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akarunway

Amnesty fo illegals

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Please tell me what America would be like with no mexicans? Who will take all they jobs that they do? Not to many people. Lets go to the slums and get all the black males between 18-55 that are on welfare, send them to iraq, they get $$$ for nothing. Now that sucks.

I ain't got a clue brother. I'm just another pissant that pays the bills[:/]
I hold it true, whate'er befall;
I feel it, when I sorrow most;
'Tis better to have loved and lost
Than never to have loved at all.

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>Lets go to the slums and get all the black males between 18-55 that
>are on welfare, send them to iraq, they get $$$ for nothing. Now that sucks.

Naah, let's get the arabs! They're all terrorists anyway, and we're better off without em.

Or the jews! They're all a bunch of greedy bastards. Let's see how THEY like it in Iraq!

And the irish! They're all drunks who live on welfare anyway. We'd be improving the country by kicking them out.

And all those damn europeans. They like their socialist home countries so much, let's give em a free one way ticket back home!

This country would be great if we could just get rid of all those damn foreigners.

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The problem is, illegals get 'phony' papers and go for the higher paying assembly-line, construction jobs.



And I don't see how it is proposed to be prevented.

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Social Security numbers, can be checked-out. The problem there is, it is 'costly' for employers to do so.



There is basically no reason for employers to do so, unless they run background check on a person. The law does not require them to validate SSNs, so they do not.

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Back in the 70's and '80's, we were short on Patrol Agents but, 'raids' still took place.



The raids raise more questions than answers. How could they qualify legal immigrants vs illegal during the raid? I don't think they have passports with them. And how did they justify the raid - or they just go to any business they want (or do not like)?

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By cutting welfare benefits to 2nd. & 3rd. generation welfare recipients, they could do some of the grape picking.



Or some crimes.

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The Border Patrol Investigators work on finding who and where papers are being forged.

True story. Maybe, employers should be made to check SS numbers.

How does the Border Patrol justify raids? Usually the same way any other law Enforcement agency would... tips and/or investigation.

That's a good point!:D


Chuck

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>Lets go to the slums and get all the black males between 18-55 that
>are on welfare, send them to iraq, they get $$$ for nothing. Now that sucks.

Naah, let's get the arabs! They're all terrorists anyway, and we're better off without em.

Or the jews! They're all a bunch of greedy bastards. Let's see how THEY like it in Iraq!

And the irish! They're all drunks who live on welfare anyway. We'd be improving the country by kicking them out.

And all those damn europeans. They like their socialist home countries so much, let's give em a free one way ticket back home!

This country would be great if we could just get rid of all those damn foreigners.

Hey, hey hey. I'm an Irish drunk but I ain't on welfare. "Functioning alcoholic" is the term I think.B|:P
I hold it true, whate'er befall;
I feel it, when I sorrow most;
'Tis better to have loved and lost
Than never to have loved at all.

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>I'm an Irish drunk but I ain't on welfare.

I'm irish, italian and german - so there are at least three reasons to kick me out!


_______________________________________

Hee, hee! Try: Scot, German, Polish, French, Native American (I think, that's all of 'em)! nanner, nanner:D


Chuck

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>Hee, hee! Try: Scot, German, Polish, French, Native American (I think, that's all of 'em)!

Oh, well, if you're native american - you can stay. You can help me boot everyone else out. (Although then I guess you'd have to boot me out, too.)

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>Hee, hee! Try: Scot, German, Polish, French, Native American (I think, that's all of 'em)!

Oh, well, if you're native american - you can stay. You can help me boot everyone else out. (Although then I guess you'd have to boot me out, too.)


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You're here legally... aren't you? :D You can stay!:D


Chuck

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The Border Patrol Investigators work on finding who and where papers are being forged.



That's what the police and FBI does. However that's a lot of work with few success stories. There are several reasons, and probably the most important is that several large forgery factories are in Mexico, so it is very hard to close them. It is the same as fighting drugs - it can be done, and it should be done, but there will be no successful victory which ends the drug selling forever.

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True story. Maybe, employers should be made to check SS numbers.



