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Old 04-05-2007, 12:42 PM   #161 (permalink)
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On my last dramatic note on this thread, I'd just like to state that the blackened cynic in me who thinks big, scary thoughts believes that mankind sealed its fate when it developed concepts like religion and national borders in order to separate and keep us apart. This is where my thinking on this issue stems from. I'm not of the mind that everyone on this thread taking a stand against illegal immigration is a racist or a xenophobe. (Although, I am hedging my bets with some.) I'm just a person with a very low tolerance for "us and them" thinking. I think it's a bad habit that has led to some of the worst atrocities ever committed by man. Granted, this time and place and this discussion may not be ideal for exercising these reactions, these tendencies I have, to keep people identifying positively with each other. Having compassion and understanding for each other. Then again, it may be. I don't know.

Just wanted to say all that...

John Lennon also has a song, and you might of heard it before, Pan, that goes...

Quote:
Imagine there's no countries
It isn't hard to do
Nothing to kill or die for
And no religion too
Imagine all the people
Living life in peace
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Old 04-05-2007, 03:03 PM   #162 (permalink)
 
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i looked in one more time---positions have differentiated somewhat, and i suppose that is a good thing in itself--i dont agree with cyn, for example, but i wouldn't argue against him in the same way that i was arguing against the main positions that obtained in here earlier. maybe in another thread a different discussion will be possible.

i wanted to make one thing clear in this context:

pan:

if your last two or three posts have been referencing what i have put in this thread, i would suggest that you re-read what i wrote with a more level head than you appear to have---i made it quite clear--as clear as i could manage--that the problem i have with your posts in particular follows from the LOGIC THAT YOU HAVE CHOSEN TO ADOPT--i do not impute any position to you as a human being--the false, misleading, unsubstanitated and unsubstantiatable categories that you use, the qualities that you impute to this fiction "ILLEGAL immigrant" that you substitute for undocumented workers, or migrant workers, and the way you combine these categories and qualities--THOSE ELEMENTS are what lead you straight into neofascist territory.

if i thought you WERE a neofascist, i wouldn't waste my time interacting with you at all. trust me on this one.

your posts demonstrate the argument that i was making that the POLITICAL FRAMEWORK itself is dangerous, that it can lead people who in other areas are NOT likely to espouse front national-style positions straight into that sort of territory.
and that is not a good place.

that's all i have to say.
i am not going to return to this corpse of a thread.
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Last edited by roachboy; 04-05-2007 at 03:06 PM..
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Old 04-05-2007, 03:05 PM   #163 (permalink)
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pan6467
There's only one solution and it is not amnesty to the ILLEGALS, again they committed a crime and they are slapping everyone who sacrificed, worked and did what they had to to become citizens.

The solution is for enough people to vote for politicians that will change the immigration laws.

Until then, I expect and want a government that will take this seriously, fine those that hire them, deport those they catch and tighten our borders so that it makes it harder to come in ILLEGALLY.
Pan....the problem with your scenario is that most Americans only agree with two thirds of it...fine those who hire them and tighen the borders. According to most polls, an overwhelming majority believe in provding a path to citizenship for those already here.

The rest of your latest comments are a bit too emotional for any futher response.

The BEST solution I have seen is the new bi-partisan "Security Through Regularized Immigration and a Vibrant Economy (STRIVE) Act" introduced in the House last month (better than last year's bills).

It provides for comprehensive border security, more funding and support for state/local law enforcement across the country to get the real criminals (gang members, drug dealers, money launderers...) among the illegals, a new employment verification program, guest worker program for jobs,primarily agricultural (with the jobs first offered to citizens but the workforce needs not met)... and most of all..

A two-step process towards EARNED LEGALIZATION FOR QUALIFIED, HARDWORKING INDIVIDUALS:
THe first step is to request Conditional Nonimmigrant Status that would last for 6 years, while the person would go to the "back of the line" for permanent status. :

To qualify, the illegal immigrant must:
* Establish continuous presence in the U.S. on or before June 1, 2006;
* Attest to employment in the U.S. before June 1, 2006 and employment since that date (and submit related documentation);
* Complete criminal and security background checks; and
* Pay a $500 fine plus necessary application fees (fine exemption for children).

Then after 6 years and waiting in line, they can apply for Earned Citizenship:
* Meet employment requirements during the six-year period immediately preceding the application for adjustment;
* Pay a $1,500 fine plus application fees;
* Complete criminal and security background checks;
* Establish registration under the selective service (if applicable);
* Meet English and civic requirements;
* Undergo a medical examination;
* Pay all taxes;
and
* Meet a “Legal Reentry” requirement during the six-year period in conditional nonimmigrant status
This is in line with what a majortiy of Americans want. More from the Republican co-sponsor from the border state of Ariz (link)
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Last edited by dc_dux; 04-05-2007 at 08:22 PM..
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Old 04-05-2007, 03:17 PM   #164 (permalink)
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I don't think this thread can go any further either. At this point, we're delving into irreconcilable fundamental differences in individual personalities. If we continue now, it will just become a flame war. In the end of the day, everyone's points have been laid down, and it's up to who ever's reading to make up their mind on the issue.

Much like religion, this isn't the kind of topic which will foster anything except angst for the other side, and if internet debates have taught us anything, it's that most people already have their views locked into them, and will defend them vehemently.

Anyways...yeah...Gingrich sucks.
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Old 04-05-2007, 03:22 PM   #165 (permalink)
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I'm so glad you found your way here to TFP, arch. You done good.

And I don't say that just because I happen to agree with you, lol.
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Last edited by mixedmedia; 04-05-2007 at 03:23 PM.. Reason: Automerged Doublepost
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Old 04-05-2007, 03:26 PM   #166 (permalink)
 
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We can still STRIVE for better
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Last edited by dc_dux; 04-05-2007 at 03:38 PM..
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Old 04-05-2007, 03:37 PM   #167 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by archetypal fool
I don't think this thread can go any further either. At this point, we're delving into irreconcilable fundamental differences in individual personalities.
I have no problem pulling out for the good of the thread or getting back on track. I don't mean to threadjack, and I apologize if I did.

Are you more interested in perusing Gingrch or bilingual education?
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Old 04-05-2007, 04:45 PM   #168 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
I have no problem pulling out for the good of the thread or getting back on track. I don't mean to threadjack, and I apologize if I did.

Are you more interested in perusing Gingrch or bilingual education?

Oh, I don't mean anyone in particular. It's just that, really, what more can be said? At this point, it's our core values which are on the table. I've been somewhat offended by some posts, and I'm sure our opponents have been offended by our apparent justification for breaking this law. There's nothing I, or Willravel, or dc_dux, or mixedmedia, ubertuber, or anyone else with our sentiments can do to make Cynthetiq, pan6467, djtestudo, or people of their ilk understand our stance. Like-wise, they can't make us understand their stances, when our core values are so fundamentally incompatible.

If the debate hasn't been resolved, then, by all means, let's continues, but, as I said above, I don't know if anything productive will come of it (but then again, what do I know? I'm new here...).

Quote:
Originally Posted by dc_dux
We can still STRIVE for better
Now that's some good stuff right there.

Last edited by archetypal fool; 04-05-2007 at 05:17 PM.. Reason: Automerged Doublepost
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Old 04-05-2007, 09:42 PM   #169 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dc_dux
Pan....the problem with your scenario is that most Americans only agree with two thirds of it...fine those who hire them and tighen the borders. According to most polls, an overwhelming majority believe in provding a path to citizenship for those already here.

The rest of your latest comments are a bit too emotional for any futher response.

The BEST solution I have seen is the new bi-partisan "Security Through Regularized Immigration and a Vibrant Economy (STRIVE) Act" introduced in the House last month (better than last year's bills).

It provides for comprehensive border security, more funding and support for state/local law enforcement across the country to get the real criminals (gang members, drug dealers, money launderers...) among the illegals, a new employment verification program, guest worker program for jobs,primarily agricultural (with the jobs first offered to citizens but the workforce needs not met)... and most of all..

A two-step process towards EARNED LEGALIZATION FOR QUALIFIED, HARDWORKING INDIVIDUALS:
THe first step is to request Conditional Nonimmigrant Status that would last for 6 years, while the person would go to the "back of the line" for permanent status. :

To qualify, the illegal immigrant must:
* Establish continuous presence in the U.S. on or before June 1, 2006;
* Attest to employment in the U.S. before June 1, 2006 and employment since that date (and submit related documentation);
* Complete criminal and security background checks; and
* Pay a $500 fine plus necessary application fees (fine exemption for children).

Then after 6 years and waiting in line, they can apply for Earned Citizenship:
* Meet employment requirements during the six-year period immediately preceding the application for adjustment;
* Pay a $1,500 fine plus application fees;
* Complete criminal and security background checks;
* Establish registration under the selective service (if applicable);
* Meet English and civic requirements;
* Undergo a medical examination;
* Pay all taxes;
and
* Meet a “Legal Reentry” requirement during the six-year period in conditional nonimmigrant status
This is in line with what a majortiy of Americans want. More from the Republican co-sponsor from the border state of Ariz (link)

Good post, but like I said, until the laws change, illegals are still illegals.

