If they are protesting illegal immigrants being bussed into their towns it makes sense to protest in a manner that stops the buses.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.
All right, I can't deny the logic of that, but I hate these children having to hear it. There are also unconfirmed reports, from the radio, of people yelling directly at the kids, stuff like "Go back home you ####### wetbacks, you're not wanted here!" etc. If that really happened there's no way to justify it.If they are protesting illegal immigrants being bussed into their towns it makes sense to protest in a manner that stops the buses.Protesting somewhere else doesn't make a whole lot of sense.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.
I've walked through dozens of protests. They aren't exactly bastions of good manners and etiquette. Pissed off people tend to lash out in rude and/or vulgar manners.All right, I can't deny the logic of that, but I hate these children having to hear it. There are also unconfirmed reports, from the radio, of people yelling directly at the kids, stuff like "Go back home you ####### wetbacks, you're not wanted here!" etc. If that really happened there's no way to justify it.If they are protesting illegal immigrants being bussed into their towns it makes sense to protest in a manner that stops the buses.Protesting somewhere else doesn't make a whole lot of sense.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.
well thank god those kids dont speak englishAll right, I can't deny the logic of that, but I hate these children having to hear it. There are also unconfirmed reports, from the radio, of people yelling directly at the kids, stuff like "Go back home you ####### wetbacks, you're not wanted here!" etc. If that really happened there's no way to justify it.If they are protesting illegal immigrants being bussed into their towns it makes sense to protest in a manner that stops the buses.Protesting somewhere else doesn't make a whole lot of sense.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.
Well who is to blame then? Us? Or should it be the parents? You posted earlier that it SHOULD be the taxpayers responsibility. Are you ####### kidding me? Why? Why not the parents that are pumping out 6 kids they cannot/don't support? I pay a quarter of my paycheck in taxes and a good chunk goes to stuff I don't agree with. I'm tired of paying for bull####. It SHOULD be my responsibility? #### you #######. If I ever see you on the street, I will punch you in the brain. I'm sick of your liberal bull####. Your mentality is one of the reasons that this country is going down the ####ter.timschochet said: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.StrikeS2k said: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?timschochet said: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.
Tim never will learn when he needs to shut his pie hole.I think Timmy just got poopdawged
Does this mean that tim is off your Christmas card list, or am I reading too much into this?Well who is to blame then? Us? Or should it be the parents? You posted earlier that it SHOULD be the taxpayers responsibility. Are you ####### kidding me? Why? Why not the parents that are pumping out 6 kids they cannot/don't support? I pay a quarter of my paycheck in taxes and a good chunk goes to stuff I don't agree with. I'm tired of paying for bull####. It SHOULD be my responsibility? #### you #######. If I ever see you on the street, I will punch you in the brain. I'm sick of your liberal bull####. Your mentality is one of the reasons that this country is going down the ####ter.timschochet said: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.StrikeS2k said: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?timschochet said: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'm very strongly pro-immigration and I think you and I generally agree on a lot of this, but birthright citizenship is a stupid policy that nobody would ever choose if we were starting 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.
Not going to disagree with you, but I see that as the price we pay for something that overall makes a lot of sense and is a wonderful thing.I'm very strongly pro-immigration and I think you and I generally agree on a lot of this, but birthright citizenship is a stupid policy that nobody would ever choose if we were starting 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.
In most cases, a child born to illegals ought to be granted citizenship, because the US is the only country he or she has ever known. No problem there. But granting citizenship to a child of French parents who just happens to be born while they're passing through the country (hypothetical) is indefensible.
i just dont see how letting people into the country in unregulated droves is financially feasible in the long run...so many people who come here send more than half the money they earn here back to their native country,taking money from here and not putting it back. Those are the one who work,the ones that dont just get aid that we working people pay for ...i get your passion ,its a romantic idea ,just not realistic .Not going to disagree with you, but I see that as the price we pay for something that overall makes a lot of sense and is a wonderful thing.I'm very strongly pro-immigration and I think you and I generally agree on a lot of this, but birthright citizenship is a stupid policy that nobody would ever choose if we were starting 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.