It might work. The only question is how? Currently you have to submit the list of number-name-DOB of your employees in writing to SSA, and wait for reply. The reply may take a while. Obviously the employer could not wait for three months while SSA runs the check, and confirms the numbers, so the interface must be fast and easily accessible. Like an online web site.

However this still doesn't solve a faked identity problem though, when a person uses someone's real name and SSN by forging identity papers.

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How does the Border Patrol justify raids? Usually the same way any other law Enforcement agency would... tips and/or investigation.



The most important thing is not to choose the business to raid; at least in California a lot of people seems to know where the illegals work, so you just need to ask locals.

The question one is how to do the raid; obviously those people do not pick up grapes with their passports or driver licenses in pocket. Some of them might claim themselves as US citizens, so it is not easy even to legally recognize an illegal immigrant.

The question two is what to do next; anyone who's deported has a right to get a hearing in the immigration court, and this might create major burden for them.

And the question three is what to do after the court decided to remove them - what makes it difficult for them to cross the border again?
* Don't pray for me if you wanna help - just send me a check. *

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The Border Patrol Investigators work on finding who and where papers are being forged.



That's what the police and FBI does. However that's a lot of work with few success stories. There are several reasons, and probably the most important is that several large forgery factories are in Mexico, so it is very hard to close them. It is the same as fighting drugs - it can be done, and it should be done, but there will be no successful victory which ends the drug selling forever.

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True story. Maybe, employers should be made to check SS numbers.



It might work. The only question is how? Currently you have to submit the list of number-name-DOB of your employees in writing to SSA, and wait for reply. The reply may take a while. Obviously the employer could not wait for three months while SSA runs the check, and confirms the numbers, so the interface must be fast and easily accessible. Like an online web site.

However this still doesn't solve a faked identity problem though, when a person uses someone's real name and SSN by forging identity papers.

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How does the Border Patrol justify raids? Usually the same way any other law Enforcement agency would... tips and/or investigation.



The most important thing is not to choose the business to raid; at least in California a lot of people seems to know where the illegals work, so you just need to ask locals.

The question one is how to do the raid; obviously those people do not pick up grapes with their passports or driver licenses in pocket. Some of them might claim themselves as US citizens, so it is not easy even to legally recognize an illegal immigrant.

The question two is what to do next; anyone who's deported has a right to get a hearing in the immigration court, and this might create major burden for them.

And the question three is what to do after the court decided to remove them - what makes it difficult for them to cross the border again?


___________________________________

Good questions. We can discuss this till we're both blue in the face but... the problem will still be there.


Chuck

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The distinction between legal and illegal immigrants is arbitrary. For that reason it is not particularly relevant to the discussion.



Wrong, and wrong. First the distinction is not arbitrary. One category have applied through the legal channels and met the criteria to immigrate by demonstrating they have the skillsets to complement the US job market with a positive net effect. The other for some reason or another have elected to skip applying through the appropriate channels, which begs the question about their suitability for immigration in the first place. Therefore it is of the utmost relevance to the discussion.

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This is demonstrated by the majority of American history, during which there was scant distinction between legal and illegal immigrants as we purport exists todayHardly anyone was turned away-- mainly people carrying overt communicable diseases, and people with extensive criminal backgrounds..



You are refering to an era that had no economic similarity to now. During America's formative years there was uncharted plains to be traveled and mapped, arable land to be farmed, trapping etc, and general grunt labour work that required a small mind without education. We needed people who could work lumber, farmhands, railway workers, cattle runners, builders, gunsmiths, fishermen, blacksmiths...etc. The skillsets required then did not include any real education, therefore there was no real need for a criteria. It would make sense that there was no real distinction then.

We also did not have a large social service/welfare system at the time so those who did come would have a plan to make it on their own without using up resources, or find their way back home if things did not pan out here. This is not the case today.

