so fast that it allowed millions to pour in illegally, including a mix of those who posed a threat to national security. And I do also agree that some tactics used in deporting illegal immigrants are inhumane and need to be fixed. I don't think that means we should stop with the notion of mass deportation, however. Instead, we should fix the transportation methods to make it more humane.
But as far as economic impact goes, I'm going to have to say I disagree with your outlook. Sure, it would cost a lost of money. Sure, it would harm several industries. But illegal immigration has also already caused devastating economic impacts on some of the typically most prosperous cities in the United States. According to a report on illegal immigration by the House Budget Committee (Works Cited 6) that was filed at the start of last year, New York City had to put together $12 billion to pay for housing, food, healthcare, and other taxpayer-funded services for illegal immigrants. There were not enough undocumented workers who paid their taxes so that the city had to make a 5% budget cut across "a range of services, including sanitation, public education, and the police department." Similar reports have been made about Chicago, Denver, the District of Columbia, and multiple other major urban areas in the U.S. that have been forced to take in a massive number of illegal immigrants. Illegal immigration has already economically harmed America. American citizens' taxpayer dollars in major urban areas are now going more to helping illegal immigrants than helping actual American citizens.
Works Cited
In my opinion, we should deport illegal immigrants. Why? Because it is not fair for the people who comes to a country legally and the people who comes to a country illegally. People who comes to a country legally work hard to earn the opportunity to go to another country, and the people who comes to a country illegally, they don't work hard, they are not resilent but they still want to go to another country even though they don't deserve.
Someone should vote on this.
idk why but my laptop crash like twice while trying to publish the debate.