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12-20-2014 #21
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Re: Immigration Reform - exclusive Order
There was certainly the concept of tribal nations, lands and the notion of trespass. Offenders of The Law were often enslaved or simply killed.
"...I no longer believe that people's secrets are defined and communicable, or their feelings full-blown and easy to recognize."_Alice Munro, Chaddeleys and Flemings.
"...the order in creation which you see is that which you have put there, like a string in a maze, so that you shall not lose your way". _Judge Holden, Cormac McCarthy's, BLOOD MERIDIAN.
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12-20-2014 #22
Re: Immigration Reform - exclusive Order
I think many of us start out with some core beliefs that hopefully they can back up with personal arguments about why they feel the way they do.
You can start out with some pretty hard core beliefs about illegal immigration (as I may have at one time)...but I think personal experience can change things an awful lot. As for me, I got to know and love quite a few folks who turned out to be undocumented...and for me - loyalties to people that mean something to me come first. There are folks I love that I would never want to see deported...and there are folks I love that I wish had the freedom to come back...that I miss.
The only reason I'm a citizen myself is because my father served in the army abroad. It's a technicality I can't and won't cling to as a moral upper hand.
This is something that needs to be fixed for the long term...we especially need to fix shit in our own back yard so it doesn't bite us in the ass in the future. Our political squabbles often meant that we didn't play well with our immediate neighbors as perhaps we should have...I don't know.
But we need to fix this.
2 out of 2 members liked this post.
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12-21-2014 #23
Re: Immigration Reform - exclusive Order
Fred, I've always enjoyed your posts and this one is one of your best.
Knowing that your politics are neither far right, nor far left, there is a strong common sense underpinning your point here. And if I may, there's a broader point. Once a person gets to know individual people from a group who'd they never met before, it's very likely to change one's opinion of those people.
The more segregated a society is, the more likely those groups won't intermingle. I also believe there's a strong us vs them in societies mainly comprised of two tribes. I live in New Mexico and on one side is Arizona and the other is Texas, both states dealing with immigration and policies towards Latinos in a pretty harsh way. And yet here in New Mexico there's a lot less strife and I believe part of it is that Anglos and Latinos have learned to respect diversity due to the high % of Native Americans here. In fact, living here a few months and I have come to appreciate the large diversity just within the Native American population.
Now I realize this doesn't explain Arizona which also has a large Native American population. But perhaps there's a critical mass at work as AZ is about 5% vs NM at 10% Native American. I'm not really sure how the harmony works here. It surely isn't enhanced by the local Albuquerque police dept which by almost any measure of killing the people they serve, beats just about every jurisdiction in the US - twice that of Chicago and something like ten times that of NYC. But I will say this, they seem to be equal opportunity killers as APD appear to kill with complete disregard to skin color. But anyway, that's a whole 'nother issue.
Bottom line, the more integrated a society is, the more harmony seems to exist. I think one advantage the gay rights movement has enjoyed is that gay people are disbursed across the nation. Nowadays everyone has a sister, a cousin and/or 3 co-workers who are gay. It's no longer just the hair dressers, as it was back in the 70's. As a result, gay marriage is almost the law of the land. It's interesting how the LGBT population, representing about 10% of the total, is less discriminated against than the African American population at 13%.
But it all begins with that one on one interaction that Fred speaks of above.
2 out of 3 members liked this post.
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12-21-2014 #24
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- 25
Re: Immigration Reform - exclusive Order
Which is still not a legal argument. It is not legal to enter another country without permission and then surreptitiously set up residency there. They are literally illegal aliens not "undocumented" workers.
If you or I were to sneak into Germany or Italy or Australia or wherever with no passport, no visa, no documentation of any kind, and then proceed to surreptitiously set up residency in one of those countries, we would be considered exactly what are...illegal aliens. We would correctly be deported when found out.
And it is exactly the same for every single person from Mexico and other countries from south of the border illegally occupying America. All 11 million of them or whatever the number is. Every single one is literally a criminal. I'm not making this up. This is not a subjective interpretation.
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12-21-2014 #25
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Re: Immigration Reform - exclusive Order
If you drive without a license you are an unlicensed driver, not an illegal driver.
"...I no longer believe that people's secrets are defined and communicable, or their feelings full-blown and easy to recognize."_Alice Munro, Chaddeleys and Flemings.
"...the order in creation which you see is that which you have put there, like a string in a maze, so that you shall not lose your way". _Judge Holden, Cormac McCarthy's, BLOOD MERIDIAN.
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12-21-2014 #26
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Re: Immigration Reform - exclusive Order
So simplistic... but then... what more can we expect from you?
