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REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS
Stand with Arizona
Monday, May 10, 2010 7:42 PM
MOMCARP
Monday, May 10, 2010 8:56 PM
ANTIMASON
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: If I say I don't have any easy solutions, does that mean we should automatically jump to the worst "solution"? If memory serves, weren't you of the "do nothing" persuasion when it came to healthcare reform? What was YOUR solution to that issue? Since you didn't have an easy, workable solution, can we assume that you approve fully of the insurance mandate? Or can we deduce that while you might not know what the answer IS, you know what answer you DON'T WANT?
Quote: You're offering a false dichotomy, a non-choice. "If you don't like this, then what?" That's rather like telling someone they have terminal cancer, 6 months to live, and then handing them a .45 and telling them if they don't have a better solution, they really should shoot themselves. Now. Sooner would be better, because we need the room and the medicine for people who aren't needlessly wasting oxygen.
Quote: It's not racist to want an orderly immigration policy. That's where you're conflating the issues. Applying one set of standards TO EVERY SINGLE PERSON WHO COMES INTO THE COUNTRY is not the issue. If it were, there'd be no issue at all. We're talking about this because there's a new law on the books that is NOT treating everyone equally, and is designed from its inception to single out a particular group of people based solely on their appearance.
Quote: And as I've pointed out before, do you REALLY want to make the case for America by pointing out how bad Mexico is? Really? Pointing out how tough their rules are, as a way to show how tough ours should be, doesn't seem like the smart choice. Let's take gun ownership, for instance. It's damned near impossible to legally own a gun in Mexico. Should we do that here? Wouldn't it cut down drastically on crime, both here AND there, if guns weren't so easily obtainable here? [note to Frem: I'm *NOT* arguing that or going down that road; I'm merely using that ludicrous example as being illustrative of the kind of arguments that line of logic can take you through.]
Quote: So your logic is that, since we don't have a libertarian paradise, the next closest thing is to have a right-wing fascist police state? If you don't have your libertarian society, how does passing ever-more-intrusive laws regulating who and where people can be move you in any way CLOSER to that libertarian ideal?
Quote: See, THIS is where "libertarians" and tea baggers, as they tend to express themselves here, lose me completely. They SAY they want freedom for everyone, freedom from government intrusion and involvement - but when it comes down to brass tacks, they always seem to end up siding with big government and forceful rounding up of people who aren't them. How exactly is that any different from fascism?
Quote: why was your little sister in public school? You don't believe in public schools, remember? Why didn't you pay for her to go to private school? Why were you so willing to live off the government tit for your sister's education, and why are you so quick to deny others that same largesse?
Quote: And you know those people in the ER were illegal... HOW, exactly? Did you ask to see their papers? Or was it because they were in the ER? Wouldn't that make YOU illegal, too?
Quote: I don't pretend that European immigrants were never a point of contention. You seem to want to pretend that they were never singled out for discrimination ("No Italians!" signs, and "No Irish Need Apply" postings on the job board), or that it wasn't wrong to single them out. It was wrong then, and still is. Only this time it's aimed primarily (if not SOLELY) at "brown" people. To say that it's not is disingenuous at best, lying at worst.
Quote: Hey, if you want to tear down the Statue of Liberty, I'm sure there are some people who'd love to fly a few airliners into it for you.
Quote: I mean, since you want that besotted poem inscribed on its base gone so bad, you wouldn't mind if we just tore the whole bitch down and melted her for scrap, right? I mean, it's not like the founders of this nation ever wanted it to be a beacon of hope or a shining dream of what could be. "Give us your tired, your poor... Just not so many of them, and not so well-tanned, please."
Quote:I thought you were JUST arguing a couple days ago that the whole reason they came here was to work for less than minimum wage. Aren't you contradicting yourself when you claim that they aren't here to work?
Quote: As I've pointed out to you already, your own forebears did it. This nation is rich with history of people who fled nations for multitudes of reasons - wars, religious persecution, greener pastures, a better opportunity, or just because they were unpopular in their home countries. And every single one of them came here "demanding" nothing more than these illegals are "demanding": a chance to make for themselves a better life. And your entire attitude seems to be, "Fuck you, pal. I got mine, so nuts to you. Now get out."
Quote:Where did your ancestors come from? Why didn't they stay and try to reform their own country? Are you the product of weaklings, or cowards, or traitors, or deserters? Could they not organize, or were they so detestable that no decent country would have them? Yet you'd sit here in judgment of people who are fleeing death squads in nations where there can be no justice, where they can have no voice, and you're only too happy to tell them to shut the hell up and go back to where they belong, because while you're glad that your ancestors weren't turned away, you don't owe anyone else the same opportunities they were given by people far better and more American than you.