And people seem to miss the point where I stated illegals having to get into trucks with little or no ventilation, paying people to bring them and not knowing if they will truly make it....

That's really humane and supporting ILLEGALS supports that humane life and the parasites that feast off the people that feel they have no choice but to pay that price.

ILLEGAL = ILLEGAL..... change the laws and then see who is still against immigration before you wrongly accuse people of racism, neo-nazistic, KKK, white supremicist behaviors or beliefs.

As for Lennon.... good point, Ms. Mixed.... But Lennon and Jesus also taught and lived that you shouldn't break laws, you should protest and change laws before you break them.

Protest the laws, change the laws but don't break the laws or condone or turn your back on those breaking them.

(I'm sure someone will still bring into the fold petty traffic laws.... yes speeding through a city or school zone should be punished doing 70 in a 65 on the highway is called survival in some cases and comparing it to illegal immigration is idiotic.)


PS: RB my previous post was not addressed to you, it was addressed to the attacks in general.... if you read over the entire thread, those names and labels were tossed around quite liberally.
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Old 04-05-2007, 09:50 PM   #170 (permalink)
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Awww, man...Just when I though this thread had died a peaceful death...
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Old 04-05-2007, 10:03 PM   #171 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pan6467
Good post, but like I said, until the laws change, illegals are still illegals.
So if it were legal, you wouldn't have a problem with it?

From this I see two answers, yes or no. Yes, you would still have a problem with it, would let us examine why specifically you are against illegal immigrants beyond the simple "it's illegal" argument, which doesn't tell us much about your reasoning. No, you wouldn't have a problem, might make your position a lot weaker. I'm just curious. Since you and I get a long, but disagree on this issue, I see an opportunity for common ground.
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Old 04-05-2007, 10:06 PM   #172 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by archetypal fool
Awww, man...Just when I though this thread had died a peaceful death...

Excuse me??????? I think I have the right to answer something addressed to me without getting this response.

Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
So if it were legal, you wouldn't have a problem with it?

From this I see two answers, yes or no. Yes, you would still have a problem with it, would let us examine why specifically you are against illegal immigrants beyond the simple "it's illegal" argument, which doesn't tell us much about your reasoning. No, you wouldn't have a problem, might make your position a lot weaker. I'm just curious. Since you and I get a long, but disagree on this issue, I see an opportunity for common ground.

NO Will, I have stated all along.... change the laws and I have no problem. Believe it or not....

Read my last few threads..... I would rather change the laws than to have people riding in trucks with no ventilation.

Sometimes one must take their stance to an extreme they may not even agree with in order to be heard and to reach true compromise.

Ask yourself and please feel free to point it out and call me on it..... Did I attack anyone? Did I call anyone names or reply with negative smilies?

Now is the reverse true? Were people labelling me, calling me names, (either outright or thinly disguised?)

One cannot have true discussion if the responses are not of equal respect.
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I just love people who use the excuse "I use/do this because I LOVE the feeling/joy/happiness it brings me" and expect you to be ok with that as you watch them destroy their life blindly following. My response is, "I like to put forks in an eletrical socket, just LOVE that feeling, can't ever get enough of it, so will you let me put this copper fork in that electric socket?"

Last edited by pan6467; 04-05-2007 at 10:13 PM.. Reason: Automerged Doublepost
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Old 04-05-2007, 10:15 PM   #173 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pan6467
Excuse me??????? I think I have the right to answer something addressed to me without getting this response.
Fine. I apologies. The humor was kind of subtle...

No hard feelings, Pan?
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Old 04-05-2007, 10:16 PM   #174 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by archetypal fool
Fine. I apologies. The humor was kind of subtle...

No hard feelings, Pan?
It's cool man... no hard feelings.
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I just love people who use the excuse "I use/do this because I LOVE the feeling/joy/happiness it brings me" and expect you to be ok with that as you watch them destroy their life blindly following. My response is, "I like to put forks in an eletrical socket, just LOVE that feeling, can't ever get enough of it, so will you let me put this copper fork in that electric socket?"
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Old 04-05-2007, 10:19 PM   #175 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pan6467
Good post, but like I said, until the laws change, illegals are still illegals.

And people seem to miss the point where I stated illegals having to get into trucks with little or no ventilation, paying people to bring them and not knowing if they will truly make it....

That's really humane and supporting ILLEGALS supports that humane life and the parasites that feast off the people that feel they have no choice but to pay that price.
It's nice to see we're finally seeing them as humans. I'm sorry if you've felt this way all along, but in our defense, your earlier posts didn't quite reflect that sentiment...

By the way, how do you feel about the STRIVE Act dc_dux showed us earlier?

Last edited by archetypal fool; 04-05-2007 at 10:23 PM.. Reason: Automerged Doublepost
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Old 04-05-2007, 10:33 PM   #176 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pan6467
NO Will, I have stated all along.... change the laws and I have no problem. Believe it or not....
I believe it completely. You're a damned reasonable person. In all honesty, I've been more busy this week, so I didn't have time to read all your posts. This was a horribly weak way for me to get the entire gist of your position in one shot.
Quote:
Originally Posted by pan6467
I would rather change the laws than to have people riding in trucks with no ventilation.
I couldn't agree more. The thing is, if there are less illegals coming into, living in, and working in the US, the less likely things are to change. If they went home, that would mean the system works. The result would be fatality and crime rates tripling in Mexico, and severe damage to our economy. I can't get behind that.
Quote:
Originally Posted by pan6467
Sometimes one must take their stance to an extreme they may not even agree with in order to be heard and to reach true compromise.
I agree, so long as you don't go too far. For example, I think Bush should be impeached and imprisoned. I would never say I want him dead or tortured.
Quote:
Originally Posted by pan6467
Ask yourself and please feel free to point it out and call me on it..... Did I attack anyone? Did I call anyone names or reply with negative smilies?
Not that I can see.
Quote:
Originally Posted by pan6467
Now is the reverse true? Were people labelling me, calling me names, (either outright or thinly disguised?)
Unless you're a member of the Minutemen, I don't recall calling you anything. I'll go back and see if others did. You used a lot of caps, which got my attention (which I'm sure was your intention).
Quote:
Originally Posted by pan6467
One cannot have true discussion if the responses are not of equal respect.
And it would take quite a bit to lose the respect you've earned from me here.

I, personally, see bilingual education as a step in the right direction. It'd be nice if Canada, the US and Mexico could be chummy like the EU some day. I think all three nations could benefit greatly from it, and it would help to stabilize the economy of Central America. Newt, on the other hand, is an antique. He's leftover casserole from the 90s, no longer decent enough to stomach. It wouldn't be a waste to simple toss his impotent opinions out with the trash. I'll bet he smells like cheap single malt and cheese.
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Old 04-06-2007, 03:21 AM   #177 (permalink)
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Hey Pan:

I've got a question for you - something I'm a little fuzzy on that you've hinted at in your posts. Is it your contention that illegal immigrants receive more social benefits (medical care, etc.) than poor citizens?
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Old 04-06-2007, 03:54 AM   #178 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
I couldn't agree more. The thing is, if there are less illegals coming into, living in, and working in the US, the less likely things are to change. If they went home, that would mean the system works. The result would be fatality and crime rates tripling in Mexico, and severe damage to our economy. I can't get behind that.

I, personally, see bilingual education as a step in the right direction. It'd be nice if Canada, the US and Mexico could be chummy like the EU some day. I think all three nations could benefit greatly from it, and it would help to stabilize the economy of Central America.
Are you implying then that illegals coming in are "protesting" or "civil disobedience" to change things? That's the implication I read from your statement above.

Fatality and crime rates tripling???? I'm sorry did you just pull that number outta your ass? Because that also implies that crime rates would DECREASE here if Illegals did not exist within our borders. And again, why is it my problem? There are enough problems here WITHIN America to fix before I worry about somewhere else. There are enough poor Americans that need our help before helping someone who is here illegally, or even back at their homeland before they come here.

Have you seen the effect of NAFTA on industries? I've seen it first hand. I've seen 3rd and 4th generation garment manufacturer owners, close their business because it competed against cheaper labor pools. People who employed 150-300 people having to either invest in moving their company into NAFTA zones outside of the US borders. Some had to uproot or split the family to live outside of US borders. Into countries and areas that have high crime rates.

Vibrant sections of the garment industry here in NYC completely wiped out. Even the Chinese sweatshops were impacted because they had a symbiotic relationship with the garment manufacturers. It used to be that if you walked around the garment district you'd see it bustling with workers, fabrics, and fashion. It hasn't been that way since the mid to late 90s.

uber, I'm of the belief that Illegals get more benefits than poor americans because they have learned how to exploit the system. Maybe it's media driven but I have heard of people who come here from Santo Domingo just to get welfare checks, figure out some exploit within the system and collect monies even though they have returned back to Santo Domingo.

