Author Topic: The President's Immigration Address  (Read 1237 times)

Offline Skuzzy

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The President's Immigration Address
« Reply #30 on: May 16, 2006, 05:21:36 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by NattyIced
If you don't follow one herd, you must be part of the other herd.
That's not necessarily true.
Roy "Skuzzy" Neese
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Offline midnight Target

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The President's Immigration Address
« Reply #31 on: May 16, 2006, 07:13:25 PM »
With Bush's numbers in the 20's and the republicans jumping ship right and left... I believe this issue will be the one that the dems will use to blow another election.


Offline CHECKERS

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The President's Immigration Address
« Reply #32 on: May 16, 2006, 07:36:42 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by Hap
What follows is a response to the President's address last night.  The article appeared in the Chicago Tribune and does not appear to have been written by a liberal which is good to know if you're a conservative afraid of being infected.

O'Sullivan brings up points that i did not consider.  

Did these ploys sneak into Bush's speech?
May 16, 2006
BY JOHN O'SULLIVAN

For my next trick, ladies and gentlemen, I will perform a death-defying stunt -- no, not climbing a 300-foot ladder, diving through seven rings of fire and landing perfectly safely in a glass of water. That's easy once you know how to do it.
Instead, I shall advise you on how to interpret President Bush's speech on immigration that you heard last night but that was delivered several hours after this column was written. Very simply: Ask yourselves the following questions:
Did the president use the phrase ''comprehensive immigration reform'' several times? That's revealing because this phrase is an example of smuggling. He hopes that by wrapping a ''temporary guest-worker program'' and the ''not an amnesty'' provision to legalize the 12 million illegals already here -- both of which are unpopular -- inside a tough-sounding popular promise to secure the border with the National Guard, he will persuade most Americans to accept the first two proposals.
Did the president spend a large part of his speech on promising to secure the border by sending the National Guard there? Heigh-ho. This is the umpteenth time that Bush has promised to toughen up border security with a new initiative. He does so whenever there is public disquiet about illegal immigration.
Yet this kind of mini-initiative is fundamentally irrelevant. As this column has repeatedly pointed out, porous borders are the result of uncontrolled immigration as much as its cause. You cannot control the borders, however many patrols you hire or fences you build, if you grant an effective pardon to anyone who gets 100 miles inland.
Besides, a guest-worker program that admits as many people as employers are willing to hire (at sweatshop wages Americans won't accept) makes extra border security pointless. If everyone can come in legally, there won't be any illegals crossing the desert or swimming the river.
Did the president deny that he and the Senate are proposing an amnesty because the 12 million illegals ''will have to go to the end of the line''?
The trick here is the identity of the line. You thought it meant the line to enter and live in the good old USA, didn't you? That's exactly what the president and his speechwriters wanted you to think. In fact, it means the line to become a citizen. Under the Senate-White House ''compromise,'' the illegals will immediately be granted the right to reside here permanently while legal applicants still wait outside.
It's the line to enter that really matters, however, since a U.S. permanent resident has all the rights and duties of a U.S. citizen except the right to vote and the duty to serve on a jury. Illegals will have to wait a dozen or so years inside America before they obtain those last two. And they will probably be casting votes when those ''ahead of them in the line'' are still sitting in consular waiting rooms in Warsaw and Manila. Still, all together now, ''IT'S NOT AN AMNESTY.''
When the president stressed that the guest-worker program would be temporary, did he mention ''anchor babies''? No? Well, just guessing, but that omission may be because ''anchor babies,'' as the phrase implies, make ''temporary'' guest-workers permanent.
Here's how: Under the U.S. Constitution, if a temporary guest-worker or spouse gives birth during their stay, they become parents of a U.S. citizen and enjoy a right of residence and, in due course, citizenship. The baby anchors them in the United States and nullifies the president's pledge that temporary guest-workers will have to return when their job assignment ends. Unless Bush proposed a constitutional amendment to remove that right of citizenship (and my guess is that he proposed no such change), then the guest-worker program is simply another route to permanent U.S. residency and citizenship.
Did the president quote many statistics about the number of people likely to be admitted under the ''compromise'' legislation? Or the likely cost of granting amnesty? No? Well, that's hardly surprising. When Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions produced a chart suggesting that something like 30 million people would be admitted under provisions of the compromise bill, his brave and effective speech halted it dead in its tracks in the Senate before Easter.
But the latest estimates suggest that Sessions was being overly cautious. Robert Rector of the Heritage Foundation has just added up all the provisions of the bill -- for instance, it doubles the number of legal immigrants -- and discovered they would admit 103 million new people over the next 20 years. It's estimated that 19 million people would otherwise enter America over the same period.
The same author last week added up the fiscal costs of the Hagel-Martinez compromise bill. He concluded that the long-term cost of government benefits could be $30 billion per year or more: ''In the long run, the Hagel/Martinez bill, if enacted, would be the largest expansion of the welfare state in 35 years.'' It was very sensible of the president not to bore the listeners with such details.
Finally, did the president cite polls arguing that the American people were on the side of such generous reforms? If so, he's been reading the New York Times or Time magazine again. Both media outlets, which favor open borders, have been asking questions designed to push people into supporting amnesty and guest-worker programs. So the Center for Immigration Studies designed a scrupulously fair opinion poll that laid out all the real-world options in neutral language. It found that the ''enforcement only'' bill favored by House Republicans was preferred over the Senate ''compromise'' bill by roughly 2-1.
All in all, Mr. Bush seems bent on committing political suicide. Will the American people join him?


