MC Gas Money
Footballguy
2920
Thats the projected year we take back america
Thats the projected year we take back america
We are currently in the days of pre-2920s, right?Yes, I'd like to see us return to the days of pre-2920s immigration policies, but I acknowledge that will never happen. So I support the "Path to Citizenship" ideas that were proposed by Bush and now Rubio. And I will reluctantly accept the trade off of tighter controls on our borders (even a fence in some places if we must) in exchange for legal recognition and a road to citizenship for those already here. I am willing to compromise. Are you?StrikeS2k said:Tim's solution is to simply let anyone who wants to come here. And he calls others simplistic.Sarnoff said:Tim offers no solutions of his own, preferring to belittle the whole problem. And offers no concrete reason to be against the proposed fence along our southern borders.
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I always assumed he was from the future.We are currently in the days of pre-2920s, right?Yes, I'd like to see us return to the days of pre-2920s immigration policies, but I acknowledge that will never happen. So I support the "Path to Citizenship" ideas that were proposed by Bush and now Rubio. And I will reluctantly accept the trade off of tighter controls on our borders (even a fence in some places if we must) in exchange for legal recognition and a road to citizenship for those already here. I am willing to compromise. Are you?StrikeS2k said:Tim's solution is to simply let anyone who wants to come here. And he calls others simplistic.Sarnoff said:Tim offers no solutions of his own, preferring to belittle the whole problem. And offers no concrete reason to be against the proposed fence along our southern borders.
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No, you're not willing to compromise. You refuse to budge at all from the position that we must reward those here illegally with citizenship. I've proposed many other solutions, but you refuse to compromise in the slightest.Yes, I'd like to see us return to the days of pre-2920s immigration policies, but I acknowledge that will never happen. So I support the "Path to Citizenship" ideas that were proposed by Bush and now Rubio. And I will reluctantly accept the trade off of tighter controls on our borders (even a fence in some places if we must) in exchange for legal recognition and a road to citizenship for those already here. I am willing to compromise. Are you?StrikeS2k said:Tim's solution is to simply let anyone who wants to come here. And he calls others simplistic.Sarnoff said:Tim offers no solutions of his own, preferring to belittle the whole problem. And offers no concrete reason to be against the proposed fence along our southern borders.
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I remember some of your solutions. I actually found them to be quite reasonable and thoughtful, and certainly a willingness to compromise from your original position. I believe I gave you credit for that here.No, you're not willing to compromise. You refuse to budge at all from the position that we must reward those here illegally with citizenship. I've proposed many other solutions, but you refuse to compromise in the slightest.Yes, I'd like to see us return to the days of pre-2920s immigration policies, but I acknowledge that will never happen. So I support the "Path to Citizenship" ideas that were proposed by Bush and now Rubio. And I will reluctantly accept the trade off of tighter controls on our borders (even a fence in some places if we must) in exchange for legal recognition and a road to citizenship for those already here. I am willing to compromise. Are you?StrikeS2k said:Tim's solution is to simply let anyone who wants to come here. And he calls others simplistic.Sarnoff said:Tim offers no solutions of his own, preferring to belittle the whole problem. And offers no concrete reason to be against the proposed fence along our southern borders.
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You will fail, but the good news is this is a messageboard so all of your self-important babble is meaningless anyways.Would this be acceptable to anyone here? (I'm trying to reach a consensus, I really am.)
The Berlin Wall analogy really isn't accurate, because they were trying to keep people from leaving. You didn't touch on my main reason, actually. I'm a strong believer in free trade, and that starts with Mexico. I believe this wall would antagonize our relationship with Mexico and threaten our trade with them. The symbolism of a fence between us and the Mexicans, keeping them out, would create a level of hostility between the two countries that would threaten our relationship. It could lead to the rise of radical, populist elements (such as the mayor of Mexico City, who is basically a clone of the former Presidrnt of Venezuela). So that's the main reason I'm against this idea.Tim, why are you vehemently against a fence? Too much of a Berlin Wall feel or something? If everyone is forced to enter/exit through checkpoints why is that a problem? The only reasons it would be a problem are the cost to construct/maintain, or you think having to be checked at the border is wrong.