Today we need human intellectual capital, not old labour skills. The argument that they will do the work that americans will not do does not hold water, because I (and many people I know) have done many of those jobs that apparently us soft lazy americans/canadians refuse to do. These guys simply have a lower reservation wage (by a wide margin). If the output of such jobs (say manufacturing) do not justify paying at least minimum wage then the argument one of efficiency. By utilizing large amounts illegal labour to do jobs that are not worth paying american workers, outdated processes are kept alive longer than industrial evolution would dictate because firms have little or no incentive to invest in R&D to find better ways of doing things with fewer people, thus holding us back so we remain a labour intensive economy rather than evolving into a capital based economy.

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In fact, it is broadly anti-immigrant to harp on the distinction between so-called illegal and legal immigrants,



Do you just say this stuff because it sounds inflamatory? How on earth can seeking to ensure that immigration policies are adhered to make one anti-immigrant? Or is that simply the generic straw-man response to anyone who criticizes the current state of affairs? You argument makes no sense.

Making a polarized argument like that, stating that anyone who does not blindly submit to one side of an agenda clearly must be on the other side reminds me of that public figure who stated back in 2001 that anyone who did not jump on board with his agenda was clearly "with the terrorists". It blindly ignores any other grey areas, and simplifies things into good vs bad.


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because it betrays ignorance for the causes and demographics of immigration.



I'm all ears.
My biggest handicap is that sometimes the hole in the front of my head operates a tad bit faster than the grey matter contained within.

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If you do not like a law then you as a voting taxpaying citizen have every right to protest it until it is changed, but until it is you still have to abide by it.



what happens when protest is outlawed?



Then it is outlawed. For the time being it is not outlawed. We do not live under a tyranical regime, so as with any democracy we have to accept that we may not always be happy with the laws, but we have to abide by them.
My biggest handicap is that sometimes the hole in the front of my head operates a tad bit faster than the grey matter contained within.

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One category have applied through the legal channels and met the criteria to immigrate by demonstrating they have the skillsets to complement the US job market with a positive net effect. The other for some reason or another have elected to skip applying through the appropriate channels, which begs the question about their suitability for immigration in the first place.



The difference between the two amounts to a lottery because there is artificial restriction on who may enter. It is a rational choice for illegal immigrants to pursue life and employment here, even though they face additional risks, due to the economic advantages to both them and us.

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You are refering to an era that had no economic similarity to now.



It was substantially different then because it experienced enormous growth due to an influx of working citizens.

The differences you cite are artificial, you along with the protectionists, and those fearful of competition assume that the workforce is immutable, which is utterly false.

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We also did not have a large social service/welfare system at the time so those who did come would have a plan to make it on their own without using up resources, or find their way back home if things did not pan out here. This is not the case today.



And on balance they give back more than they take, except for a short transitioning window, assuming they are granted citizenship. When they are not granted citizenship, the costs are slight. Not to mention that the reason we provide public services like healthcare is that they provide a social benefit. It is meaningless to only consider the costs in a vacuum.

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Today we need human intellectual capital, not old labour skills.



The enormous markets for day laborers, farm hands, etc defy you. Have you not turned on a television for the past 5 years? Most of our job growth is projected to be in unskilled fields (iirc per the Department of Labor). Things like home care as our population ages.

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Do you just say this stuff because it sounds inflamatory? How on earth can seeking to ensure that immigration policies are adhered to make one anti-immigrant?



The policies themselves are anti-immigrant, that's how. They are artifacts of an isolationist and racist era from our past, and they do neither our present nor our future citizens any justice.
My advice is to do what your parents did; get a job, sir. The bums will always lose. Do you hear me, Lebowski?

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Some tidbits from the 1995 Senate testimony of the Chairman of the U.S. Commision on Immigration reform:

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Four points in our report call for special attention. First, we need improved border management. The Commission calls for a strategy of prevention of illegal entry and facilitation of legal ones in the national interest. The concept is simpler, of course, than its achievement. The Commission was highly impressed with the border operations in El Paso that aim to prevent illegal entry. It is far better to deter illegal immigration than to play the cat and mouse game that results from apprehensions followed by return followed by re-entry. To accomplish a true deterrence strategy will require additional personnel as well as a strategic use of technology and equipment. We will also require new measures of effectiveness because apprehensions alone cannot measure success in preventing illegal entries. Our goal should be zero apprehensions-not because aliens get past the Border Patrol but because they are prevented entry in the first place.