As far as healthcare goes, again, it's what I hear from the media, illegals get healthcare coverage that uninsured americans do not.
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Last edited by Cynthetiq; 04-06-2007 at 03:57 AM..
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Old 04-06-2007, 04:13 AM   #179 (permalink)
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pan6467
Good post, but like I said, until the laws change, illegals are still illegals.

And people seem to miss the point where I stated illegals having to get into trucks with little or no ventilation, paying people to bring them and not knowing if they will truly make it....

That's really humane and supporting ILLEGALS supports that humane life and the parasites that feast off the people that feel they have no choice but to pay that price.

ILLEGAL = ILLEGAL..... change the laws and then see who is still against immigration before you wrongly accuse people of racism, neo-nazistic, KKK, white supremicist behaviors or beliefs.
I NEVER, in any post here, made such accusations. I suggested that IMO, some of your comments were ugly (shoot to kill at the border, illegals are parasitic leaches - a gross generalization) and ignorant (illegal immigration is a felony, illegals dont pay taxes).

I agree with you that we should also absolutely prosecute, to the full extent of the law, those who engage in transporting persons across the border for profit.

.
Quote:
Protest the laws, change the laws but don't break the laws or condone or turn your back on those breaking them.

(I'm sure someone will still bring into the fold petty traffic laws.... yes speeding through a city or school zone should be punished doing 70 in a 65 on the highway is called survival in some cases and comparing it to illegal immigration is idiotic.)
In our system of justice, we have plea bargaining (for far more serious and deadly crimes), serving less than a full sentence for good behavior, etc.

I want illegal immigration stopped as much as you, but for those already here and contributing in a positve way, I am just not as rigid as you in my interpretation of justice. I believe in tempering justice with fairness and compassion for those who are not hardened criminals. That is the American way!
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Old 04-06-2007, 04:13 AM   #180 (permalink)
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I also fail to see how the legal or illegal status of immigrants, specifically from mexico, will do jack shit about the increase in spanish-speaking united states citizens / dwellers, the parading of other cultures flags or celebrations, the change of "traditional" american culture. certainly at present, the two issues are linked. however, if all the laws were changed so that will and pan could go skipping down the street singing duets of mixed english/spanish lyrics, all the issues with people speaking spanish (or whatever other language) still remain.

secondly, i'm not going to exhaustively review and cite from the thread, but come on pan, lets not play the 'i'm so innocent, where is all this coming from?' card here bro. you made some pretty strong statements, amongst them the shoot on site statement, and some people said "hmmm...that certainly sounds xenophobic to me and might border on some racism" and all of a sudden you're pulling this big-eyed "all you people calling me a xenophobic nazi pigfucking KKK loving babyeating dragon!!" shit so people would back down from some of the claims / questions. no one here called you explicitly racist, but it was either stated or implied that you might have some xenophobic tendencies on this one. maybe no one else will, but i'll stand by that part of the claim. and its not just you, as roach pointed out, its the position and the logic behind it.

as far as the side discussion with cyn and will, i'll save the homeless for another thread, but as far as legal immigrants looking down on illegal immigrants, i would tend to think that would also be something that would need to be evaluated on individual merit, no? i mean, i can understand where you're coming from cyn, but shit it seems like you've just got a dried up compassion well. on some of these issues it seems you seem to implicitly take the position that your shit doesn't stink. i know you state that you know it does, but i think you're assuming that all people who illegally have migrated here have been in the same situation that your family was; both in terms of living situation as well as proximity to the states or other large industrialized nation. am i missing something? that just seems rather 1-dimensional on these types of political discussions.
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Old 04-06-2007, 08:41 AM   #181 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
Are you implying then that illegals coming in are "protesting" or "civil disobedience" to change things? That's the implication I read from your statement above.
Whether they know it or not, that's what they're doing. The idea behind civil disobedience would be that people don't obey the laws they don't believe in to change the law. I'm sure that Mexicans would like to make getting in to and working in the US safer.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
Fatality and crime rates tripling???? I'm sorry did you just pull that number outta your ass?
I've calmed down. It's your turn. No, I didn't pull that number out of my ass. Statistics show that every time the INS has tightened down across the board, crime rates have shot up close to the border on the Mexican side.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
Because that also implies that crime rates would DECREASE here if Illegals did not exist within our borders. And again, why is it my problem? There are enough problems here WITHIN America to fix before I worry about somewhere else. There are enough poor Americans that need our help before helping someone who is here illegally, or even back at their homeland before they come here.
I'm afraid your assumption about the implications of my guesswork would be flawed. Imagine this: a family, out of work and starving, needs to get across the border into the US in order to work. Imagine there are a thousand of these families. Imagine they all try to cross the boarder with their belongings over the time span of a week. Now imagine that there is no more immigration anymore. Suddenly you have an influx of poor families into small border communities. They are desperate, and they make good prey from former coyotes who now find themselves out of work. Not only that but the families are now starving and need to start stealing themselves in order to eat. It's a damn dangerous situation.

The alternative is that many of the families make it to the US and get work. Once they have work, they have some security. They're not likely to need to steal to eat if they can afford food. They also send a little home, which keeps their family in Mexico more safe and less likely to need to turn to crime.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
Have you seen the effect of NAFTA on industries? I've seen it first hand. I've seen 3rd and 4th generation garment manufacturer owners, close their business because it competed against cheaper labor pools. People who employed 150-300 people having to either invest in moving their company into NAFTA zones outside of the US borders. Some had to uproot or split the family to live outside of US borders. Into countries and areas that have high crime rates.
NAFTA is just another way for the US government to give a free ride to US corporations to move in to Central America and exploit them freely. I'd like to see NAFTA destroyed. The free trade thing only works when corporations can be held responsible for their actions. If they can't, then free trade is a weapon.
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Old 04-06-2007, 08:53 AM   #182 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pigglet
as far as the side discussion with cyn and will, i'll save the homeless for another thread, but as far as legal immigrants looking down on illegal immigrants, i would tend to think that would also be something that would need to be evaluated on individual merit, no? i mean, i can understand where you're coming from cyn, but shit it seems like you've just got a dried up compassion well. on some of these issues it seems you seem to implicitly take the position that your shit doesn't stink. i know you state that you know it does, but i think you're assuming that all people who illegally have migrated here have been in the same situation that your family was; both in terms of living situation as well as proximity to the states or other large industrialized nation. am i missing something? that just seems rather 1-dimensional on these types of political discussions.
This may seem one dimensional but this is a simplistic view for me. I'm not speaking of this from anything but personal experience and reiterating my feelings on that. If you look at all my posts, there is only one time that I've addressed anything to engage in a solution or discuss this differently than how I feel about the issue.

I guess when you stand on line for something and multiple people cut in front of you, it's fine for you. They shouldn't have to wait, they don't need to wait, it's fair for you to have prepared, gotten there early to secure your place in line you abided by the rules established and followed them and they didn't. It doesn't upset you in the least?

I cannot speak for anyone else and how they feel about their family emigrating to the US. I know people who were refugees, people who sought political asylum, poor, rich, connected, but they all followed the processes established to secure being here.

Now the implication that "my shit don't stink" is unjustified. The difference is that I accept responsibility for the indiscretions and transgressions commited that are either against another person, government, animal, thing. I do not excuse the idea that "because they have it hard" or any other kind of mitigating excuse. You may call it a dried up compassion well, but I believe I have enough compassion without having to be either a person who tramples over everyone else or gets trampled over. I am a firm believer of don't do the crime if you can't do the time. If you do something right or wrong, be ready for the consequences good or bad that come from that action.
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Old 04-06-2007, 09:18 AM   #183 (permalink)
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cyn,

i thought about the shit not stinking analogy when i posted it; i agree it doesn't express exactly what i want to say, but i'm having trouble putting the thoughts into words. perhaps it rolled up in the waiting in line analogy; as i said before, it seems to me that when you lump all illegals into a category and assign them a blanket sentence, it starts to head in that direction of unsmelly shit to me. if i was waiting in line at the bank, and someone just like me cut in, yeah, i'd be pissed. but what if they're elderly, or if they don't look well, or if they have kids with them, or if (somehow i know) that they are more desparate than i? i can wait a bit because i've got an hour lunch break, and a few minutes won't kill me.

i'm not trying to trivialize your family's previous predictaments...how could i? i don't know their situations...but in answer to the question, as i said: i can't say across the boards that illegal immigrants are always just a bunch of immoral rule breakers fuckers. sometimes rules are broken, but as has been pointed out that's a different consideration from fundamental morality, in my opinion. incidentally, i agree that you shouldn't do the crime if you can't do the time, but that doesn't mean i look down on someone who does the crime necessarily. it also means i don't look down on them if they do the crime and don't get caught. in situations like illegal immigration, if they are a good person, etc, i tend to think more along the lines of "hats off the them." as has been previously stated, its not like they're taking the easy way out. they're taking on a lot of risk and danger to try to make things better for themselves and their loved ones. not always, but in a lot of cases.
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Old 04-06-2007, 09:20 AM   #184 (permalink)
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In answer to some's questions....