Tuesday, May 11, 2010 12:17 AM
FREMDFIRMA
Tuesday, May 11, 2010 3:51 AM
KWICKO
"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)
Quote:Originally posted by momcarp: I'm to the left of center. I've always worked my ass off, but now I work my ass off for less money, and yeah, I resent that. I do my own yard work, wash my own truck (and my Volvo P 1800), and when I do a remodel, I hire legal subs, and I'll take less money so that they can be paid what they're worth. Capitalism made this country great, and now it's f'ing it up, big time. The "righties" love to scream about illegals, while they hold open the back door for their illegal maid. Some kind of equilibrium needs to be reached, and it's not by opening the border, as the "bleeding hearts" so wish for.
Tuesday, May 11, 2010 4:58 AM
DREAMTROVE
Tuesday, May 11, 2010 5:03 AM
WULFENSTAR
http://youtu.be/VUnGTXRxGHg
Tuesday, May 11, 2010 5:37 AM
Tuesday, May 11, 2010 6:07 AM
ANTHONYT
Freedom is Important because People are Important
Tuesday, May 11, 2010 8:55 AM
HERO
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: Find in there where it says "reasonable suspicion" and a "lawful contact" are enough to search and/or seize someone.
Tuesday, May 11, 2010 1:41 PM
Tuesday, May 11, 2010 6:05 PM
NIKI2
Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...
Quote: My freedom is worth more to me than any 'security' this law claims to provide
Quote: The intelligent efforts have been aimed at the employers of illegal immigrants, and it is those efforts that are meeting success.
Quote: Time has "Person of the Year" - they should start having "Evil Shitbag of the Year" - Rush Limbaugh, not even close.
Quote: correlation being not equal to causation
Quote: A closer look at per capita homicide rates for each state from FBI Uniform Crime Reports Bureau of Justice Statistics indicate that Louisiana's per capita homicide rate has ranked 1st every single year from 1989 to 2008, which is 20 consecutive years. Southern states had the highest overall crime rates. Crime can also be isolated to one particular part of a state. Lafayette, Louisiana, for instance had 6 murders per 100,000 people in 2004, while New Orleans, Louisiana, had 35 murders per 100,000 people.[46] Almost all of the nation's wealthiest twenty states, which included northern mid-western and western states such as Wisconsin and California, had crime rates below the national average. In addition to having the country's lowest crime rates, New England states also had the country's highest median household income, while the Southern states have the lowest. This contrasts starkly to some of the nation's poorer states such as Georgia, Florida or Louisiana. Louisiana had a crime rate 27% and a homicide rate 130.9% above the national average and ranked as the nation's fourth poorest state with a median household income 20% below the national median. While poorer states generally have higher crime rates, several states who fell below the national median for household income such as Maine and Kentucky also had crime rates below the national average, while some wealthier states such as Maryland and Hawaii had crime rates above the national average
Quote: Phoenix police anticipated a drop in kidnapping reports in 2009 compared with the previous year, though with 302 filed through November, the numbers haven't decreased significantly. 2008's total of 359 earned Phoenix the nickname "kidnapping capital" of the U.S. Phoenix Home Invasion and Kidnapping Enforcement investigators say they have dismantled dozens of small gangs involved in kidnappings and home invasions, which led to a small drop in the overall numbers. Last month, crime analysts corrected the 2008 total the department shared with Congress and other federal authorities earlier in the year. The number was 368 when politicians used it earlier this year when requesting federal stimulus money to combat border-related violence. Phoenix recently revised the number to 359. A handful of kidnappings were either classified as other crimes or considered false reports, police said. For example, relatives of a woman who was arrested at a home in the Palomino neighborhood near 26th Street and Greenway Road told police she was led away by a group of unidentified gunmen. The men were actually agents from Immigrations and Customs Enforcement who had come to the home to arrest the woman on an immigration violation. Still, the report was filed as a kidnapping, detectives said.
Tuesday, May 11, 2010 6:06 PM
Quote: 25 years ago in CA, drywall companies started going out of business because their competitors were hiring cheap illegal labor. Then the concrete, tile, plumbing and carpentry trades were basically taken over by illegals.
Quote: In the city next door to us, there are at least 200,000 "undocumented guests" throwing trash in the street, standing in the parking lot at Home Depot, parking decrepit old cars on their lawns, pushing 4 or 5 kids around in a shopping cart, etc.
Quote: An American can never become a Mexican citizen (please correct me if I'm wrong) own property, vote, or collect public assistance.
Quote: In America, citizens of other countries march through the streets by the thousands demanding American citizenship
Quote:Have you ever been in close proximity (as in a work situation) to an undocumented, non English speaking person for 8 hours? Or issued directions to workers in Spanish because you were the only person on a jobsite who spoke English? Many Americans are egocentric in that they believe everyone should speak English; but the same can be said of "immigrants" who refuse to learn English.
Quote: The "righties" love to scream about illegals, while they hold open the back door for their illegal maid.