I hope it's the former because the latter reason is assinine.
I don't get it.The Berlin Wall analogy really isn't accurate, because they were trying to keep people from leaving. You didn't touch on my main reason, actually. I'm a strong believer in free trade, and that starts with Mexico. I believe this wall would antagonize our relationship with Mexico and threaten our trade with them. The symbolism of a fence between us and the Mexicans, keeping them out, would create a level of hostility between the two countries that would threaten our relationship. It could lead to the rise of radical, populist elements (such as the mayor of Mexico City, who is basically a clone of the former Presidrnt of Venezuela). So that's the main reason I'm against this idea.Tim, why are you vehemently against a fence? Too much of a Berlin Wall feel or something? If everyone is forced to enter/exit through checkpoints why is that a problem? The only reasons it would be a problem are the cost to construct/maintain, or you think having to be checked at the border is wrong.
I hope it's the former because the latter reason is assinine.
This is completely untrue. Not only am I 100% willing to allow them to apply for citizenship in the exact same manner that all other prospective non-citizens must use, I'm not even proposing any punishment for breaking the law in the first place. What I'm not willing to do is reward illegals for breaking the law. What message does that send to those who have applied for citizenship legally?I remember some of your solutions. I actually found them to be quite reasonable and thoughtful, and certainly a willingness to compromise from your original position. I believe I gave you credit for that here.No, you're not willing to compromise. You refuse to budge at all from the position that we must reward those here illegally with citizenship. I've proposed many other solutions, but you refuse to compromise in the slightest.Yes, I'd like to see us return to the days of pre-2920s immigration policies, but I acknowledge that will never happen. So I support the "Path to Citizenship" ideas that were proposed by Bush and now Rubio. And I will reluctantly accept the trade off of tighter controls on our borders (even a fence in some places if we must) in exchange for legal recognition and a road to citizenship for those already here. I am willing to compromise. Are you?StrikeS2k said:Tim's solution is to simply let anyone who wants to come here. And he calls others simplistic.Sarnoff said:Tim offers no solutions of his own, preferring to belittle the whole problem. And offers no concrete reason to be against the proposed fence along our southern borders.
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Ultimately the reason I couldn't accept them is because although you are willing, under certain conditions, to allow the illegals to stay in this country, you're not willing to grant them citizenship under any conditions. In effect, what you are doing is creating a permanent underclass. I can never agree to that. If that makes me, in your mind, uncompromising, so be it. I hate these people having to wait, but I can live with that. I hate the idea of tighter border restrictions, and I REALLY hate the idea of a fence, which I think is the height of stupidity. But I am willing to accept those conditions, very reluctantly, in the spirit of compromise. What I can't accept is never allowing these people a chance at citizenship, no matter how well they behave once they get here. I just think that's wrong.
I'm going to take the extraordinary step of agreeing with Tim on the wall thing.The Berlin Wall analogy really isn't accurate, because they were trying to keep people from leaving.You didn't touch on my main reason, actually. I'm a strong believer in free trade, and that starts with Mexico. I believe this wall would antagonize our relationship with Mexico and threaten our trade with them. The symbolism of a fence between us and the Mexicans, keeping them out, would create a level of hostility between the two countries that would threaten our relationship. It could lead to the rise of radical, populist elements (such as the mayor of Mexico City, who is basically a clone of the former Presidrnt of Venezuela). So that's the main reason I'm against this idea.Tim, why are you vehemently against a fence? Too much of a Berlin Wall feel or something? If everyone is forced to enter/exit through checkpoints why is that a problem? The only reasons it would be a problem are the cost to construct/maintain, or you think having to be checked at the border is wrong.
I hope it's the former because the latter reason is assinine.
Under current law, wouldn't children born here be citizens anyway? I'm not really a fan of that law, to be honest, as it seems to reward law-breaking. Were I in charge, I'd want to modify that law as part of any compromise. Specifically, here's the problem: I would want to create a guest worker program for the future, allowing foreigners to live and work here legally. I would want to include those already here under that program, without penalty. But I wouldn't want to grant those already here any special status that isn't granted to the first guest workers who come over after the law is passed. So, any citizenship-granting provision would have to apply equally to those already here and those who come here afterward. Perhaps a law that included a time period, such as "arrived in the US prior to age N, lived in the US with parents through age Q" confers citizenship would work for me. The simple law of "born here confers citizenship" doesn't work for me, when we're allowing all comers in via a guest worker program.I do have one more compromise to offer: we could allow illegals to stay, under certain conditions, and be treated with equality under the law, but because of how they got here, they could never be citizens- so long as their children who are born here would be citizens without any cloud attached to them. A sort of "second generation Path to Citizenship" if you will. That way we avoid giving amnesty to illegals, and they would be deprived of most social programs (except those of public health)- but they would be allowed to stay and their children would have access to everything that the rest of us do.
Would this be acceptable to anyone here? (I'm trying to reach a consensus, I really am.)
http://www.ontheissues.org/2008/Barack_Obama_Immigration.htmQ: Do you think your vote on the border fence or the implementation of it was wrong?
A: The key is to consult with local communities, whether it’s on the commercial interests or the environmental stakes of creating any kind of barrier. The Bush administration is not real good at listening. I will reverse that policy. There may be areas where it makes sense to have some fencing. Having border patrolled, surveillance, deploying effective technology, that’s going to be the better approach.
Source: 2008 Democratic debate at University of Texas in Austin Feb 21, 2008
That's not a law. That's (yet another) poor legal interpretation by the SCOTUS. From Wiki:Under current law, wouldn't children born here be citizens anyway? I'm not really a fan of that law, to be honest, as it seems to reward law-breaking. Were I in charge, I'd want to modify that law as part of any compromise.I do have one more compromise to offer: we could allow illegals to stay, under certain conditions, and be treated with equality under the law, but because of how they got here, they could never be citizens- so long as their children who are born here would be citizens without any cloud attached to them. A sort of "second generation Path to Citizenship" if you will. That way we avoid giving amnesty to illegals, and they would be deprived of most social programs (except those of public health)- but they would be allowed to stay and their children would have access to everything that the rest of us do.
Would this be acceptable to anyone here? (I'm trying to reach a consensus, I really am.)
I believe it would take a constitutional amendment to change that at this point which, unfortunately, I don't see happening. I suppose they could reinterpret the 14th but I don't see that happening either.The Citizenship Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution indicates that "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States." The Supreme Court of the United States ruled in United States v. Wong Kim Ark, 169 U.S. 649 (1898), that the Fourteenth Amendment guarantees citizenship for nearly all individuals born in the country, regardless of their parents' citizenship or immigration status
As I mentioned before, if your purpose is to demonstrate that our leading Democrats have been weak ### hypocrites on this issue, be my guest. They have. In many cases they're far worse than the conservatives I'm always arguing here because they're disingenuous. They don't care about solving this problem; they're just looking for votes from Latinos. They'll get them.What's funny about this isn't about the law, we have a law, it's the failure to enforce the law.
Why would we put up a wall when we won't even try to put enough agents on the border?
Didn't Obama as Senator actually vote for a border fence? And as president he won't
http://www.ontheissues.org/2008/Barack_Obama_Immigration.htmQ: Do you think your vote on the border fence or the implementation of it was wrong?
A: The key is to consult with local communities, whether its on the commercial interests or the environmental stakes of creating any kind of barrier. The Bush administration is not real good at listening. I will reverse that policy. There may be areas where it makes sense to have some fencing. Having border patrolled, surveillance, deploying effective technology, thats going to be the better approach.
Source: 2008 Democratic debate at University of Texas in Austin Feb 21, 2008
The whole thing is ludicrous.
Tim further up I tried to agree with you. What can I say I agree.As I mentioned before, if your purpose is to demonstrate that our leading Democrats have been weak ### hypocrites on this issue, be my guest. They have. In many cases they're far worse than the conservatives I'm always arguing here because they're disingenuous. They don't care about solving this problem; they're just looking for votes from Latinos. They'll get them.What's funny about this isn't about the law, we have a law, it's the failure to enforce the law.
Why would we put up a wall when we won't even try to put enough agents on the border?
Didn't Obama as Senator actually vote for a border fence? And as president he won't
http://www.ontheissues.org/2008/Barack_Obama_Immigration.htmQ: Do you think your vote on the border fence or the implementation of it was wrong?
A: The key is to consult with local communities, whether its on the commercial interests or the environmental stakes of creating any kind of barrier. The Bush administration is not real good at listening. I will reverse that policy. There may be areas where it makes sense to have some fencing. Having border patrolled, surveillance, deploying effective technology, thats going to be the better approach.
Source: 2008 Democratic debate at University of Texas in Austin Feb 21, 2008
The whole thing is ludicrous.
Look at it from another perspective. Pretend we were designing a brand new system, from the ground up, with ZERO existing laws on the books. What system would we design? That's the system I want to put in now. Forget the mistakes of the past, whatever they are, and design the right system from scratch.Rich I tried to find common ground with you but we are just too far apart. You and Sarnoff and Strike want to change the law so that children born here to illegals aren't citizens, and I could never abide that. We're moving in opposite directions.
Which is fine. Though things look bleak for my side right now, I'm pretty confident that eventually we will defeat your side on this issue, and push through a Path to Citizenship. Dunno how long it will take, but it will happen.
That wouldn't change our disagreement. Ultimately I see illegals as a good thing, and consider their breaking the law to get here to be a positive (and the law itself to be a minor one) and would like to see them rewarded and encourage more to come. You disagree on all of this. Whether we start from scratch makes no difference because we just don't see this the same way.Look at it from another perspective. Pretend we were designing a brand new system, from the ground up, with ZERO existing laws on the books. What system would we design? That's the system I want to put in now. Forget the mistakes of the past, whatever they are, and design the right system from scratch.Rich I tried to find common ground with you but we are just too far apart. You and Sarnoff and Strike want to change the law so that children born here to illegals aren't citizens, and I could never abide that. We're moving in opposite directions.
Which is fine. Though things look bleak for my side right now, I'm pretty confident that eventually we will defeat your side on this issue, and push through a Path to Citizenship. Dunno how long it will take, but it will happen.
We don't, and that's fine. But if you were to design a system from the ground up, you'd never in a million years go with "people already born can't become citizens, people born on that side of the border can't become citizens, but people born on this side are citizens".That wouldn't change our disagreement. Ultimately I see illegals as a good thing, and consider their breaking the law to get here to be a positive (and the law itself to be a minor one) and would like to see them rewarded and encourage more to come. You disagree on all of this. Whether we start from scratch makes no difference because we just don't see this the same way.Look at it from another perspective. Pretend we were designing a brand new system, from the ground up, with ZERO existing laws on the books. What system would we design? That's the system I want to put in now. Forget the mistakes of the past, whatever they are, and design the right system from scratch.Rich I tried to find common ground with you but we are just too far apart. You and Sarnoff and Strike want to change the law so that children born here to illegals aren't citizens, and I could never abide that. We're moving in opposite directions.
Which is fine. Though things look bleak for my side right now, I'm pretty confident that eventually we will defeat your side on this issue, and push through a Path to Citizenship. Dunno how long it will take, but it will happen.
