The Heritage Foundation: Not Coming to America: The 60-Year Immigration Bubble Finally Bursts
Fox News: Not coming to America: The 60-year immigration bubble finally bursts
Indeed, "immigration" and "coming to a new country" are closely aligned. The problem is that your example sentence seems to be spoken by an omniscient narrator who doesn't reside anywhere. The same voice might say Spain is on the Iberian Peninsula. Where is the speaker? Probably not in Spain. Now, if someone said He is coming to Spain.
Two dissimilar government agencies have inadvertently combined to clarify the immigration debate. Stomach-turning excesses by Immigration and Customs Enforcement have turned many Americans’ abstract ...
For generations, the credibility of the American immigration system rested on a simple promise: The process might be long and complicated, but immigrants who followed the rules would eventually find ...
Immigrants used to feel blessed and grateful they got to America and were allowed in. Something has gone terribly wrong with immigration. AP Silicon Valley was energized by legal immigrants from all ...
Yahoo: As the Country Turns 250, Has America Lost the Immigration Plot?
Here in America, the debate around immigration is getting louder and more polarised. Some people think we should close our borders to almost everyone, whereas others believe that shutting out the ...
Do native speakers use present continuous when talking about timetables? Can I use "is coming" in my sentence? That film comes/is coming to the local cinema next week. Do you want to see...
I will be coming tomorrow. The act of "coming" here is taking a long time from the speaker/writer's point of view. One example where this would apply is if by "coming" the speaker/writer means the entire process of planning, packing, lining up travel, and actually traveling for a vacation. I will come tomorrow.