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What about Chicago?

Incensed by President Barack Obama's plan to deport thousands of immigrant children who have arrived in the U.S. illegally in recent months, activists have taken to the streets to chide the president. Many protests have included children. At one, a young boy can be seen carrying a sign that reads: "No deportation of children fleeing violence and poverty."

I, too, care about children facing violence and poverty, and that's why I support the Obama administration's plan to expedite deportations.

Last weekend, 82 people were shot in Chicago, the president's hometown--16 died. But don't feel bad if you didn't know this. Recent media coverage of the child border crisis has dwarfed coverage of many of the very real problems Americans are already grappling with, particularly low-income Americans of color. The shootings mainly occurred on Chicago's South Side, which consists predominantly of African Americans, including plenty of children. And while the Obama administration has made enormous policy strides for some disenfranchised groups, it has struggled to address the economic needs of poor black Americans.

Gay Americans have benefited from the president's commitment to seeing the end of "Don't ask, don't tell" and passionate support for same-sex marriage. Young Americans who have spent their lives living here illegally, known as Dreamers, are benefiting from the work permits the president authorized via Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or his DACA order, despite the failure of Congress to act on their behalf.

But prior to the launch of Obama's My Brother's Keeper, the administration had frequently been criticized for its lack of specific initiatives that were targeted toward improving the lives of African Americans.

Why? The most common speculation tends to be best summarized by two words: "limited capital"--both budgetary and political.

Which is what makes it frustrating that some expect the president to expend his limited capital helping children who are not his responsibility at the expense of children who are.

On Tuesday the president requested $3.7 billion to address what is quickly morphing from an immigration crisis to a disaster. While much of the funds will be spent on border security and deterrence, at least $1.8 billion will be spent on caring for the children here illegally. That number is only to cover the needs of children here temporarily. The costs would skyrocket if they remained here permanently.

And that money could be used elsewhere, including to help American children already living here who are facing violence and poverty on a daily basis, such as those in Chicago.

Yet despite the fact that our government is struggling to fund initiatives that could protect children already in this country, the president is still being pressured to take responsibility for the futures of thousands of additional children. That isn't fair to the president, and most of all, it isn't fair to our children.

I have long supported allowing Dreamers--children brought here illegally who have spent their entire lives here--a path to college and citizenship. But the fact is, if we are complicit in allowing thousands of additional children to follow them here and remain here, soon we will not be able to provide any resources for Dreamers or any other American children, and that would be irresponsible and un-American.

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Keli Goff is correspondent for The Root.com.

Editorial on 07/11/2014

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