Quote: No one knows what the rehabilitation costs will be to try to "fix" untold thousands of soldiers who have been f'd up mentally and/or physically by the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. This is the most gut wrenching aspect of this f'd up mess.
Quote: if a democrat had come up with this, aerator or AURAptor as those who don't have auto spell check on call him, would be picking it apart as an exempt [sic] (did you mean “example”?) of the inherit racism of the democratic party dating back to the Jackson, instead of extolling the virtues of the bill, should there be any
Quote: But what the right DOESN'T want to do is hold employers responsible for their own actions. They seem to think that asking an employer to verify eligibility for employment is an unwarranted intrusion by big government (when it's been a requirement at every job I've ever held), but for some reason they don't think stopping people on the street with no probable cause and no warrant is NOT an unwarranted intrusion into one's privacy - provided, of course, that those people are the right shade of brown.
Quote: i never hear any criticism of the Mexican and S. American governments
Quote: the gall, to come here demanding things from Americans, when they have lacked the courage or organisation or resolve to reform the countries of their own births
Quote: this policy is racist and unconstitutional, and therefore it doesn't matter whether 1%, 50% or even 100% of the people of Arizona support it, it's still racist and unconstitutional - human rights bein universal and applying to either everyone, or no one.
Quote: More likely they will detain someone for another reason, such as a traffic stop. If the person detained cannot produce an ID then they can be further detained to determine who they are.
Tuesday, May 11, 2010 6:19 PM
Quote:The son of a decorated Vietnam veteran, Hector Veloz is a U.S. citizen, but in 2007 immigration officials mistook him for an illegal immigrant and locked him in an Arizona prison for 13 months. Veloz had to prove his citizenship from behind bars. An aunt helped him track down his father's birth certificate and his own, his parents' marriage certificate, his father's school, military and Social Security records. After nine months, a judge determined that he was a citizen, but immigration authorities appealed the decision. He was detained for five more months before he found legal help and a judge ordered his case dropped.
Quote:Hundreds of U.S. citizens have landed in the custody of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, struggling to prove they don't belong there. Some prisoners who are legal U.S. residents have remained locked up for many months because they can't produce the documents to prove their identity, hampered by the fact that immigration detainees don't have constitutional protections such as the right to counsel. Some who find themselves in the situation were born in other countries and acquired citizenship through a U.S.-born parent, or through a parent who became a naturalized citizen{I am one of those myself}. The American Civil Liberties Union Immigrants Rights Project says others have mental health problems and frequently they are poor. "These are people who are the most vulnerable," said Judy Rabinovitz, the project's deputy director. "People are being locked up without bond hearings, often for long periods." "The Constitution is the same that applies to U.S.-born citizens as to naturalized citizens," Sin Yen Ling of San Francisco's Asian Law Caucus told the Chronicle. "Detaining these folks is creating a third category of people with a different set of rights."
Wednesday, May 12, 2010 1:33 AM
AURAPTOR
America loves a winner!
Wednesday, May 12, 2010 2:01 AM
Quote:The trouble with fighting for human freedom is that one spends most of one's time defending scoundrels. For it is against scoundrels that oppressive laws are first aimed, and oppression must be stopped at the beginning if it is to be stopped at all. ~ H. L. Mencken
Wednesday, May 12, 2010 2:43 AM
Wednesday, May 12, 2010 3:12 AM
PIZMOBEACH
... fully loaded, safety off...
Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: Pizmo, you’re being extremely disingenuous to say no particular race is being targeted. Why would a cop ever detain a blonde, blue-eyed yuppie and ask to see her papers? There’s no question that only ONE race is coming across the border illegally, ergo only people of that race will be asked to show papers. It doesn’t have to be said, it’s OBVIOUS.
Wednesday, May 12, 2010 3:17 AM
Wednesday, May 12, 2010 3:24 AM
Wednesday, May 12, 2010 5:33 AM
Wednesday, May 12, 2010 6:18 AM
Wednesday, May 12, 2010 7:25 AM
Quote: And if a crime is committed by 1 illegal to another illegal, is it then NOT a crime ? Of course it is! You can't simply wave your hand and dismiss such acts didn't happen, or aren't a big deal, just because it wasn't against a U.S. citizen! That's absurd !! ( and racist, I might add ) If such high rates of crime are committed w/ in the U.S. borders, regardless of to whom, such activity will spread. At beat, innocent citizens will get caught up in the cross fire. This sort of activity can NOT go on unanswered.
Wednesday, May 12, 2010 7:37 AM
Quote:Originally posted by AURaptor: Frem Omit your childish, irrational profanity laced rants, and what's left isn't worth my time to bother with any sort of a response.
Quote: As for Limbaugh and calling Faisal a registered Democrat, he got it wrong. I can't find where he was the source of that piece of information, but he did repeat it.