If someone kills someone without lawful permission or legal cause... are they an undocumented/unlicensed killer? No... we have other legal names for that.
Or are you going to claim that those not lawfully in this country are in fact unlicensed aliens, rather than illegal/undocumented aliens?
I purposely use the term 'alien' as it is one that is codified in US law with regards to persons in the United States who are not natives nor authorized to be present.
Do you want to claim that those unlawfully here are 'unauthorized'? That would be a more correct argument... assuming the whole 'undocumented' thing were put to rest... which isn't likely to happen... or do you want to claim that someone who shoots a couple of cops sitting in a car is simply an 'undocumented killer' who lacked the proper documentation that the person who pulls the lever for the electric chair as part of a state sponsored execution has?
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12-21-2014 #27
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Re: Immigration Reform - exclusive Order
They are murderers, not illegal killers (unless they're double 0 agents in which case they have a license to kill). If you're caught driving without a license the charge is "driving without a license", not "illegal driving." Surely your driver's license document your legal right to be driving on the public roads.
Or are you going to claim that those not lawfully in this country are in fact unlicensed aliens, rather than illegal/undocumented aliens?
1 out of 1 members liked this post."...I no longer believe that people's secrets are defined and communicable, or their feelings full-blown and easy to recognize."_Alice Munro, Chaddeleys and Flemings.
"...the order in creation which you see is that which you have put there, like a string in a maze, so that you shall not lose your way". _Judge Holden, Cormac McCarthy's, BLOOD MERIDIAN.
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12-21-2014 #28
Re: Immigration Reform - exclusive Order
Well thank you very much...and of course, what you said about segregation, I believe to be absolutely correct.
You're right...it wasn't a legal argument...but that's irrelevant, because I wasn't trying to make one. Are they breaking a law?...Yes they are...but I'm not a robot, so I don't believe all laws carry the same weight. I've solicited prostitutes, smoked marijuana and am a serial jaywalker...so lock me up forever...lol.
are you telling me you never broke a single law in your whole life?
Look, no one is saying no one should ever be deported...but each individual case is not the same. There are humane ways to do this. Some people really do come here to support their families. What, they shouldn't try to do this? If your family was going to go hungry and the only realistic way for you to stop this is to sneak across the border and find any kind of work available...you wouldn't do this? Let's get some kind of guest worker system in place that makes this easier...perhaps something that would help put a tax system in place so, for instance, schools systems that are unduly burdened by the illegal (there..feel better?)child student population can better make ends meet.
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12-21-2014 #29
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Re: Immigration Reform - exclusive Order
Thank you for some insightful posts Fred and Odelay.
To the antagonists: Of course you can refer to anyone by any epithet you please. What you choose to call them may be inappropriate and miss its mark, but your choice will always reflect upon your own character and your own attitude toward those to whom you refer.
Yes, the law requires proper documentation; and deportation is often the mandated punishment. Obama has deported more immigrants than any president in history. In 2006 Pew estimated there were perhaps twelve million undocumented immigrants in the U.S. It doesn’t take a genius to surmise that logistically it would be too costly both economically and politically to track down and deport that many people. It doesn’t take a saint to realize how immoral it would be to separate that many families, or to turn away the child refugees who are now at our borders in flight from the cartels that now run Honduras.
Reform is not about what the law is, but about what the law should be. I would hope that immigration law in the U.S. reflect the family values we claim to espouse.
2 out of 2 members liked this post."...I no longer believe that people's secrets are defined and communicable, or their feelings full-blown and easy to recognize."_Alice Munro, Chaddeleys and Flemings.
"...the order in creation which you see is that which you have put there, like a string in a maze, so that you shall not lose your way". _Judge Holden, Cormac McCarthy's, BLOOD MERIDIAN.
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12-22-2014 #30
Re: Immigration Reform - exclusive Order
Undocumented is actually a very good way to describe the immigrants who are living and working here. It is the same for the the ancestors of 95% of Americans. I love the conceit of those Americans who are descended from Europeans who emigrated here in the late 1800's and early 1900's. They seem to lose sight of the fact that their grandparents and great grandparents entered the US without any papers or documents approving their emigration beforehand. Ellis Island and other entry points weren't checking people's papers. They were checking for disease and then letting hoardes of people pass on through. No one had papers.
My own grandparents entered through the port of Baltimore from Germany. They had nothing except bare travel expenses to the Great Plains where the government gave them 160 acres of land for free. If you don't think you have a similar grandparent or two in your family tree, then you're not looking hard enough.
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