I did say shoot on sight..... but would you rather be shot and killed on sight or die of suffocation in a truck?

No, not everyone called or implied names.

Pigglet, where do I mention anything about LEGAL immigrants or LEGAL immigration needing to be cut?

If I were xenophobic as you stated here:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Pigglet
called you explicitly racist, but it was either stated or implied that you might have some xenophobic tendencies on this one. maybe no one else will, but i'll stand by that part of the claim
Then I would be against ALL immigration, I believe, not just ILLEGAL. And I believe, if I were the Xenophobe, I would not say "change the laws and I'll accept them." All I kept repeating was that I was against Illegal Immigration and felt that those doing so were criminals (breaking a law = criminal). And notice I CAPITALIZED ILLEGALS so noone could say I was going after all immigrants (which are necessary to keep this country growing as we as a nation are having fewer children).

As for the cost of ILLEGALS there are several websites that discuss them and break them down.

This website is straight 1996 money and they try to show the cost in 2003 dollars:

http://www.fairus.org/site/PageServe...suecentersf134

Here's one in favor of a guest worker program that talks about the environmental impact:

http://www.fairus.org/site/PageServe...suecentersf134

Here's a CNN report on the cost of ILLEGALS to America: (A very good report and informative):

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cY6t2ckpb5g

There are plenty more just do a Yahoo search on the cost of iilegal immigration and you'll see and can do your own research.
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Old 04-06-2007, 09:26 AM   #185 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by archetypal fool
By the way, how do you feel about the STRIVE Act dc_dux showed us earlier?
I have no legal training so this act H.R.1645 was very hard for me to understand. From what I have read they are granting amnesty to illegals by giving them "Conditional Nonimmigrant" status. This is totally unfair to those who follow the rules (our law) and therefore I am against this section of the bill.

The section under "Encouraging aliens to depart voluntarily" may be a way to reduce the number of illegals without having to resort to legal proceedings. Perhaps giving illegals 60 days or so to leave voluntarily before being charged with a crime could be the way for most to depart. Also those who do so could possibly be allowed to get in line to immigrate legally without having their past illegal status held against them. Perhaps most deportation proceedings could be avoided this way.
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Old 04-06-2007, 09:29 AM   #186 (permalink)
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pan,

i don't want to get sidetracked too much on this, as will stated i have a lot of respect for you and i know you're a good guy, so to speak. but what about the posts concerning flying a blahblah flag and sitting on an american one? or not assimilating into our culture, but forcing us to accomodate them? i guess i just see america as a place where you don't have to assimilate. that's your right. you can speak in any language you want to. shit, make one up. that's your right as well. if you want to form an enclave and sit around and speak in piglatin and use clothing made of american flag, or toilet paper with american flags printed on it; while i may not like it or want to be part of it, you can do it. that's why america is so great. or at least my concept of america. that's the part where i see the xenophobia.

the part, strictly separated, about illegal immigrants, i see as just being overly simplified. yes, they're breaking the law. but i just can't bring myself to blame every single one of them, on that basis alone. you're right, they are definitely involved in illegal conduct, which is why i, back in post blabidyblahblah, brought up traffic violations. its not just breaking the law that's pissing you off, it some violation of the concept of "america" and laws that preserve "america." i mean, fuck look at your sig: imagine all the people living in peace. love is the answer. to extend love towards these people means seeing them as humans with real life situations. if they're caught, sure send 'em back if you want to. but that doesn't mean i have to be happy about it, or that i think that our current laws reflect reality.
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Old 04-06-2007, 09:59 AM   #187 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pigglet
pan,

i don't want to get sidetracked too much on this, as will stated i have a lot of respect for you and i know you're a good guy, so to speak. but what about the posts concerning flying a blahblah flag and sitting on an american one? or not assimilating into our culture, but forcing us to accomodate them? i guess i just see america as a place where you don't have to assimilate. that's your right. you can speak in any language you want to. shit, make one up. that's your right as well. if you want to form an enclave and sit around and speak in piglatin and use clothing made of american flag, or toilet paper with american flags printed on it; while i may not like it or want to be part of it, you can do it. that's why america is so great. or at least my concept of america. that's the part where i see the xenophobia.

the part, strictly separated, about illegal immigrants, i see as just being overly simplified. yes, they're breaking the law. but i just can't bring myself to blame every single one of them, on that basis alone. you're right, they are definitely involved in illegal conduct, which is why i, back in post blabidyblahblah, brought up traffic violations. its not just breaking the law that's pissing you off, it some violation of the concept of "america" and laws that preserve "america." i mean, fuck look at your sig: imagine all the people living in peace. love is the answer. to extend love towards these people means seeing them as humans with real life situations. if they're caught, sure send 'em back if you want to. but that doesn't mean i have to be happy about it, or that i think that our current laws reflect reality.

I have personally seen ILLEGALS do that (as well as legals). Is it all of them? No.

I do believe that you come into this country you need to assimilate with our society not expect us to assimilate to you. I am not saying you need to give up your beliefs and become "American".

I am simply statiing you do not come into my house and make demands from me. I will respect you and help you but if you come in making demands that I change my house to suit your needs.... my respect ends and my bitterness and anger will get the best of me.

And I will firmly admit I am prejudiced against the ILLEGALS and legals that come demanding we change our language, we cater to them and so on. But it is a vast majority ILLEGAL that do this (by vast majority I mean of the immigrants demanding we change to suit them... not the vast majority of ILLEGALS).

You can love someone, but if they slap you in the face (which I consider ILLEGAL immigration to be) and continue to slap you, you turn the cheek so many times and then you just turn your back on the person doing the slapping and show them the respect they are showing you... so that they may learn and realize they made their own bed.

If you have a child or sibling and they keep stealing your property and making demands on you, no matter how much you love them you eventually will say enough and do some tough love until they learn respect. Has nothing to do with sex, color, religion, ethnicity, etc....

I still have issues with how I am the bad guy for stating my beliefs and offering to change with the laws.... while others continue to talk about how they are humans but by condoning the ILLEGAL you condone the trucks with poor ventilation, the shit waged job with substandard working conditions, the rafts that turn over and people drowning.

By sheer association you say you approve of the above, by not demanding change, by not making it harder for them to come here until laws change, by allowing the employers to hire these workers.

I'm sorry, I see the end result of ILLEGAL immigration as the above and it doesn't seem very humane or loving to me.
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Old 04-06-2007, 10:13 AM   #188 (permalink)
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pan,

you're not a bad guy, but you may have some xenophobic tendencies on this issue. that's my opinion, i could be wrong. i've been wrong before, i'll be wrong again.

the thing is, i (and i think many others) would agree that the situation sucks for the people who fall prey to coyotes pulling people across the border. they're fuckers! plain and simple. fuck them. i don't think anyone on the "other side" of this thread would say that's ok. it is predictable, but not ok.

but that doesn't mean, in my opinion, you can say "fuck all illegals." they're not all like that. so why not just say fuck people who want others to cater to them constantly, and who are inflexible themselves? legal, illegal, american by birth, whatever. its basically the same as silver spoon syndrome.

as usual, i think we agree on the basics of this situation; we just disagree on the application thereof.
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Old 04-06-2007, 10:20 AM   #189 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
Whether they know it or not, that's what they're doing. The idea behind civil disobedience would be that people don't obey the laws they don't believe in to change the law. I'm sure that Mexicans would like to make getting in to and working in the US safer.
I'm sorry but that only works for those who fall under the umbrella of the law. US Citizens fall under that, not illegal aliens. I cannot go to another country like Iraq, Iran, Germany, et. al. and expect to be civilly disobedient to change their laws. I'm sure that ALL nationalities would like to make getting into and working the the US safer.

Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
I've calmed down. It's your turn. No, I didn't pull that number out of my ass. Statistics show that every time the INS has tightened down across the board, crime rates have shot up close to the border on the Mexican side.
Please provide something to show that evidence. I'll already state that correlation does not imply causation.

Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
I'm afraid your assumption about the implications of my guesswork would be flawed. Imagine this: a family, out of work and starving, needs to get across the border into the US in order to work. Imagine there are a thousand of these families. Imagine they all try to cross the boarder with their belongings over the time span of a week. Now imagine that there is no more immigration anymore. Suddenly you have an influx of poor families into small border communities. They are desperate, and they make good prey from former coyotes who now find themselves out of work. Not only that but the families are now starving and need to start stealing themselves in order to eat. It's a damn dangerous situation.

