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HanzHenry
reply to post by qwerty12345
nothing is bigger than those who actually are benefiting off the demise of the American middle class!
Ruining my kids' schools, hospitals, job prospects (including pay), crowding neighborhoods, over running/crowding every decent park around, making the cost of housing TWICE what it would be otherwise.
Many working class Americans would love a cheaper place to live.. But, have you seen those neighborhoods? Getting looked at and discriminated against in your OWN country!! You as a white guy, go ahead, move into a predominantly immigrant neighborhood. YOUR CAR and HOUSE is GUARANTEED to be the MOST frequently vandalized or stolen.. That is a promise!!... this fact alone makes me wish there was bounties like Australia had.
Alien Abduct
reply to post by Phage
How about enforcing current immigration laws? Is that rational enough for you?
-Alien
www.law.cornell.edu...
(1) In general
An immigration judge shall conduct proceedings for deciding the inadmissibility or deportability of an alien.
I'm sure you must be right. I'm not sure why, but you must be. But ok, complain about the past. That's a good solution to the problem.
Had they been enforcing the law all along it wouldn't have gotten so out of control.
And, you know that employers aren't being fined, right? Oh, wait. Maybe they are. In 2012 for example. 495 actions taken with total fines of $12,475,575. www.lexology.com...
If employers were fined for hiring illegals, things wouldn't be so out of control.
So, even though strongly enforced drug laws have little if any effect on drug use, you think that strong (stronger?) enforcement of immigration laws would have an effect. Got it.
No I don't see the connection as the immigration laws are not strongly enforced.
Phage
reply to post by Alien Abduct
So, even though strongly enforced drug laws have little if any effect on drug use, you think that strong (stronger?) enforcement of immigration laws would have an effect. Got it.
No I don't see the connection as the immigration laws are not strongly enforced.
Do you think there are sufficient resources available to allow stronger enforcement?
edit on 10/5/2013 by Phage because: (no reason given)
Immigration and Customs was placed under DHS. It is not a new department.
I do think there are sufficient resources available and at the ready. Didn't they just create an entire new branch of government that would be able to handle most of this issue? DHS
I see you don't have a very firm grasp of how government budgets work. I assume you're talking about health and welfare type stuff. The thing is, if those costs actually are reduced, the money doesn't just go to some other department of choice.
We could come up with a working formula that accurately shows how much money we save by getting rid of a number of illegals and then allocate some of that money saved to keeping with the stronger enforcement.
No. But do you have a problem with actually looking for evidence that backs up your position? Actually, it seems that you might.
You are probably digging up numbers that favors your argument that we don't have the resources lol
DHS combined 22 different federal departments and agencies into a unified, integrated cabinet agency when it was established in 2002
daskakik
reply to post by Alien Abduct
You can come up with a dozen solutions but, if for whatever reason, those in charge don't agree with your POV on illegals beeing a problem or they just don't want to implement your solutions then nothing changes.
Has it?
My point was that DHS has been acquiring more and more resources in massive quantities sense it's creation.
Yeah. Pretty much so.
Are you arguing that we don't have the resources to remove and keep out almost all illegals?