 Good Post Hap !!!

   
 Bob/CHECKERS
Originally posted by Panman
God the BK's are some some ugly mo-fo's. Please no more pictures, I'm going blind Bet your mothers don't even love ya cause u'all sooooooooo F******* ulgy.

Offline NattyIced

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The President's Immigration Address
« Reply #33 on: May 16, 2006, 08:30:17 PM »
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Originally posted by Skuzzy
That's not necessarily true.


It isn't at all. It only is to the lunatic fringe on the "conservative" and "liberal" "sides."

Offline Rotax447

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The President's Immigration Address
« Reply #34 on: May 16, 2006, 09:37:02 PM »
John O'Sullivan is wrong in his article concerning “anchor babies.”  Yes, the Constitution does grant those babies US citizenship.  Show me where the Constitution grants the illegal parent(s) of those babies citizenship, or permanent resident status.

At the very least, the parent(s) would have to submit INS Forms...

I-485
G-325A
I-864
I-693

and this is only the beginning.  If the parent(s) entered this country illegally, and have stayed for more than one year, they are barred from re-entering this country for ten years.  If they have worked in this country, while in an out of status condition, they are barred from re-entering this country for ten years.  If they have ever falsely claimed US citizenship, they are barred from this country for life.  

Once again, a load of happy horse chit, from someone who should know better.

Offline Hap

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The President's Immigration Address
« Reply #35 on: May 16, 2006, 09:46:49 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by NattyIced
It isn't at all. It only is to the lunatic fringe on the "conservative" and "liberal" "sides."


a voice a reason  :O  quick diogenes, get the latern.  good post.

hap

Offline Hap

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The President's Immigration Address
« Reply #36 on: May 16, 2006, 09:47:42 PM »
rotax, pop him an email and let us know the reply.

hap

Offline Hangtime

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The President's Immigration Address
« Reply #37 on: May 16, 2006, 11:55:42 PM »
The price of Freedom is the willingness to do sudden battle, anywhere, any time and with utter recklessness...

...at home, or abroad.

Offline bkbandit

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The President's Immigration Address
« Reply #38 on: May 17, 2006, 12:20:34 AM »
I dont understand, they say crime doesnt pay but these illegals broke the law and they want to let them stay.  Any other country in the world would have deported them all.  I love america but things like this really disappoint me, i feel like america lets me down and its been happening alot.  They need to deport them and secure the borders(the mexican american border aswell as the canadian american border).

Offline lazs2

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The President's Immigration Address
« Reply #39 on: May 17, 2006, 08:41:25 AM »
skuzzy... as you may have figured out... I am no fan of big government but....

I don't think that it (the illegals situation solution)is quite as sinister as you make out...  I think that the "day without a leafblower" was a catalyst for a lot of Americans.... they were forced to see the problem...

The media...smelling blood and a way to boost sagging ratings... hit us with "immigrant" stories 24/7 every channel and outlet.

I think that is what spurred the real reason for the speach.   I understand and have said so here that the government will use the "crisis" to expand i'ts power but..

I am glad that at least it is being talked about.

I agree with MT that for the democrats it is a huge albatross that they won't be able to get from around their neck... but a much deserved albatross... the democrats own worst enemy is...

having people know what they stand for.  

lazs

Offline Hap

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The President's Immigration Address
« Reply #40 on: May 17, 2006, 08:59:30 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by lazs2
the democrats own worst enemy is having people know what they stand for.  

lazs


you're right.  i wish the democratic party would do better on the matters the republican party boots. that would be handy.  

hap

Offline lukster

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The President's Immigration Address
« Reply #41 on: May 17, 2006, 10:42:48 AM »
Well said lazs.

The democrats speak of high ideals when their support is really all about redistribution of wealth. It was inevitable that these would eventually come into conflict resulting in self-destruction. I guess they had to at least pretend to believe their own propaganda.

Offline Cthen

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The President's Immigration Address
« Reply #42 on: May 17, 2006, 11:50:18 AM »
Until I can have the job I have worked for my entire life back, without having to worry about the "illegal" underbidding me by 60-75% I will report EVERY illegal I find period.  Keep hiring your leaf blowing amigo's, and your nospeaky engrish illegals my fellow citizens, but keep watching over your shoulder for me and my camera.


It is unreasonable to accept as fact that I must work for minimum wage as a sole proprietor and still LOSE bids to illegals.

FYI I am/was a house painter ................ now I'm out of work and trying to find a new career.

Offline bkbandit

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The President's Immigration Address
« Reply #43 on: May 17, 2006, 01:13:17 PM »
painters used to make decent money, they used to get more then minimum wage.  A job like me that never painted in his life will get 6 mexicans to paint a house get paid and throw them some scraps.  And ack-ack says im makeing excuses about being unemployed:lol .  If u been painting ur entire life by now you would have had ur own small painting business, but now with out the money u cant make that investment, u have to worry about feeding ur family.

Offline Cthen

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The President's Immigration Address
« Reply #44 on: May 17, 2006, 01:27:39 PM »
Your right on the money bkbandit.  I had my own business, i payed taxe, i am atm a home owner ( soon to change due to unemployment), father of two great citizen children, i cant provide insurance medical,auto,life etc...., forget a new truck (still driving my 1992 AMERICAN made chevy).

I do/did not work at minimum wage, I am saying I would make LESS than minimum wage if I bid low enough to get the job in the first place.  


Stop Illegal immigrants or be ready to provide welfare/health/education/housing to many, many citizens.  


Cthen