The alternative is that many of the families make it to the US and get work. Once they have work, they have some security. They're not likely to need to steal to eat if they can afford food. They also send a little home, which keeps their family in Mexico more safe and less likely to need to turn to crime.
I guess you've not been to the Philippines, where those same things happen as well. Did you know that Filipinos come to the US legally sent home more than $10.7 billion in 2005, equal to about 12% of the gross domestic product. Has it changed the fact that there are millions of people still living in squalor and uneducated? Crime is still high, morbity rates are also quite high. There are other issues for their impact on society, but as you can see below they have organized their government to make it easier to emmigrate to any country. I don't see the Mexican government doing that at all. Yet a country thousands of miles away gears up and gets people going overseas legally.

Quote:
LATimes.com
The money they earn trickles into towns and villages, helping build houses, open restaurants and send children to school. But the absence of so many industrious and skilled people — mothers and fathers, engineers and entrepreneurs — exacts a heavy toll.

Across the Philippines, children are being raised by their grandparents. "Now children can buy a lot of computer games, but they don't have a mother or father, or both," Santo Tomas said.

For the sake of supporting their families, the overseas workers endure years of loneliness. Some, especially maids in the Middle East, suffer beatings and sexual abuse. In countries such as Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, they are jailed for running away. Yet the Philippines has grown so dependent on remittances that the thought of doing without them is frightening.

"Money from abroad is the only thing that keeps the economy in motion," said Ding Lichauco, former head of the country's economic planning office. "If you don't encourage the employees to go overseas, you will have revolution."

Providing sailors, maids, entertainers and other workers for a growing world market is a big business.

In this competitive arena, the Philippines has an advantage. Many Filipinos speak English. They are generally better educated than workers from countries such as Bangladesh, Sri Lanka or Indonesia. And they have a reputation for being good-natured.

An entire bureaucracy has been created around them. The Philippine Overseas Employment Administration helps find jobs in other countries, encourages workers to go abroad and processes some job applications.

The Technical Education and Skills Development Agency offers free training in welding, driving heavy trucks and other skills. The Overseas Workers Welfare Administration stations diplomats around the world to look after the Philippines' foreign workers.

Those who bring or send their earnings home pay no income taxes. And the government offers returning workers low-cost equipment and tools to help them start small businesses.

With that level of encouragement, an industry has developed to match workers and jobs.

There are more than 1,500 licensed recruiting agencies. Some provide training — six months for dancers, four months for seafarers, two weeks for housekeepers — in return for a cut of the worker's earnings.

A cook on a cargo ship can make more than Arroyo's official salary of $1,000 a month. A bar singer in Japan can earn more than a Philippine senator. But the fees can run into the thousands of dollars; the better the job, the greater the cost.

Dozens of agencies in Manila's Ermita district attract job seekers from all over the country. Applicants line up on the streets, luggage in hand, ready to go anywhere.

Notaries sit at small wooden desks on the sidewalk. Using manual typewriters, they help workers fill out the 14 documents they are required to submit. Large copy machines on the sidewalk crank out duplicates.

Laboratories conduct blood, tuberculosis and drug tests to certify the workers' health. Nearby are cellphone shops, money changers, cheap hotels and restaurants.


Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
NAFTA is just another way for the US government to give a free ride to US corporations to move in to Central America and exploit them freely. I'd like to see NAFTA destroyed. The free trade thing only works when corporations can be held responsible for their actions. If they can't, then free trade is a weapon.
so that fact that NAFTA created jobs for these impoverished groups doesn't mean anything. In your opinion they all need to come live in the United States.

Quote:
Originally Posted by pigglet
cyn,

i thought about the shit not stinking analogy when i posted it; i agree it doesn't express exactly what i want to say, but i'm having trouble putting the thoughts into words. perhaps it rolled up in the waiting in line analogy; as i said before, it seems to me that when you lump all illegals into a category and assign them a blanket sentence, it starts to head in that direction of unsmelly shit to me. if i was waiting in line at the bank, and someone just like me cut in, yeah, i'd be pissed. but what if they're elderly, or if they don't look well, or if they have kids with them, or if (somehow i know) that they are more desparate than i? i can wait a bit because i've got an hour lunch break, and a few minutes won't kill me.

i'm not trying to trivialize your family's previous predictaments...how could i? i don't know their situations...but in answer to the question, as i said: i can't say across the boards that illegal immigrants are always just a bunch of immoral rule breakers fuckers. sometimes rules are broken, but as has been pointed out that's a different consideration from fundamental morality, in my opinion. incidentally, i agree that you shouldn't do the crime if you can't do the time, but that doesn't mean i look down on someone who does the crime necessarily. it also means i don't look down on them if they do the crime and don't get caught. in situations like illegal immigration, if they are a good person, etc, i tend to think more along the lines of "hats off the them." as has been previously stated, its not like they're taking the easy way out. they're taking on a lot of risk and danger to try to make things better for themselves and their loved ones. not always, but in a lot of cases.
Maybe that's the distinct difference of approach. You're willing to give them the opportunity of doubt first, whereas I'm of the opinion that they cheated from the beginning, now I'm giving them the opporutnity to prove themselves otherwise and convince me that they are different enough to warrant the compassion you are looking for.

I agree that there is something to being accommodating, but also there has to be a line where it stops. Should there always be mitigating circumstances that makes that situation okay? If there are, then enact laws that address that. Examples of this have been established like political and refugee asylum. But again, there are finite numbers of applicants.

Quote:
Asylum status and refugee status are closely related. They differ only in the place where a person asks for the status. Asylum is asked for in the United States; refugee status is asked for outside of the United States. However, all people who are granted asylum must meet the definition of a refugee.

A refugee is defined as a person outside of his or her country of nationality who is unable or unwilling to return because of persecution or a well-founded fear of persecution on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinions.

The Refugee Act of 1980 regulates U.S. asylum policy as well as governing refugee procedures. The Act, for the first time, established a statutory basis for granting asylum in the United States consistent with the 1967 United Nations Protocol on Refugees.
I don't know how densely populated of an area you are, but I can tell you that if I didn't get to the cafeteria by 10AM there were no plain bagels left. Saying I woke up late, the bus was stuck in traffic, the baby was cranky, the dog needed to be walked, "the person in front of me ALWAYS gets a bagel why don't I get it this one time." None of that changes the fact that there just isn't enough to go around. It doesn't change the fact that there is a finite amount. It is just a fact of scarcity. There are finite amount of seats at the movie theater on a Friday or Saturday night, I may have to line up an hour before the show to make sure I have good seats. I may even have to purchase the ticket online an pay $1 extra so that I get it before it sells out. My point with this is that there is a finite amount of things. Scarecity is a reality. There are not enough goods and services for every human being on the planet. When the music stops not everyone will have a seat.
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Last edited by Cynthetiq; 04-06-2007 at 10:44 AM.. Reason: Automerged Doublepost
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Old 04-06-2007, 10:49 AM   #190 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
I'm sorry but that only works for those who fall under the umbrella of the law. US Citizens fall under that, not illegal aliens. I cannot go to another and expect to be civilly disobedient to change their laws. I'm sure that ALL nationalities would like to make getting into and working the the US safer.
Do you understand the concept of civil disobedience? You break the law peacefully in order to bring about change. That means no one who acts in civil disobedience is under he umbrella of the law. You're just splitting hairs because this is a law you seem to like. If it were a sit in to end segregation, I'm sure you'd be behind it.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
Please provide something to show that evidence. I'll already state that correlation does not imply causation.
Do you have any friends that work in the INS, FBI, or police forces on the boarder of Mexico? It's easy to sit at your computer and assume that correlation doesn't imply causation, but the fact of the matter is that any border cop, be they on the US or Mexico side, will corroborate my conclusions. Why don't you give them a call?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
I guess you've not been to the Philippines, where those same things happen as well. Did you know that Filipinos come to the US legally sent home more than $10.7 billion in 2005, equal to about 12% of the gross domestic product[?] Has it changed the fact that there are millions of people still living in squalor and uneducated? Crime is still high, [morbidity] rates are also quite high. There are other issues for their impact on society, but as you can see below they have organized their government to make it easier to [immigrate] to any country. I don't see the Mexican government doing that at all. Yet a country thousands of miles away gears up and gets people going overseas legally.
I don't see the al Quaeda and other illegal organizations that resort to terrorism operating in Mexico, I do in the Philippines. I see drug lords, but they get a shitload more money from the US than they do from Mexico.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
so that fact that NAFTA created jobs for these impoverished groups doesn't mean anything. In your opinion they all need to come live in the United States.
What jobs? NAFTA destroyed hundreds of thousands of agricultural jobs in Mexico. The influx of imports from incorporated agricultural companies from the US ruined corn prices and clear subsidies to the tune of $10.1 billion.

Check this out for more info (pdf from oxfam).
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Old 04-06-2007, 11:15 AM   #191 (permalink)
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[QUOTE=willravel]Do you understand the concept of civil disobedience? You break the law peacefully in order to bring about change. That means no one who acts in civil disobedience is under he umbrella of the law. You're just splitting hairs because this is a law you seem to like. If it were a sit in to end segregation, I'm sure you'd be behind it. [quote]
Funny because I don't think we'd sit on the same side of that either. See, I don't agree that Program housing on campuses for self segregation is a good thing. I don't think that colleges should have seperate graduation ceremonies in spanish, german, tagalog, chinese.