In most cases, a child born to illegals ought to be granted citizenship, because the US is the only country he or she has ever known. No problem there. But granting citizenship to a child of French parents who just happens to be born while they're passing through the country (hypothetical) is indefensible.
How so?Busted Knuckles, to address just one of your points, about when they send money back to their own country: as Maurile Trembilay has pointed out many times, this is actually an economic positive for the US.
Long story short, and poorly explained...How so?Busted Knuckles, to address just one of your points, about when they send money back to their own country: as Maurile Trembilay has pointed out many times, this is actually an economic positive for the US.
Perhaps we should levy a fine/tax on all outgoing remittances sent out of the country. Since we've been taxed to the hilt, let illegals know just what they'll experience when they become "instant citizens."Long story short, and poorly explained...How so?Busted Knuckles, to address just one of your points, about when they send money back to their own country: as Maurile Trembilay has pointed out many times, this is actually an economic positive for the US.
They do some work (economic benefit to U.S.), U.S. gives them green pieces of paper. They send green pieces of paper to another country. If those green pieces of paper aren't used to purchase anything here, the U.S. essentially got work for paper.
Personally, I don't buy it, but that's the theory.
That's half the explanation. The other half is those green papers being used to buy stuff overseas increases the value of our currency.Long story short, and poorly explained...They do some work (economic benefit to U.S.), U.S. gives them green pieces of paper. They send green pieces of paper to another country. If those green pieces of paper aren't used to purchase anything here, the U.S. essentially got work for paper.How so?Busted Knuckles, to address just one of your points, about when they send money back to their own country: as Maurile Trembilay has pointed out many times, this is actually an economic positive for the US.
Personally, I don't buy it, but that's the theory.
Can you show your work on this? Well, before you do that, do you believe global economics work the same now as they did even 15 years ago? If so, nevermind.That's half the explanation. The other half is those green papers being used to buy stuff overseas increases the value of our currency.Long story short, and poorly explained...They do some work (economic benefit to U.S.), U.S. gives them green pieces of paper. They send green pieces of paper to another country. If those green pieces of paper aren't used to purchase anything here, the U.S. essentially got work for paper.How so?Busted Knuckles, to address just one of your points, about when they send money back to their own country: as Maurile Trembilay has pointed out many times, this is actually an economic positive for the US.
Personally, I don't buy it, but that's the theory.
these people are ignorant scumbags and i hope they all burn in hell. ####### disgusting.timschochet said: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.
Maurile has done some stellar work on this. I'll try to find a link later when I have time.Can you show your work on this? Well, before you do that, do you believe global economics work the same now as they did even 15 years ago? If so, nevermind.That's half the explanation. The other half is those green papers being used to buy stuff overseas increases the value of our currency.Long story short, and poorly explained...They do some work (economic benefit to U.S.), U.S. gives them green pieces of paper. They send green pieces of paper to another country. If those green pieces of paper aren't used to purchase anything here, the U.S. essentially got work for paper.How so?Busted Knuckles, to address just one of your points, about when they send money back to their own country: as Maurile Trembilay has pointed out many times, this is actually an economic positive for the US.
Personally, I don't buy it, but that's the theory.
I didn't ask for Maurile's work....I asked for yours. Doesn't matter. Move on.Maurile has done some stellar work on this. I'll try to find a link later when I have time.Can you show your work on this? Well, before you do that, do you believe global economics work the same now as they did even 15 years ago? If so, nevermind.That's half the explanation. The other half is those green papers being used to buy stuff overseas increases the value of our currency.Long story short, and poorly explained...They do some work (economic benefit to U.S.), U.S. gives them green pieces of paper. They send green pieces of paper to another country. If those green pieces of paper aren't used to purchase anything here, the U.S. essentially got work for paper.How so?Busted Knuckles, to address just one of your points, about when they send money back to their own country: as Maurile Trembilay has pointed out many times, this is actually an economic positive for the US.
