skyscraper

skyscraper


    Sprache wählen
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    Synonyme und Definitionen Gehen Sie zu den Synonymen

    Verwenden Sie „immigration“ in einem Satz

    immigration Beispielsätze

    immigration


    1. They’re usually relegated by the state to immigration and border security


    2. So what are the facts? An operation arranging illegal immigration of undesirables (according to Renald Forhamm) ostensibly organised from Earth with well-placed contacts across on Errd, a suspicious Errdian in a position of some power in London, Earth, who is upset by the arrival of an agent of the Secret Guild on his patch … and come to think of it, he’d not liked the fact you were coming to this part of the country


    3. Her appreciation grew as she realised that the scenes depicted, although looking like innocuous country views, were actually Errd … could it be that she was wrong, that whoever worked here was not involved in the immigration operation?


    4. Berndt, one final matter; you have doubtless heard of the problem Renald Forhamm has uncovered with regard to illegal immigration


    5. Nonetheless, she found herself positively enjoying the concentration of interest that surrounded her whenever the conversation turned to the state of the nation and to the whole immigration issue


    6. A year or so after the event on the street corner the government proposed the setting up an immigration processing centre in the borough where Miss Jones lived


    7. 'Or Cutler had to pull serious strings at the immigration department for this,'


    8. “Ours is a dead branch, because Thera did explode in real life, no more souls revived on the island, but we have had significant immigration, like me, so that the archipelago has four and a half million residents in the 2341ad echo, the most recent


    9. “She must have told you about the immigration and therefore the government


    10. With this letter I sent my wife a copy of the United States Immigration Laws

    11. When you wrote about getting a job here, I called up the immigration Department of the government and they sent me some information


    12. Briefly I'll try and explain the immigration booklet and I'll underline important information


    13. Still haven't heard anything from immigration yet but they did say it would take months


    14. Still haven't heard anything from immigration but they said it would take three months and working for the government I can believe how slow things go


    15. I did hear from the Immigration and Naturalization people but it wasn't exactly the news I wanted


    16. I told immigration I wrote to several women but after three months I was only writing to you and have been for over three years


    17. You seem to know a lot more about the immigration process than I do


    18. So you can tell the immigration people that we met through letters through an introduction service


    19. He told me that Congressman Denny Smith personally called Immigration and the State Department and that you should have your visa by August 15


    20. Immigration explained to me that we have 90 days after you arrive to get married

    21. I have just received the enclosed report from the authorities that the Immigration and Naturalization Service in response to my inquiry on your behalf


    22. My cousin called today and said that the Congressmen heard from immigration and they said that the American Consulate should have the paperwork


    23. Otto walked over to his employees and explained the procedure for customs and immigration


    24. Came from Merica and is going back so immigration tell us, together with these three


    25. So that’s when I began to realize the real impact of the catastrophic illegal immigration trends of the early part of the century


    26. Europe had become a partitioned conglomeration as far as immigration was concerned


    27. France, the Benelux Countries, Italy and Germany had imposed strict immigration quotas, except for educational visas


    28. And let"s not forget the calls he made, again from his White House office, directing Immigration and Naturalization officers across the country to relax their screening standards for immigrants who wished to become citizens


    29. He left us with this concerning immigration: “The safety of a republic depends essentially on the energy of a common national sentiment; on a uniformity of principles and habits; on the exemption of the citizens from foreign bias and prejudice; and in that love of country which will almost invariably be found to be closely connected with birth, education, and family…


    30. For whatever reason I’d asked Cayman Immigration

    31. Maso's project of inducing restricted immigration from the Canary Islands and northern Spain will solve the latter difficulty, if placed into effect; and to the former, while America financiers may still be cautious, English capitalists are winning contracts, obtaining options and making effective arrangements for aggressive investment


    32. The Balkanization of America will prove to be the inevitable outcome of ill-conceived immigration policies aimed at injecting


    33. The solution to this unfortunate dilemma requires (the) reestablishing of and ―enforcement‖ of Immigration Quotas designed to preserve existing racial and ethnic balances (for the time being) while allowing recent arrivals an opportunity to properly assimilate into their new environment


    34. Per Capita Income, however much it has increased among (native) segments of our population, has been barely able to keep pace with the rapid rise in immigration whose recent emigrants are living on the (economic) fringe in unprecedented numbers