I'm sure you recall this happening in the early 90s:

Quote:
LINK
In growing numbers, ships from mainland China are sailing toward America, their holds packed with a frightened and seasick human cargo destined mostly for labor in the restaurants and sweatshops of New York's Chinatown.

Five ships carrying a total of about 600 people have been discovered since January and as many as nine more are being monitored now as they head for Los Angeles, said Bruce J. Nicholl, an official at the Immigration and Naturalization Service in Washington.

The new tactic represents a major expansion of the far-flung smuggling networks that for years have brought small groups of Chinese laborers to the United States through Canada and Central America.

International Chinese crime syndicates, many with roots in ancient secret societies called triads or tongs, have begun to add their resources and muscle to the enterprise of human smuggling, Mr. Nicholl said.

The immigration service is barely keeping pace, and even in cases where immigrants are caught here they often are released pending hearings, or for lack of detention centers, and simply disappear into an underworld of forced labor, drug dealing and crime.

"This is kind of 19th-century stuff now where the tongs are not just shipping illegals but trafficking in people as human slaves," said Peter Kwong, a professor of political science at the State University of New York College at Old Westbury.

For a price of $25,000 to $30,000, part of which goes to bribe Chinese officials, poor farmers and laborers from southern China are following earlier immigrants in search of prosperity in America. And like their predecessors who helped build the nation's railroads, most are destined for years of servitude as they labor to pay off the cost of their passage.

"Most of them end up in pretty squalid conditions as indentured servants in restaurants and packing houses and garment factories," said Mr. Nicholl, who is the immigration service's expert on Chinese smuggling. Others "can end up actually enslaved to the triads as prostitutes or enforcers or drug runners or pickpockets."

He said as many as 25,000 Chinese have entered the country illegally, mostly smuggled in by air, in the last three years; the ocean routes appeared to have been put into operation about a year ago.

Most of the new immigrants come from Fujian, a southern coastal Chinese province with a history of migration and human smuggling, and most are headed for the Fujianese enclave of New York's Chinatown, he said. Kidnapped and Beaten

There, Mr. Kwong said, they are subject to exploitation and to a growing wave of violence by the syndicates enforcing the repayment of their debts with torture, kidnapping and sometimes murder.

"Mostly they are handcuffed within an apartment and severely beaten with anything from claw hammers to sticks," said Lieut. Joseph Pollini of the New York City Police Department. "They are told they have to pay $10,000 or $15,000 above their original fee, and a lot of drastic things take place."

Just today, he said, the last of eight men was convicted of kidnapping in the first such incident to have been uncovered, in November 1990. Since then, arrests have been made in seven similar kidnappings.

Partly because of the violence surrounding the smuggling operations, the department is forming a new unit to deal with Asian organized crime.

"The tragic thing is that these illegals are so desperate to get money that they are willing to work at any price," Mr. Kwong said. "So the situation in Chinatown is that wages are getting lower and lower."

A Fujianese service economy has sprung up in New York, including "travel agencies" that help coordinate contacts and payoffs to the smugglers.

"I heard of one woman on East Broadway who emptied her village, which was about 2,000 people," Mr. Kwong said, "and she was not the only one doing that."

The Fujianese are known as tough and hard-working, he said, and those who have paid off their debts after several years of labor are beginning to enjoy the rewards of their rough passage by opening Chinese takeout restaurants, mainly in poor areas of New York City. Dreams of Success

Dreams of such success inspired the 84 men packed for 50 days into the fetid hold of the 150-foot Taiwan-registered trawler Jinn Yin No. 1, which was seized off the California coast last month.

"It was my goal and my dream to come to the United States," said G. Ling, a 22-year-old student who comes from a family of truck drivers and who is now being held at an immigration service detention center in Long Beach pending a hearing on his status. "But we suffered so much: so crowded, so cold in the ship, not enough food, no water to drink, no place to wash."

C. Chen, 31, a professional diver who, like Mr. Ling, declined to give his full name, said the terrified passengers wept, prayed and vomited as the rusting boat, with its crew of seven, struggled through a typhoon and survived two fires.

He said many people from his grandparents' village near the Fujianese city of Fuzhou had come to America and prospered and that some of these had returned home for visits, tempting others to follow with stories of prosperity.

"Since the day I was born I wanted to come to America," Mr. Chen said, speaking through an interpreter. "We wanted to apply to the United States government to come the legal way, but too many people want to come. With so many people in China how long would it take us? The rest of our lives?"

In 1990, the most recent year for which figures are available, 31,800 people succeeded in immigrating legally to the United States from mainland China, putting that country in sixth place as a source of legal immigration.

Gu Kechen, a 21-year-old carpenter, said he had made a $2,500 down payment in China and that relatives in New York had guaranteed the balance of his $25,000 passage. "I don't know how I will pay them back," he said. "The important thing was to get to America."

Though they are now subject to deportation, the men under detention here still stand a chance of completing their journey to New York. Many will be released on bond either because of overcrowding at detention centers or because they apply for political asylum, officials and immigration lawyers said. When that happens, the chances are that they will simply disappear.

The results are hundreds of millions of dollars in profits for the traffickers, who operate what Mr. Nicholl called "the most sophisticated and largest and most expensive smuggling operation that exists in the world today."

As of last year, he said, "We have identified as many as 30 different smuggling routes coming into the United States."

People who cannot pay the full price for passage, Mr. Kwong said, sometimes travel as couriers on a drug-smuggling run from Fujian through Burma and Thailand, with stops in Latin America.

"Every time we get a handle on what they are doing and how they are doing it, things change," Mr. Nicholl said. When the first shipload was captured off Los Angeles last September with 118 smuggled passengers, he said, "We were sort of in a state of shock."
"In 1990, the most recent year for which figures are available, 31,800 people succeeded in immigrating legally to the United States from mainland China, putting that country in sixth place as a source of legal immigration."

So what about the Chinese you are not speaking up for them. If you are saying that it's good for Mexicans, then it's good for Chinese, Somalians, Nigerians, Ethopians, et. al.

I'm sorry that there isn't enough for everyone, that is just a fact.

Quote:
Do you have any friends that work in the INS, FBI, or police forces on the boarder of Mexico? It's easy to sit at your computer and assume that correlation doesn't imply causation, but the fact of the matter is that any border cop, be they on the US or Mexico side, will corroborate my conclusions. Why don't you give them a call?
I'm asking you to back up your statement. You asking me to look it up or phone them makes it laughable. So far it's hearsay. So far that number still looks like you pulled it outta your ass.

Quote:
I don't see the al Quaeda and other illegal organizations that resort to terrorism operating in Mexico, I do in the Philippines. I see drug lords, but they get a shitload more money from the US than they do from Mexico.
I'm sorry WTF does terrorism have to do with this? I'm showing that governements in impoverished nation CAN asisst their people to get them to overseas jobs and helps them get them legally. You can't even say, "You know the MEXICAN government could learn from this."

You toss in terrorism???? Nowhere in ANTHING I've posted or linked to mentions terrorism. Yet the mention of Philippines and suddenly terrorism and al Qaeda come into play? If you searched history you'd find that Islam in the Philippines predates al Qaeda. You'd also should know that "Filipino Muslims form 5% of the country's population, while the rest of the general population are mostly Roman Catholic (84%) and Protestant (8%)." And the Filipino Muslims only occupy the areas closest to Indonesia/Malaysia which are Islamic nationstates. Manila where the Office of Overseas Workers is located, is Roman Catholic. But I guess, you are allowed to generalize and make blanket statements and others not.
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Old 04-06-2007, 11:40 AM   #192 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
Funny because I don't think we'd sit on the same side of that either. See, I don't agree that Program housing on campuses for self segregation is a good thing. I don't think that colleges should have seperate graduation ceremonies in spanish, german, tagalog, chinese.
Name one post out of my thousands and thousands of posts on TFP that would lead you to believe that I'm pro-segregation. That's gotta be the biggest red herring/strawman in history. I am strongly anti-segregation and strongly pro integration, culturally, racially, genderly (not sure that's a word, but you know what I mean), and even based on sexual orientation.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
"In 1990, the most recent year for which figures are available, 31,800 people succeeded in immigrating legally to the United States from mainland China, putting that country in sixth place as a source of legal immigration."