Personally, I don't buy it, but that's the theory.
Ah, so unless it comes from me personally it's invalid to you? I suppose that's a compliment, though certainly an absurd one which I don't deserve. I'mNot smart enough to figure out this stuff on my own. Until I read Maurile's argument here a few years back, I assumed that people who sent money to other countries was bad for us, like everyone else.I didn't ask for Maurile's work....I asked for yours. Doesn't matter. Move on.Maurile has done some stellar work on this. I'll try to find a link later when I have time.Can you show your work on this? Well, before you do that, do you believe global economics work the same now as they did even 15 years ago? If so, nevermind.That's half the explanation. The other half is those green papers being used to buy stuff overseas increases the value of our currency.Long story short, and poorly explained...They do some work (economic benefit to U.S.), U.S. gives them green pieces of paper. They send green pieces of paper to another country. If those green pieces of paper aren't used to purchase anything here, the U.S. essentially got work for paper.How so?Busted Knuckles, to address just one of your points, about when they send money back to their own country: as Maurile Trembilay has pointed out many times, this is actually an economic positive for the US.
Personally, I don't buy it, but that's the theory.
What do you mean you don't buy it?Long story short, and poorly explained...They do some work (economic benefit to U.S.), U.S. gives them green pieces of paper. They send green pieces of paper to another country. If those green pieces of paper aren't used to purchase anything here, the U.S. essentially got work for paper.How so?Busted Knuckles, to address just one of your points, about when they send money back to their own country: as Maurile Trembilay has pointed out many times, this is actually an economic positive for the US.
Personally, I don't buy it, but that's the theory.
First off, these kids have nothing to do with securing the border. They showed up AT the border; they did not attempt to cross it illegally.I've never understood why we elect to not simply secure our border. If we secure ours, Mexico will eventually have to secure theirs to the south or face the flood themselves. I have sympathy for many of these kids, but we simply can't take everyone because it's safer here or we have a better standard of living, at least for the time being.
Wow, aren't you an ignorant tool. Threatening people on the internet? What are you, 5'6 135 pounds?Well who is to blame then? Us? Or should it be the parents? You posted earlier that it SHOULD be the taxpayers responsibility. Are you ####### kidding me? Why? Why not the parents that are pumping out 6 kids they cannot/don't support? I pay a quarter of my paycheck in taxes and a good chunk goes to stuff I don't agree with. I'm tired of paying for bull####. It SHOULD be my responsibility? #### you #######. If I ever see you on the street, I will punch you in the brain. I'm sick of your liberal bull####. Your mentality is one of the reasons that this country is going down the ####ter.timschochet said: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.StrikeS2k said: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?timschochet said: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.
They've seen school programs cut every year, along with everything else, and the local politicians blame illegal immigrants, because they're an easy target, and nobody challenges it. It makes me sick but I can't blame the Sarnoffs of the world for thinking as they do. This is what they've been taught.How ####### embarrassing this is for those of us in SoCal. Idiots up in Murrieta should be ashamed of themselves.
The bottom line is any immigration reform begins with securing the border and if that means a wall---that means a wall. If that means guard towers--that means guards. If that means by any means necessary--that's what it means.First off, these kids have nothing to do with securing the border. They showed up AT the border; they did not attempt to cross it illegally.I've never understood why we elect to not simply secure our border. If we secure ours, Mexico will eventually have to secure theirs to the south or face the flood themselves. I have sympathy for many of these kids, but we simply can't take everyone because it's safer here or we have a better standard of living, at least for the time being.
Second, what do you specifically mean by "simply secure our border"? Are you calling, as Sarnoff is, for a wall? Or do you have something else in mind?