While we tighten our control over illegal entry, we must also reduce the long waiting times at our ports of entry. It is ridiculous that people with legitimate border crossing cards feel it is more convenient to cross illegally than go through our ports of entry. But that is the case. Our own delegation waited for one and one-half hours to cross from Juarez into El Paso-and this wasn't even at rush hour. In an age of NAFTA, we must do a better job of handling the legitimate border travel. The Commission supports the development of a land border user fee whose resources would be used to open more lanes, add more inspectors and, if necessary, more ports of entry to speed this traffic.

Our second set of recommendations would reduce the magnet that jobs currently present for illegal immigration. We have concluded that illegal immigrants come primarily for employment. The Commission believes that we need to enhance our enforcement of both employer sanctions and labor standards. But, to make employer sanctions work, we must improve the means by which employers verify the work authorization of new employees. The Commission believes the most promising option is a computerized system for determining if a social security number is valid and has been issued to someone authorized to work in the United States. We are pleased that the Administration has endorsed our recommendations in this area, and we look forward to working with INS and the Social Security Administration on the design of pilot programs that will phase in and test this new verification approach. I urge this committee to provide the funding needed to develop the computerized system and implement the pilot programs.

Third, the Commission urges greater consistency in our immigration and benefits policies. We believe that illegal aliens should be eligible for no public benefits other than those of an emergency nature, in the public health and safety interest, and constitutionally protected. On the other hand, we urge the Congress to retain for legal immigrants eligibility for our safety net programs. The United States screens legal immigrants to determine if they will become public charges, but unforeseen circumstances-deaths, illnesses-occur. The Commission does not want to see individuals whom we have invited to enter become vulnerable when such situations arise. On the other hand, the Commission strongly supports efforts to make our public charge provisions work. We do not want the U.S. taxpayer to bear a burden when there is a sponsor in this country who has pledged to provide support for an immigrant. The affidavits of support signed by sponsors should be legally binding, and the provisions for deportation of those who do become a public charge-for reasons known prior to entry-should be strengthened.

The Commission also made recommendations regarding impact aid for states and localities experiencing the fiscal effects of illegal immigration. We believe the federal government has a responsibility in this area. The first responsibility is to control illegal entries; the second is to help states and localities with their fiscal problems. However, we are skeptical of some of the data used to calculate these fiscal impacts. At present, the Commission believes that the data to support reimbursement of criminal justice costs are sound and we urge immediate reimbursement of these costs. We are not prepared to make such a recommendation regarding medical and education costs. We also urge that any impact aid provided require appropriate cooperation by states and localities in the enforcement of immigration policy.

Our fourth area concerns the removal of criminal aliens. The Commission supports enhancement of the Institutional Hearing Program that permits the federal government to obtain a deportation order while criminal aliens are still serving their sentences. Once the sentence is over, it is far easier and less expensive to remove the alien after an IHP proceeding. The Commission also recommends further negotiation of bilateral treaties that will permit deportation of criminal aliens to serve their sentences in their home countries.



Snipped from http://www.utexas.edu/lbj/uscir/032995.html
Mike
I love you, Shannon and Jim.
POPS 9708 , SCR 14706

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due to the economic advantages to both them and us.



What advantages?

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you along with the protectionists, and those fearful of competition



There you go again. You know nothing about me yet presume to lump me in with protectionists fearfull of competition simply because I dare have an opinion that differs from yours. I have argued against protectionist policies that prevent skilled immigrants from making a relatively seamless transition into their feild upon moving here as this mitigates any gains to be had by skilled immigration. I am also not anti-immigrant yet you presume to imply that I am simply because I make the distinction between legal vs illegal immigrants. I believe immigration laws should be adhered to and will not apologise for that, nor will I be put on the defensive by those who will play the race card just because I do not blindly accept something that is wrong in the name of political corectness. Again this is a weak straw man argument based on hysteria rather than sound reason.