So what about the Chinese[. Y]ou are not speaking up for them. If you are saying that it's good for Mexicans, then it's good for Chinese, Somalians, Nigerians, Ethopians, et. al.
I'm saying that no one benefits from the current system, and that it preys on immigrant families that have no choice but to come here illegally when all other options have been exhausted. That would include people from any country. My area and experience just happen to be saturated with Central Americans.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
I'm sorry that there isn't enough for everyone, that is just a fact.
That's an issue of overpopulation, not immigration.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
I'm asking you to back up your statement. You asking me to look it up or phone them makes it laughable. So far it's hearsay. So far that number still looks like you pulled it outta your ass.
It was an estimate based on statistics I've read in newspapers for a while. The fact that google doesn't come up with the statistics doesn't make them untrue. The fact of the matter is that you're too lazy to prove m wrong. Tell me, do you see a flaw in my logic about the hypothetical situation where the border is shut down and crime rises? If not, then you're saying my stuff is laughable is laughable, and we're just wasting out time laughing.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
I'm sorry WTF does terrorism have to do with this? I'm showing that [governments] in impoverished nation CAN [assist] their people to get them to overseas jobs and helps them get them legally. You can't even say, "You know the MEXICAN government could learn from this."
In some ways, the Mexican government could learn from the Philippine government. Of course, you failed to mention how many Filipino people are in the US vs. Mexicans. I'll let you google that one yourself. If the Mexicans were only trying to get a fraction of what they're getting in now into the US, a comparable number to the Philippines, I doubt we'd have as much of a problem.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cynthetiq
You toss in terrorism???? Nowhere in ANTHING I've posted or linked to mentions terrorism. Yet the mention of Philippines and suddenly terrorism and al Qaeda come into play? If you searched history you'd find that Islam in the Philippines predates al Qaeda. You'd also should know that "Filipino Muslims form 5% of the country's population, while the rest of the general population are mostly Roman Catholic (84%) and Protestant (8%)." And the Filipino Muslims only occupy the areas closest to Indonesia/Malaysia which are Islamic nationstates. Manila where the Office of Overseas Workers is located, is Roman Catholic. But I guess, you are allowed to generalize and make blanket statements and others not.
What blanket statements? True or false: the al Qaeda works and has worked in the Philippines.

True? Then there were no blanket statements. I was comparing the security concerns from each place, which is basically the entire reason for closed borders.
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Old 04-06-2007, 12:11 PM   #193 (permalink)
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by flstf
I have no legal training so this act H.R.1645 was very hard for me to understand. From what I have read they are granting amnesty to illegals by giving them "Conditional Nonimmigrant" status. This is totally unfair to those who follow the rules (our law) and therefore I am against this section of the bill.

The section under "Encouraging aliens to depart voluntarily" may be a way to reduce the number of illegals without having to resort to legal proceedings. Perhaps giving illegals 60 days or so to leave voluntarily before being charged with a crime could be the way for most to depart. Also those who do so could possibly be allowed to get in line to immigrate legally without having their past illegal status held against them. Perhaps most deportation proceedings could be avoided this way.
flstf...I undertand how the section that provides Conditional Nonimmigrant status can be described as defacto amnesty but I just dont agree that it is for the vast majority who have otherwise commited no crimes.

I would describe it as alternative sentencing and far more pratical, reasonable, fair and less expensive than rounding up and deporting millions.
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Old 04-06-2007, 12:15 PM   #194 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
Name one post out of my thousands and thousands of posts on TFP that would lead you to believe that I'm pro-segregation. That's gotta be the biggest red herring/strawman in history. I am strongly anti-segregation and strongly pro integration, culturally, racially, genderly (not sure that's a word, but you know what I mean), and even based on sexual orientation.
No I'm saying we'd disagree on it in some fashion. I more than likely will no agree with your methodology for integration as you'll probably not like my version. Note that my examples are SELF SEGRGATION, Choices made by the individuals in the name of cultural pride or whatever.

Quote:
I'm saying that no one benefits from the current system, and that it preys on immigrant families that have no choice but to come here illegally when all other options have been exhausted. That would include people from any country. My area and experience just happen to be saturated with Central Americans.
According to my article, 31,800 Chinese people will beg to differ. That's 31,800 people who did not want to or were able to forgo the illegal boat container route.

According to the DHS, there are approximately 3 million people from 2004-2006 beg to differ that they benefitted from the current system.



Quote:
That's an issue of overpopulation, not immigration.
So traffic on the 101 has not been impacted by illegal immigration? What illegal immigrants don't take up space and use resources both food, infrastructure, and government?

Quote:
It was an estimate based on statistics I've read in newspapers for a while. The fact that google doesn't come up with the statistics doesn't make them untrue. The fact of the matter is that you're too lazy to prove m wrong. Tell me, do you see a flaw in my logic about the hypothetical situation where the border is shut down and crime rises? If not, then you're saying my stuff is laughable is laughable, and we're just wasting out time laughing.
Again, I ask that you qualify it. Now you say that I'm too lazy to prove you wrong. Newpapers are for the most part available via google. Just admit you pulled the number out of your ass with no basis of fact.

Quote:
In some ways, the Mexican government could learn from the Philippine government. Of course, you failed to mention how many Filipino people are in the US vs. Mexicans. I'll let you google that one yourself. If the Mexicans were only trying to get a fraction of what they're getting in now into the US, a comparable number to the Philippines, I doubt we'd have as much of a problem.
Really? According to the Center for Immigration Studies Mexcian population is almost 4 times what the Filipino totals are. So that's fairer because of proximity that they can have more?



Quote:
What blanket statements? True or false: the al Qaeda works and has worked in the Philippines.

True? Then there were no blanket statements. I was comparing the security concerns from each place, which is basically the entire reason for closed borders.
I see, you didn't say ANYTHING about the security of the borders, it was completely out of left field.

edit:

I did just found this article from the NY Times

Quote:
The immigrants who remade New York in the 1990's are now indelibly shaping its future, according to new city figures showing that 6 in 10 babies born in the city since 2000 have at least one foreign-born parent. The foreign-born groups growing fastest through immigration, including Mexicans, Guyanese and Bangladeshis, also have among the highest birthrates, the figures show.

Even for a city with a storied immigrant past, the sheer size and diversity of the present foreign-born population is greater than ever before, according to the most detailed and sweeping portrait of immigrant New York ever to be issued by the City Planning Department. Demographers counted 2.9 million immigrant residents in 2000 and estimate the current number is at least 3.2 million, a record high.

The report, to be released today as a 265-page book called ''The Newest New Yorkers 2000: Immigrant New York in the New Millennium,'' offers a comprehensive look at the foreign-born residents who have transformed the city's neighborhoods, schools and businesses, bringing sari shops to Queens, halal pizza to Brooklyn and Ghanaian preachers to the Bronx. Unlike earlier city reports that dealt only with legal immigrants recorded by federal authorities, this analysis tries to capture legal, illegal and temporary residents alike, combining census information, city housing surveys and vital statistics to offer a fine-grained topography of a global resettlement unmatched by any other metropolis.

One result is the striking emergence of Mexicans as the fifth largest immigrant group in the city. Their census numbers quadrupled to 122,550 in the decade since 1990, when they ranked 17th with 32,689. City demographers said the true growth was still higher, possibly to a total of 200,000, and not expected to slow. Births to the city's Mexican-born mothers -- 6,408 in 2000 -- are second only to births to foreign-born Dominicans, who remained the most numerous of the city's foreign-born groups at 369,000 residents, followed by the Chinese, the Jamaicans, and the Guyanese.

The report did not try to calculate rates of illegal immigration for Mexicans or any other group, though Mr. Salvo acknowledged that the large increase in the Mexican-born population could not be accounted for by recorded legal immigration. Jeffrey Passel, a demographer with the Pew Hispanic Center who has studied the issue, said that nationally, 80 to 85 percent of all Mexican immigration since 1990 was undocumented, while among other immigrant groups, a great majority had entered legally.

''Any place that's getting a lot of new immigration from Mexico, virtually all of it is undocumented,'' Mr. Passel said, ''and that certainly includes New York.''

Still, the city is home to only 1 percent of Mexicans in the United States -- compared with 54 percent of the nation's Dominican-born immigrants and 45 percent of its Bangladeshis, who are the city's fastest-growing group. Too few to count in 1980, Bangladeshis surged to 17th place from 42nd in the 1990's, mainly through diversity visas issued by lottery. They now place 10th in the number of births, with Pakistanis right behind them. One reason is that nearly 80 percent of Bangladeshi households are married-couple families, as are more than 6 in 10 Indian, Chinese, and Pakistani homes, compared with only 31 percent of native-born New Yorkers' households.

At a time when a Congressional push for crackdowns on illegal immigrants is converging with backlogs in legal immigration, the report stresses the economic benefits that sheer numbers of newcomers brought the city in recent decades, replacing residents who died or moved out, filling housing vacancies, revitalizing small businesses, and now accounting for 43 percent of the city's work force. High rates of migration to other states are still offset only by a combination of foreign immigration and births increased by immigrant fertility, the demographers said.

''If we didn't have immigration, I don't know where we'd be,'' said Joseph Salvo, director of the department's population division and co-author of the report with Arun Peter Lobo. ''Immigrant flows have mitigated catastrophic population losses in the 1970's, stabilized the city's population in the 1980's, and helped the city reach a new population peak of over 8 million in 2000.''

