http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100424/ap_on_re_us/us_immigration_enforcement
I haven’t read too much about this law other than a couple news articles, but this makes me go huh?:
“The legislation, sent to the Republican governor by the GOP-led Legislature, makes it a crime under state law to be in the country illegally. It also requires local police officers to question people about their immigration status if there is reason to suspect they are illegal immigrants; allows lawsuits against government agencies that hinder enforcement of immigration laws; and makes it illegal to hire illegal immigrants for day labor or knowingly transport them.”
So, a bill needed to be enacted that makes it a crime to be in the country illegally. Umm…? Isn’t it already a crime when it’s illegal?
And there doesn’t seem to be anything wrong with anything they are trying to do here. In my opinion.
The Federal government has long dragged its heels in doing anything about a real problem that exists. Is this the right answer? I don’t know. I don’t live on the border in Arizona and have it effect my life on a daily basis. But here in California, we do have plenty. And in SoCal it’s a lot bigger problem. And since a majority of the people that do live there (in AZ) and deal with it daily want something done, it’s the State’s right, and responsibility, to do something.
And this:
“It’s going to change our lives,” said Emilio Almodovar, a 13-year-old American citizen from Phoenix. “We can’t walk to school any more. We can’t be in the streets anymore without the pigs thinking we’re illegal immigrants.”
Guess what you little brat? Thinking like that causes huge problems too. I don’t think a majority of the people who complain about immigration complain about the nice, quiet family down the street who just don’t have green cards. They are complaining about thugs, hoodlums, welfare cases, etc. So calling the police pigs leads me to believe you have done something illegal already – so you should just be sent to boot camp now.
I have no idea what the intricacies of the law are. I have no idea if this will solve any problems. But something has to be done about the volume of illegal immigration. And it’s very easy to live up North or in the East where you don’t have to deal with this as much and say how it’s unfair, illegal, unconstitutional, hate-mongering, racial profiling, wrong, etc, etc, etc, when YOU don’t have to deal with it in your yard.
I’m very much for making this a priority. Something has to be done to control immigration and legal entry/stays in this country. That shouldn’t be a dirty word or unthinkable. If you come enter this country illegally, you are committing a crime. That seems very black and white to me. Will it be easy to tackle and fix? I’m sure not by a long shot. And it will not please everyone. But nothing does. But someone has to start.
Just sayin...
3:32 am on April 24th, 2010
Sometimes common sense isn’t so common. The lawsuits that are sure to follow will challenge whether state law is per se illegal/unconstitutional because it violates federal immigration laws with it’s apparent zero tolerance provisions and targeting of one or two country’s citizens.
Personally, I can see how states would be fed up with the costs of border patrols, medical care, schooling, etc. that must be straining budgets. I wonder if this also applies to those Canadiens streaming over the northern border? ;)
9:38 am on April 24th, 2010
I can definitely see how states, and people, are fed up. The CA economy/budget is a joke but we keep offering free services and no one will stop it.
But I do wonder how we can possibly handle the Canadian influx/overflow too ;)
12:27 pm on April 25th, 2010
What the what? Isn’t our dollar worth more than yours right now? Why would we want to cross into the US and miss out on our yummy maple syrup, Canadian bacon and hanging out with our friendly neighbourhood wolves. Plus we don’t like how the yanks spell.
But I do agree with you on the illegal immigration front – my parents immigrated to Canada in the early ’60s because they enacted an “open door” policy to allow southern European labourers in – at the time they were “building” Canada and construction was booming – they needed workers. But that is no longer the case here.
In the southern US – I think it is even more complex – because the immigration issue and the protection of your borders is also wrapped up in drug trafficking and terror threats.