Preview

Devils Highway

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
737 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Devils Highway
Perspectives on Immigration
Immigration in America has been a topic of intense debate through American history. Americans seem to always want to single “immigrants” out as being a bad guy per say, and the border patrol as good guys. Is it really fair to make that judgment based just on history? I sure do not think so. There’s more to immigrants then there history, there’s a reason why they come to America and it is not always intended for evil. Believe it or not, after reading The Devils Highway by Luis Alberto Urrea, immigrants are the good guys just asking for another chance at life. While the Border Patrol Officers are just wearing that uniform and taking advantage of it. Not coming to an agreement, Luis Alberto Urrea’s nonfiction novel would actually enrich the debate on illegal immigration due to the reasoning’s Urrea gives us on these walkers wanting to come to America. In the beginning of the novel, Urrea gives us background knowledge on the Devils Highway, the illegal immigrants crossing the border, and information on the Border Patrol Officers. Immigrants not having any income at all, they need to survive as well. In Mexico it was very hard to get a job, with that being said, woman with children, men with children, families in this case needed to survive. “Prices kept raising, and all families, mestizos, and Indian, Mexican and illegal, Protestant, Catholic, or heathen were able to afford less and less. Food was harder to come by. Families continued to grow” (44). These Mexicans needed money to survive; they needed better opportunities that Mexico was not offering them. Coming to America was their only choice. Not coming legally, these walkers took a chance at life down the “dangerous border”(8). It was a chance worth taking. “Good guys”, these immigrants were trying to better there future no matter what it took. Why couldn’t the Border Patrol accept that? The Devils Highway was a road leading to a rude awakening, wasn’t that bad enough. These

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    The Iguana Tree Summary

    • 828 Words
    • 4 Pages

    When the man started his journey to come across to America, he was taken to an old, run down, dark house. When Hector arrived at the house another man (Miguel) was already there waiting to be hustled across the border. They would spend several days and nights together in the house not knowing what was to come next. They had to go with limited food and drink for days. Then one night the coyote came and took the two men to a warehouse, there at the warehouse were many men. Eventually all the men were loaded into a hole that had been cut out of the bottom of a truck. After all the men had been loaded into the hole it was welded back shut. After hours of riding in a closed, cramped space that smelled of urine and vomit, Hector was losing hope of ever making it out of the truck. Finally, the truck came to a stop, the hole was reopened, and the men were “hustled” out of the truck into a second warehouse (25). From the second warehouse all the men was took into a office where they was given an new identification card, the start of their new life as an “illegal American” (26). Hector went to South Carolina with Miguel the man he met in the old house, they waited on a bench for Miguel’s cousin Pablo to come and pick them up. Finally Pablo arrived and they started their journey to South Carolina where Pablo’s lives and works. The farmer that Pablo worked for also gave Miguel a job. Pablo’s boss called his neighbor to…

    • 828 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Second, Mexico was experiencing an increase in Islamic immigrants due to the fact that the United States government increased its security measures and tightened immigration laws. The United States believes potential terrorists may seek assistance of human traffickers to infiltrate our borders. Intelligence collected from domestic and international communities has proven this to be a fact. In this case the border patrol could be faced with a new problem like smugglers becoming potential terrorist partners. If the border patrols main intent was to shift the criminal activity why weren’t they prepared to handle the rise of criminals in surrounding areas? Some combined issues contributing to not being able to handle the shift in migrants could be politics and insufficient…

    • 701 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Author Amanda Rose has taken it upon herself to bring to light the horrific experiences of modern day immigrant’s flight to freedom through the Sonoran Desert. In addition to addressing the immigrant’s plight, she calls into question the immigration process or lack thereof, the United States legislative broken immigration policy, religious leaders and their roles, US Border Patrol and US citizens. Her intent is to open up a dialogue on US immigration policies and educate the American public on the devastating consequences of a hapless built dividing wall between two countries which are felt not only by the immigrants but by the people that live in and around the border. Rose illustrates the conflicts that everyday Americans citizens living on the border face in trying to help and solve border issues with their personal solutions. Do they work? Are they…

    • 1358 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    In the early 1900’s Mexican migrants were free to enter and leave the U.S. whenever they felt like it. The primary concern of the border patrol was to keep the Chinese migrants out. For the most part every person who tried to get into the U.S. and looked hispanic was allowed and never questioned. Today Mexicans or people who look hispanic are being chased after by the border patrol and are being kept out. Since the U.S. is denying entry to these illegal immigrants they are going through extreme measures to get in. Most of them end up severely injured or dead. The book The Beast: Riding the Rails and Dodging Narcos on the Migrant Trail by Oscar Martinez talks about the experiences of these migrants which aren’t easy. Martinez goes to Mexico…

    • 1301 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Throughout The Devil’s Highway, bodies of men and women fell numerous times trying to cross into the United States. Once the United States increased patrol of the border, they controlled the geography. Immigrants had to find another way and sometimes it resulted in death.…