Putting aside the main issue here (we disagree on that, we've argued it before, that's fine) I really don't think you're correct about Obama. I wish Obama was as open to illegal immigration as some conservatives try to paint him. But the truth is actually quite different: I think Obama has allocated more resources to the border than any previous President. And he is actually talking about issuing executive orders to do more to tighten up the border. (He is of course pushing for a path to citizenship for those illegals already here, but that has no bearing on the tightening of the border.)The bottom line is any immigration reform begins with securing the border and if that means a wall---that means a wall. If that means guard towers--that means guards. If that means by any means necessary--that's what it means.First off, these kids have nothing to do with securing the border. They showed up AT the border; they did not attempt to cross it illegally.I've never understood why we elect to not simply secure our border. If we secure ours, Mexico will eventually have to secure theirs to the south or face the flood themselves. I have sympathy for many of these kids, but we simply can't take everyone because it's safer here or we have a better standard of living, at least for the time being.
Second, what do you specifically mean by "simply secure our border"? Are you calling, as Sarnoff is, for a wall? Or do you have something else in mind?
Tim I think your heart is in the right place, but none of what you propose means anything if there is not an enforcement method. You can't say here is the speed limit, but people can drive whatever speed they want because they know there is no chance of a ticket. And that applies with what is happening here. We need to hang the "NO VACANCY" sign out and mean it.
Listen I don't agree with the president on a lot. I have made that clear in the past, but in the same token, the GOP doesn't exactly welcome me because I tend to be more central leaning in my beliefs (especially since I am pro-choice). But this current crisis is caused by Obama--there is no refuting this. We can argue until we are blue in the face about what ultimate immigration reform should look like, but the bottom line is people in Central American believe that they can get amnesty here. They may have believed that to a lesser extent before, but in the numbers that are being seen at the border currently, this surge is a direct result of Obama's use and willingness to use Executive Orders to advance his agenda.
We need to send them back now. Once the planes start flying back loaded down with children---parents will stop sending their kids.
It will just happen naturally. But instead we have a president who has created a crisis and now wants to exploit it for political gain instead of just sending them home.
It is going to ugly fast and I am guessing the protests we are seeing are only the tip of the iceberg of what is to come.
Congress' inability to pass immigration reform is President Obama's fault?The bottom line is any immigration reform begins with securing the border and if that means a wall---that means a wall. If that means guard towers--that means guards. If that means by any means necessary--that's what it means.Tim I think your heart is in the right place, but none of what you propose means anything if there is not an enforcement method. You can't say here is the speed limit, but people can drive whatever speed they want because they know there is no chance of a ticket. And that applies with what is happening here. We need to hang the "NO VACANCY" sign out and mean it.First off, these kids have nothing to do with securing the border. They showed up AT the border; they did not attempt to cross it illegally.Second, what do you specifically mean by "simply secure our border"? Are you calling, as Sarnoff is, for a wall? Or do you have something else in mind?I've never understood why we elect to not simply secure our border. If we secure ours, Mexico will eventually have to secure theirs to the south or face the flood themselves. I have sympathy for many of these kids, but we simply can't take everyone because it's safer here or we have a better standard of living, at least for the time being.
Listen I don't agree with the president on a lot. I have made that clear in the past, but in the same token, the GOP doesn't exactly welcome me because I tend to be more central leaning in my beliefs (especially since I am pro-choice). But this current crisis is caused by Obama--there is no refuting this. We can argue until we are blue in the face about what ultimate immigration reform should look like, but the bottom line is people in Central American believe that they can get amnesty here. They may have believed that to a lesser extent before, but in the numbers that are being seen at the border currently, this surge is a direct result of Obama's use and willingness to use Executive Orders to advance his agenda.
We need to send them back now. Once the planes start flying back loaded down with children---parents will stop sending their kids.
It will just happen naturally. But instead we have a president who has created a crisis and now wants to exploit it for political gain instead of just sending them home.
It is going to ugly fast and I am guessing the protests we are seeing are only the tip of the iceberg of what is to come.