Quote: As for Contessa Brewer, a bonafide news anchorette and reporter, she WAS the source of some blatantly idiotic and biased comments on the Times Square bomber, which only revealed what everyone already knew. The Left wants to demonize the Tea Party Americans more than they want report the truth about Militant Islamic terrorists.
Wednesday, May 12, 2010 7:46 AM
Wednesday, May 12, 2010 8:55 AM
Quote:And that's the sum total of your argument. You can't offer up any substantive, reasonable reply, other than dole out insults and dismissive, personal comments.
Quote:Quit making up shit. Either show some evidence or admit you can't
Quote:This is a good law, and will hold up to a barrage of wasteful, pointless litigation the Left will throw its way
Quote:allows local police to more effectively do their job
Quote: Omit your childish, irrational profanity laced rants, and what's left isn't worth my time to bother with any sort of a response
Quote: I'm always amused when the petulant little children pretend they're on the moral high ground and call others petulant children.
Quote: I can't find where he was the source of that piece of information
Wednesday, May 12, 2010 8:56 AM
Quote: all people who try and immigrate to this country
Quote:will you welcome any new brand of evil just because it purports to solve a problem?
Quote: You parrot his every talking point, every single day, and you try to claim it as reliable info
Wednesday, May 12, 2010 10:33 AM
Wednesday, May 12, 2010 11:00 AM
Wednesday, May 12, 2010 11:14 AM
Quote: So is it about the cheapest way or the quickest way to get here? And not the legal way? So if the legal way costs more and takes longer, then fuck it? That's what it sounds like and that's what it looks like.
Wednesday, May 12, 2010 11:50 AM
Thursday, May 13, 2010 6:59 AM
Quote:Originally posted by AnthonyT: "We definitely disagree about the point of this law. You see it as pure evil, designed to harass Latino Citizens, even encourage it. I think it was designed more as a deterrent to illegal immigration" Hello, Neither of us is in disagreement about the 'point' of the law. I don't think anyone sat down and said, "Hey, let's make a law so that we can harrass people." What we disagree on is the law's potential for misuse. To my mind, every law should be scrutinized to see how it can be misused, mishandled, and misapplied. Every new law represents a new threat on the freedoms of the citizenry. That threat must be carefully weighed against the benefits provided. I see ways to get all the same benefits without including that 'proof of citizenship' potentially be attached to any 'lawful contact.' Laws in Arizona recently became quite harsh on the employers of illegal immigrants. That's just fine with me. Eliminate incentive WITHOUT impacting the freedoms of the citizenry. And yes, by the way, all black markets (including black market immigration) surface when doing something legally is either difficult, prohibitively expensive, or impossible. There are two ways to eliminate the incentive for this behavior. A) Give the illegals no reason to want to be here, by eliminating their chances for employment. B) Make legal immigration a more open and simple process, so that we can absorb however many applicants wish to come here to work and live otherwise honest lives. Why not do both? Which part of 'eliminating incentive' requires citizens to whip out a Birth Certificate on command? It's the wrong angle to take. It's a bad law. A kneejerk reaction instead of a carefully contemplated one. It hasn't been weighed carefully to minimize the impact on citizens. It's a shotgun, when the country needed a rifle.
Thursday, May 13, 2010 7:04 AM
Thursday, May 13, 2010 7:31 AM
Thursday, May 13, 2010 7:59 AM
Thursday, May 13, 2010 8:03 AM
Thursday, May 13, 2010 8:58 AM
Thursday, May 13, 2010 9:25 AM
Thursday, May 13, 2010 10:09 AM
Thursday, May 13, 2010 10:42 AM
Quote:Originally posted by momcarp: Wow, you do write long posts. True, probable cause is pretty vague. Some people think their civil rights are violated by being stopped if they're driving over the speed limit. If I were driving in Mexico, the police could stop me for any reason, and I'd still need to have ID.
Quote: Every person in America for any reason should have ID, at least if they're driving.
Quote:My daughter and her husband live in Texas, and they've been pulled over a couple of times just because they have tattoos and drive an old Mercury. Pissed me off when I heard about it. They didn't like it, but it goes with the territory.
Quote: I agree with you that if the Feds would enforce the law against employers who hire illegals, would be no problem.
Thursday, May 13, 2010 1:23 PM
Thursday, May 13, 2010 1:30 PM
Thursday, May 13, 2010 7:14 PM
BLUESUNCOMPANYMAN
Quote:Originally posted by momcarp: This law is bulletproof, and the authors made every effort to work within the framework of the Constitution.
Friday, May 14, 2010 2:07 AM
Friday, May 14, 2010 3:20 AM
JONGSSTRAW
Friday, May 14, 2010 3:29 AM
Friday, May 14, 2010 3:45 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: By the way, sounds like you're all for boycotting Arizona. Thanks for your support
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