    • 504 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    About twenty-six Mexican men risked their lives on the journey to cross the deadly desert to the United States. As their “coyote”, Jesus Mendez was paid to guide the men (referred to as “walkers”). By the end of the journey, fourteen men had died while Mendez and the rest of the twelve men survived. As a result, Mendez was charged and tried for 16 years in prison for manslaughter; however, the walkers were aware of the risk they were taking so Mendez shouldn’t have been responsible for their deaths and charged with manslaughter.…

    • 265 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Arturto Banuelas Analysis

    • 1226 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Like Fr. Deck, Msgr. Arturto Bañuelas tends to focus on practical theology and real issues that affect Latinos and Hispanics in the United States; and of course, no discussion of these issues would be complete without touching on immigration reform. Bañuelas’ experience with immigration is a personal one. He grew up in the El Paso-Juárez communities on the U.S.-Mexican border and saw the massive disparity between the cities firsthand; the situation, as he himself was described it, was that “For the past 15 years, El Paso has been ranked as the second safest city in the nation [The United States], while, just across the border, Ciudad Juárez ranks the second most dangerous city in the world.” (The Lies Are Killing Us: The Need for Immigration…

    • 1226 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    He stated, “it is lived through a palpable sense of deportability- the possibility, which is to say, the possibility of being removed from the space of the US nation-state” (Dowling & Inda 2013, p.44). Revisions to the immigration law have caused Mexican migrants to receive illegal status, which in turn caused police departments to interrogate these migrants because of forces within the administration believing they are not allowed here legally (Dowling & Inda 2013, p.44). Compared to De Genova perception of illegality, Urrea strains more away from defining illegality and the issues it may cause but says they are individuals who pay Coyotes a set amount of money for them to move between borders by finding appropriate refuge in safe houses before they can make it to the United…

    • 572 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    In The Devil’s Highway by Luis Alberto Urrea, the Mexican illegal immigrants are automatically portrayed as villains once they cross the border. When it comes to immigration, the United States government focuses on border control due to the abundance of illegal immigrants who enter and reside in the United States.Many think that Mexicans who cross the border illegally choose their suffering and pain. However, as demonstrated in the true story, many tragic factors such as the Mexican Government, the United States Government, and the Coyotes and gangsters contribute to the illegal immigration from Mexico to the United States.…

    • 1815 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Road to Hell

    • 466 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The case “Road to Hell” by Gareth Evans is a story of two characters with different backgrounds, personalities and points of view and how these two characters interact. John Baker is a successful western chief engineer of the Barracania’s branch of a multinational company. In the case it is mentioned that John Baker is an English expatriate, so we assume that he is white, possibly born in Canada.…

    • 466 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Road to Hell

    • 411 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Matthew Rennalls. it was crucial that this interview be successiiil and that Rennalls leave his office uplifted and encouraged to race the challenge of a new iob, A touch on the bell…

    • 411 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Road to Hell

    • 2888 Words
    • 12 Pages

    John Baker, English expatriate and the chief engineering of the Caribbean Bauxite Company of Barracania in the West Indies conducted an interview with Matthew Rennalls, a Barracanian who holding assistant engineering position in the company and also Baker’s successor because he received a complaint from Mr. Jackson, one of the European employees; that Rennalls had been rude to him. Baker’s interview with Rennalls was to talk about this issue and tried to solve it.…

    • 2888 Words
    • 12 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    More than 17,000 people were smuggled or trafficked into the United States. The U.S Mexico border is the most unstable region in North America. In groups of 10 to 16, women and children routinely cross the border, led by brazen smugglers called polleros. Smugglers should receive harsher penalties because the treatment of the immigrants are inhumane, it’s a National Threat, and its illegal.…

    • 754 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Most of us think that heroes make a lot of money, appear on TV, etc.… and for the most part they do, but there are those who don’t. On document 4 unit 8 (Facing reality), we can see another category of heroes, those who are struggling to survive, who put up a fight every morning when they wake up: the immigrants. On this document, we have a group of Mexicans that is trying to cross de U.S.-Mexico border. Once they’ve crossed the Rio Grande they’ve encountered a group of smugglers who led them to a miserable truck. Miles ahead, the smugglers pretended the truck had a problem that there was a breakdown and asked the Mexicans to step off until the engine was repaired. But, it was a trap! When the engine purred nicely, the American guide betrayed the immigrants and left them maroon in the middle of nowhere with no supplements. Well, by the end of the afternoon they were all dead due to the appalling conditions that they were up…

    • 779 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Road to Hell

    • 600 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The main barrier to the problem solving is misunderstanding between people with different nationalities and cultures. In this case Baker made a huge mistake building his interview from his own European perspective. Through the interview Baker emphasized the importance and leading position of…

    • 600 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays