Can you imagine being a child coming home from school and finding out that your hardworking, upstanding, tax paying immigrant parents are being forced to return to their native country? Immigration laws in United States are in need of regulation because immigrants are unfairly forced to leave the country after establishing residency and employment. Sure, the American law says as long as a person is born here then he or she is considered an American citizen. But, this law proves to be quite inconsequential for the many adults, most of whom are parents to American-born children, are either allowed or illegally migrate to the United States. These immigrants are seeking a better way of life for the children who will be born into this country; as well as the families that many U.S. bound immigrants leave behind. Typically, immigrants from countries like Africa, Haiti, and Mexico seek and obtain work visas in order to gain American employment. However, a visa does not guarantee amnesty from being deported. It seems that this country wants to benefit from the talents that many immigrants have to offer to the American factory, landscaping, and urban development industries. However, the United States pay these type of employees next to nothing. Worsening the situation is when these employees are told to leave the country due to non-citizenship. Immigration and how the system has been handled in the United States begin with a history of illegal immigrants being processed into this country. Some people were admitted or denied based upon race and class. During the settlement of America’s first colonies immigrants worried about nothing more than diseases and adapting to the new land’s harsh and unpredictable weather. Further on in history was slavery, which was one of the first regulated immigration systems to exist in America. Of course, these groups of people