    35. Higher fertility rates, common among the poor, exacerbated by lax immigration policies, have strained our nation‘s productive and material resources beyond their capacity to accommodate even the (basic) material requirements of its working classes


    36. immigration policies are compromising the quality of life in areas where poverty, congestion, disease, drugs, crime, substandard housing and decaying infrastructures are demoralizing (complex) social and cultural arrangements (and civility) as an alarming number of our citizens are feeling alienated from mainstream conventions that no longer seem to provide any meaning


    37. Immigration Reform is unlikely to occur anytime soon for the (very) simple reason that such measures designed to quiet the tides of illegal immigration must necessarily conflict with the efforts of corporate lobbyists and their political minions in conjunction with private enterprises that have come to rely heavily on cheaper sources of labor to operate their businesses and who have repeatedly demonstrated their calloused indifference to rules of law and native born working men and women and are willing to operate outside the law if that‘s what it takes, at the expense of Native Americans for the ―benefit‖ of Illegal Aliens who are ―here‖ to collect a paycheck if nothing else, who routinely flaunt our nation‘s laws while abetting an underground economy injurious to open markets


    38. 6) The Church‘s position on Immigration (Reform) and its antiwar rhetoric that is especially troubling to Conservative Catholics who believe that the Church should shy away from politics and stick to preaching


    39. President Bush‘s flawed Immigration Reform Bill providing ―conditional‖ amnesty to 12 million illegal aliens must be reassuring to 1) (Moderate) Republicans who would consider its passage a political opportunity to place the party in better stead with Hispanic Voters and the Business Community, 2) Corporations seeking to attract Cheap(er) Labor, 3) Democrats who, for the same reasons indicated above, are uncomfortable with the idea of controlling our nation‘s borders at the risk of alienating a sizeable voting bloc and (who) would otherwise seize the moment, for purely political reasons, to challenge Republican proposals that (surprise!) ―don‘t go far enough,‖ 4) Multiculturalists and Internationalists likely to embrace such ―reforms‖ as a (positive) first step towards achieving their (respective) Universalist Agenda, and 5) Shakers of Western Culture who would seek its destruction at any cost for its own sake and who would therefore (also) consider such measures as an appropriate step in the ―right‖ direction


    40. The Rule of Law, as it relates to Immigration Policy, or any other law for that matter, should dictate and not be dictated to

    41. Liberals and (some) Moderate Republicans voicing their opposition over the outsourcing of jobs overseas and its dampening effect on the United States economy should give equal expression (as well) to Illegal Immigration that has similarly produced dire


    42. How else does one explain his abysmal record on Immigration, lack of Social Security and Energy reform, reckless spending, expanding deficits (despite enjoying majorities in both Houses of Congress) while engaging the nation in a politically correct war that has clearly lost its momentum?


    43. The war in Iraq, burgeoning budget deficits, escalating energy prices, the Katrina fumble, immigration and controversies surrounding his chief political advisor have contributed to the president‘s growing unpopularity among Liberals and Conservatives, alike, thereby exhausting whatever remaining political capital he might have had in advancing the judicial career of a long time friend


    44. Just the opposite, his actions on AIDS in Africa and Latin American immigration show him strongly opposed to prejudice


    45. Conceding the argument that the war in Iraq, which I support by the way, has shifted momentum from the administration‘s domestic agenda, its reluctance to advance meaningful Immigration Reform in the wake of 9/11 has Conservatives and ―Moderates‖, alike, shaking their heads in disbelief


    46. US authorities not only invited Spanish plantation owners back, they returned their plantations and further encouraged Spanish immigration, hoping to “whiten” Cuba's population


    47. Laws barring interracial marriage and racist immigration quotas were overturned


    48. As the Governor of Texas, Bush came out against the anti immigration hysteria in his own party back in the early 1990s


    49. They developed the betel-nut industry, which soon brought wealth to the locality and attracted to Pagsanjan the immigration of the inhabitants of surrounding towns like Pila, Cavini, Santa Cruz and many others


    50. Still fuming several days after the incident, he had found his way to the archives of the immigration service where he discovered a very peculiar thing: Michael came from California













































    Weitere Beispiele zeigen

    Synonyme für "immigration"

    immigration in-migration