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And on balance they give back more than they take



I am not sure where you are getting this. When you are working illegally you are not paying taxes, you are undercutting the labour market, and utilizing social services which you are not paying for (since you are not paying taxes). Even most pro-immigration economists acknowledge this fact.

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Not to mention that the reason we provide public services like healthcare is that they provide a social benefit. It is meaningless to only consider the costs in a vacuum.



But if more people are using it than are paying taxes then there is a net loss. This is compounded by the fact that they displace domestic workers who then add to the problem by utilizing services at a higher rate (while not paying taxes since they are unemployed).

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The enormous markets for day laborers, farm hands, etc defy you.



Enormous? So enormous that we can't even afford minimum wage and thus require illegal labour? Doesn't sound like enormous demand.

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Have you not turned on a television for the past 5 years?



Not very often. I do not like TV.

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Most of our job growth is projected to be in unskilled fields (iirc per the Department of Labor). Things like home care as our population ages.



Again I think we are looking at starkly different studies. In Canada (which I suspect is rather similar to America economically speaking), with the exception of the oilsands in Alberta where they require a large influx of labour, all of our expected growth is in high tech, communications etc. This is reflected in the fact that so many youth simply have no choice but to seek post secondary education lest they face intermitent employment at low wage the rest of their lives. Hell even an undergrad degree is often not enough these days.

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The policies themselves are anti-immigrant, that's how. They are artifacts of an isolationist and racist era from our past, and they do neither our present nor our future citizens any justice.



Again you have not backed this up with an argument as to why you say this. How is our policy racist (be specific)? I realise that if I wanted to paint my face and go on a rent-a-crowd protest screaming something for dramatic effect your comment would sound very cool but it is unstantiated.
My biggest handicap is that sometimes the hole in the front of my head operates a tad bit faster than the grey matter contained within.

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Enormous? So enormous that we can't even afford minimum wage and thus require illegal labour? Doesn't sound like enormous dema



Econ 101. Demand exists only at a price. Change the price and you are not looking at the same quantity any more. See price elasticity of demand.

***
Again I think we are looking at starkly different studies. In Canada (which I suspect is rather similar to America economically speaking)
[/qute]

Troll. Good night.
My advice is to do what your parents did; get a job, sir. The bums will always lose. Do you hear me, Lebowski?

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>The difference between the two amounts to a lottery because there is
> artificial restriction on who may enter.

Yes. Just as there is an artificial restriction on who is allowed in your house, where you are allowed to jump, where you can land your airplane, where you can drink and drive, where you can shoot your gun etc.

>It is a rational choice for illegal immigrants to pursue life and
>employment here, even though they face additional risks, due to the
>economic advantages to both them and us.

That may well be true. It may also be a rational choice for a thief to rob you and burn your house down; his arson may allow him to escape without detection, and thus better feed his family, and let you collect the insurance money etc etc. Does that mean we should accept his choice as a good one? Or should we try to stop people like that?

>The policies themselves are anti-immigrant, that's how.

As we have an incredible number of immigrants here, that is provably untrue.

>They are artifacts of an isolationist and racist era from our past, and they
>do neither our present nor our future citizens any justice.

Again, if we had no/few immigrants here, your statement might make sense. But since we are pretty much all immigrants, doesn't make much sense. We DO allow a lot of people to immigrate here.

If someone proposed a law that let more people (people who wanted to work here) enter the country legally, I'd be all for that. Until then, I'll consider illegal aliens criminals. They may still be nice people who just want to work and help us etc etc, but they are also criminals who have broken our laws - and must accept the consequences of their actions if they are caught.

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Econ 101. Demand exists only at a price. Change the price and you are not looking at the same quantity any more. See price elasticity of demand.



Clap clap clap. Let me know when you finish reading the book.

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Troll. Good night.



Always a pleasure to engage in intellectually stimulating conversation with interesting individuals like yourself who provide such compelling counterarguments.
My biggest handicap is that sometimes the hole in the front of my head operates a tad bit faster than the grey matter contained within.

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