In the new world limned by the report, ethnicity and race are moving categories. More than a third of the city's black population is now foreign-born, the demographers said, with Afro-Caribbeans, who represent 21 percent of the city's immigrants, tending to replace African-Americans moving outside the city and to southern states, and the African-born population more than doubling to 92,400, or more than 3 percent of the foreign born.

Though Europeans increased in numbers through a surge of refugees and the use of diversity visas, available to people with low rates of recent immigration, like Poland, they declined to 19 percent of the city's foreign-born population from 24 percent. Had the countries of the former Soviet Union been counted together, as in earlier reports, immigrants born there would have been the city's fourth largest group, with 164,000 residents. Instead, Russia placed 10th, with 81,408, with Ukraine, Belarus and others lower on the list.

Nearly a third of city immigrants are from Latin America. Yet they seem as much divided as united by their Hispanic origins, with Mexicans joining the Chinese in Sunset Park, Ecuadoreans in Jackson Heights beside Bangladeshis, and Salvadorans and Guatemalans showing up in Far Rockaway. In that seaside neighborhood, demographers also discovered Russians, Ukrainians, Haitians, Israelis, Nigerians and Jamaicans after Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, noticing its unusually high numbers of non-English speakers on a map of literacy needs recently, asked them, ''What's going on down there?''

In his 1997 book ''A Far Rockaway of the Heart,'' the Bronx-born poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti might have provided an answer:

Everything changes and nothing changes

Centuries end

and all goes on

as if nothing ever ends

And the fever of savage city life

still grips the streets

But I still hear singing

A century ago, when immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe poured through Ellis Island, the foreign-born made up more than 40 percent of the city's population -- 80 percent when their American-born children were counted, too. But the city's total population was then only 4.7 million. At 36 percent of today's 8 million New Yorkers -- up from a low of 18 percent in 1970 -- the size of today's foreign-born population is a record, and taken together, foreign-born residents and their offspring account for more than 55 percent of the city's population. More than 43 percent of the foreign-born arrived after 1990, and 80 percent after 1980.

The same dynamic that New York experienced then is now under way in the 31 counties of the metropolitan region, the report said, especially in Hudson, Passaic, Union, Middlesex, Bergen and Essex in New Jersey and Westchester in New York, which all count the foreign-born as more than one-fifth of their populations.

Increasingly, some immigrant groups, like Jamaicans and Haitians, are bypassing the city and settling directly in adjacent counties, drawn to housing vacated by aging European immigrants of earlier migrations and their children.

''New York City is as much a process as a place,'' the report said of these crosscurrents.

What Mr. Salvo called the report's ''wall-to-wall statistics'' conveyed a strikingly mixed bag of socioeconomic factors, with some large groups, like Dominicans and Mexicans, far below the city's median education and earnings, and others, like Filipinos and Indians, far above it. In many groups, high rates of homeownership coexist with high rates of overcrowding -- 42.2 percent of Chinese households are owner-occupied, for example, and 34.2 percent are overcrowded, compared with citywide rates of 30.3 and 14.6 percent respectively.

Just over one in four foreign-born Dominicans has completed high school, and only 30 percent speak English very well. Nearly a third are in poverty, compared with a citywide rate of 21 percent, and 18.6 percent of households are on public assistance, compared with 7.5 percent for all residents.

Though Mexicans had the city's lowest median earnings ($16,737 for women, $21,284 for men) and lowest levels of education (slightly more than a third graduated from high school), they managed to bring their household incomes to 85 percent of the city median of $37,700, by having multiple workers in overcrowded households.

That was a strategy used even by highly educated foreign-born groups like the city's 49,600 Filipinos, at the other end of the spectrum. Median female earning among Filipinos was $51,000, and median household income $70,500, both the highest of any immigrant group. Though there are only 60 Filipino men to every 100 Filipino women, the Filipino poverty rate is only 5.3 percent, a fourth the citywide rate of 21 percent; only 2 percent receive public assistance.

''There is no typical New York immigrant,'' Mr. Salvo said. The report assembles an intricate mosaic of facts to support that assertion, from the highest rates of homeownership (Italians, 64 percent) to the most skewed sex ratio (161 Pakistani men to every 100 Pakistani women). Its combination of maps and tables pinpoint the whereabouts of the top 40 immigrant groups, from the 90,336 Dominicans in Washington Heights, to the five French immigrants settled in the Great Kills Zip code on Staten Island.

''The level of complexity and diversity is beyond anything we've had in our history,'' Mr. Salvo said. ''We've evolved into a city that's just an unprecedented mix. And for the most part all these people get along -- it's a testament to the power of the city.''

[Photograph]
New Americans in Brooklyn in May, from left front, Guang Zhou, from China; Rahima Khatun, from Bangladesh; and Mario Leonardo Arzu, from Guatemala. (Photo by Librado Romero/The New York Times)

[Chart]
''An Ever-Evolving Population''
Immigrant groups in New York with the largest populations are not necessarily growing the fastest.
TEN LARGEST FOREIGN-BORN POPULATIONS, BY COUNTRY, 2000:
Dominican Republic: 369,186
China: 261,551
Jamaica: 178,922
Guyana: 130,647
Mexico: 122,550
Ecuador: 114,944
Haiti: 95,580
Trinidad, Tobago: 88,794
Colombia: 84,404
Russia: 81,408
TEN FASTEST-GROWING FOREIGN-BORN POPULATIONS, BY COUNTRY, 1990-2000:
Bangladesh: 393%%
Mexico: 274.9%
Pakistan: 162.7%
Ecuador: 90.1%
Honduras: 80.9%
Guyana: 71.7%
India: 68.9%
Dominican Republic: 64.1%
China: 63.1%
Trinidad, Tobago: 57.2%
(Source by New York City Department of City Planning, Population Division)(pg. B3)

Hmmm, seems to me that maybe Mexicans have lots more to learn that just a civics lesson of how to set up expatriated workers, but also that education is an important factor in increasing wages.
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Last edited by Cynthetiq; 04-06-2007 at 01:01 PM..
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Old 04-07-2007, 08:32 AM   #195 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dc_dux
flstf...I undertand how the section that provides Conditional Nonimmigrant status can be described as defacto amnesty but I just dont agree that it is for the vast majority who have otherwise commited no crimes.

I would describe it as alternative sentencing and far more pratical, reasonable, fair and less expensive than rounding up and deporting millions.
I agree that it would be difficult to deport so many, that is why I think the section of the bill dealing with incentives to get them to leave voluntarily may have some merit.

The last time we granted amnesty there were 2 or 3 million illegals, this time there are 12 to 15 million. If the percentages hold true the next time there could be 50 million or more. Is there any number that we should allow before trying to control it?

About 10 percent of the Mexican population currently resides in the U.S. illegally and with the population growing rapidly and conditions in Mexico so bad, the incentive to come here will only increase. Maybe we can handle them all but I suspect there will be problems with so many.
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Old 04-09-2007, 09:45 PM   #196 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by archetypal fool
The sex offendor comited an act against a human...he raped someone. Furthormore, he chose to do so. He could've lived his life normally and been fine. What's his excuse? "You see, at the time, I was horney, and she was the only one around." ?
Maybe he has a psychological compulsion (like many sex offenders who target underage individuals, which causes the high recidivism rate).

Quote:
The guy living with his dog against the rules of the complex is doing so because he choose to. What's his excuse? "I need my dog to live with me, or else I'll be unhappy." ?
Possibly suffers from depression. Maybe had a companion animal suggested by a health care professional.

Quote:
The guy who sells drugs on the corner is as low as they come. He's choosing to sell drugs. What's his excuse for doing it? "Oh, well, yeah, I have every opportunity in this country to go to college, get a job, and become a great man, but I'd rather sell just sell some rocks." ?
Yes, every opportunity coming from a broken home, with a mother who works 3 jobs, and an environment where showing any interest in books is enough to get you bullied or robbed (at the minimum).

Quote:
The Mexican you see walking down the street choose to come here. What's his excuse for doing so? "There are no jobs or food in my country to raise my family, so I came here, where there is food and the opportunity for my children to have a future."

I'm sorry, but these cases don't match up at all.

Oh, and I didn't mean to say that "You can't..." because we're all entitled to our opinions. That's just mines, since I wouldn't just consider someone less than me unless they do something which would truly call for it. Bad choice of words on my part...
The only reason the cases don't match is because you choose not to see them as matching. Because you sympathize with the Mexican, you see his problem as somehow greater, and justify his crime more. But many drug sellers come from environments not much different from what would be faced in a Mexican slum. And the first two cases could easily be caused by psychological problems that an individual would have no conscious control of.

And even with your hypothetical case of the Mexican, you don't explain why the individual who chooses to commit the crime and enter illegally should gain the benefits of his crime over someone who has respect for the country he wants to live and fights through the burdensome process of legal immigration.
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