No, it wouldn't be that different, which is my point. Your idea here is to "compromise" on a solution that's clearly moronic just because it's somewhere between what the two sides want. My idea is to come up with a different solution altogether, and look at factors other than "exact location of birth".Well of course not. But Im guessing the way I would solve that inconsistency would be 180 degrees from yours, lol
So if your sister went on vacation and had a fling that resulted in a pregnancy and she came back and decided she wanted to keep the kid you'd tell her your niece or nephew can't be a citizen?I would change that law in the first place. You should only be an automatic citizen if you’re born here to two legal parents.
Give Tim the address....he can be the official welcoming committeeSo apparently the solution is to ship them to my city in California...process them...and then drop them off at bus stops.
140 arrive this Tuesday and more will come every 72 hours.
Give Tim the address....he can be the official welcoming committeeSo apparently the solution is to ship them to my city in California...process them...and then drop them off at bus stops.
140 arrive this Tuesday and more will come every 72 hours.
Shhhhh.Give Tim the address....he can be the official welcoming committeeSo apparently the solution is to ship them to my city in California...process them...and then drop them off at bus stops.
140 arrive this Tuesday and more will come every 72 hours.![]()
I'm sure as we speak he's getting spanish language copies of his his Mr Ishida novel printed up for the gift baskets.
sounds like something that would happen in North Korea....A government-contracted security force threatened to arrest doctors and nurses if they divulged any information about the contagion threat at a refugee camp housing illegal alien children at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas, sources say.
'muricahttp://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2014/07/02/medical-staff-warned-keep-quiet-about-illegal-immigrants-or-face-arrest/
sounds like something that would happen in North Korea....A government-contracted security force threatened to arrest doctors and nurses if they divulged any information about the contagion threat at a refugee camp housing illegal alien children at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas, sources say.
I saw this on the news this morning. The situation is really out of hand.
Don't worry, Tim says this won't be a problem in his lifetime and I'm sure you can take that to the bank brotasauras.To those advocating accepting these people into our "system".... at what point do we stop doing so?
100 per week?
1000 per week?
10,000 per week?
Once word is out what they get when they get over the fence, you're going to have a jailbreak on your hands.
There's no answer I can give you that you will accept. The easy answer is that we stop at the point at which they are greater a burden to our society than any possible benefit they could provide. But most of you seem to believe we've passed that point long since. I disagree, but my view represents a small minority of opinion.To those advocating accepting these people into our "system".... at what point do we stop doing so?
100 per week?
1000 per week?
10,000 per week?
Once word is out what they get when they get over the fence, you're going to have a jailbreak on your hands.
There is no endgame.What's the end game here? Build giant federally run foster towns? Dump them in the inner cities?
Maquiladores outside Nogales is the plan. Cheap, near slave labor.What's the end game here? Build giant federally run foster towns? Dump them in the inner cities?
they shouldn't be going to California. They should be going back where they came. Then we wouldn't have to worry about it, would we?I think it's classless and disgusting for people to protest in front of children and make them feel unwanted. Whatever your views on this issue and on illegal immigration in general, children are not villains; they are victims, and booing their arrival (which happened the last few days in California) is not what this country should be about.
We won't agree on that, but either way, it's still wrong to protest in front of them and yell ugliness at them. The kids aren't to blame.they shouldn't be going to California. They should be going back where they came. Then we wouldn't have to worry about it, would we?I think it's classless and disgusting for people to protest in front of children and make them feel unwanted. Whatever your views on this issue and on illegal immigration in general, children are not villains; they are victims, and booing their arrival (which happened the last few days in California) is not what this country should be about.
I agree the kids are in an unfair spot. I also sympathize with the people who were upset with the illegal aliens being shipped into their town. They did what they felt they needed to.I think it's classless and disgusting for people to protest in front of children and make them feel unwanted. Whatever your views on this issue and on illegal immigration in general, children are not villains; they are victims, and booing their arrival (which happened the last few days in California) is not what this country should be about.