Politics. It isn't PC to secure the border plain and simple. There is also probably a disconnect between the reality of the border/illegal immigration situation that residents of 4 states see and what the other 46 states only hear about through the media/politicians. If anyone from the other 46 spent a year living near the border they may be more open minded to securing it.I've never understood why we elect to not simply secure our border. If we secure ours, Mexico will eventually have to secure theirs to the south or face the flood themselves. I have sympathy for many of these kids, but we simply can't take everyone because it's safer here or we have a better standard of living, at least for the time being.
Not even just the work that US citizens won't do, they do work that plenty of US citizens would do just at a much cheaper rate.You want to stop illegals from coming in, that is very easy to do. Start punishing those that hire the illegals, but neither party will do that since big business needs the illegals that will do work that US citizens will not do.
This is the very essence of capitalism.Not even just the work that US citizens won't do, they do work that plenty of US citizens would do just at a much cheaper rate.You want to stop illegals from coming in, that is very easy to do. Start punishing those that hire the illegals, but neither party will do that since big business needs the illegals that will do work that US citizens will not do.
They can't speak English so it doesn't matter what you yell at them.All right, I can't deny the logic of that, but I hate these children having to hear it. There are also unconfirmed reports, from the radio, of people yelling directly at the kids, stuff like "Go back home you ####### wetbacks, you're not wanted here!" etc. If that really happened there's no way to justify it.If they are protesting illegal immigrants being bussed into their towns it makes sense to protest in a manner that stops the buses.Protesting somewhere else doesn't make a whole lot of sense.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.timschochet said: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 mean, I don't buy the conclusion in the current global world. Those dollars can be used to buy oil on the world market, or converted to pesos/yen/pounds, or a thousand other things, all of which mean the U.S. isn't actually getting something (labor) for nothing (some green paper).What do you mean you don't buy it?Long story short, and poorly explained...They do some work (economic benefit to U.S.), U.S. gives them green pieces of paper. They send green pieces of paper to another country. If those green pieces of paper aren't used to purchase anything here, the U.S. essentially got work for paper.How so?Busted Knuckles, to address just one of your points, about when they send money back to their own country: as Maurile Trembilay has pointed out many times, this is actually an economic positive for the US.
Personally, I don't buy it, but that's the theory.
It's illegal for businesses to pay less than minimum wage. It's not the essence of capitalism to allow different rules for different groups. That is, it's not a level playing field if illegals can accept $5/hour without government interference, but US citizens can only accept $8.25.This is the very essence of capitalism.Not even just the work that US citizens won't do, they do work that plenty of US citizens would do just at a much cheaper rate.You want to stop illegals from coming in, that is very easy to do. Start punishing those that hire the illegals, but neither party will do that since big business needs the illegals that will do work that US citizens will not do.
No, it's not invalid. I've read Maurile's work. Parts I buy, others I don't. I was asking YOU for YOUR work because I wanted to hear YOUR work. I thought you had thoughts of your own on this subject. Learned that wasn't the case and decided to move on. Not really interested in you regurgitating other peoples' work.Ah, so unless it comes from me personally it's invalid to you? I suppose that's a compliment, though certainly an absurd one which I don't deserve. I'mNot smart enough to figure out this stuff on my own. Until I read Maurile's argument here a few years back, I assumed that people who sent money to other countries was bad for us, like everyone else.I didn't ask for Maurile's work....I asked for yours. Doesn't matter. Move on.Maurile has done some stellar work on this. I'll try to find a link later when I have time.Can you show your work on this? Well, before you do that, do you believe global economics work the same now as they did even 15 years ago? If so, nevermind.That's half the explanation. The other half is those green papers being used to buy stuff overseas increases the value of our currency.Long story short, and poorly explained...They do some work (economic benefit to U.S.), U.S. gives them green pieces of paper. They send green pieces of paper to another country. If those green pieces of paper aren't used to purchase anything here, the U.S. essentially got work for paper.How so?Busted Knuckles, to address just one of your points, about when they send money back to their own country: as Maurile Trembilay has pointed out many times, this is actually an economic positive for the US.
Personally, I don't buy it, but that's the theory.