What? Without a wall?
Posted: Wed Jan 20, 2016 4:51 pm
http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/ ... li=BBnbcA1
hmmm, this is tough on certain folks' narratives, huh?
hmmm, this is tough on certain folks' narratives, huh?
Guess so:Ferno wrote:Just making it up as you go along, eh woody?
http://www.pewhispanic.org/2015/11/19/m ... o-the-u-s/The slow recovery of the U.S. economy after the Great Recession may have made the U.S. less attractive to potential Mexican migrants and may have pushed out some Mexican immigrants as the U.S. job market deteriorated.
At least it is someone elses speculation, unlike the vapors you post at time that rise like a miasmal fog from your cranial lobes.callmeslick wrote:'may have'? You are posting speculation?
no, just making note of another one of your 'blame obama' posts.woodchip wrote:And making a ignorant reply as usual eh Ferny.
woodchip wrote:he is trying to make those self same illegals legal.
woodchip wrote:No, I want illegals to get in line like everyone else. Or do you not mind having waited in line to see a favorite rock band perform, a group of people cut in front of you and when you finally get to the venues doors, they are shut in your face as the place is now full. Knowing how you think I suspect you won't even understand this simple example.
I think this is a spot where conservatives need to rethink their position.woodchip wrote:I want illegals to get in line like everyone else
I guess you don't get out often as there are adults going to rock concerts also. Immigration is not a rock concert but our country has the attraction of one.Ferno wrote:woodchip wrote:No, I want illegals to get in line like everyone else. Or do you not mind having waited in line to see a favorite rock band perform, a group of people cut in front of you and when you finally get to the venues doors, they are shut in your face as the place is now full. Knowing how you think I suspect you won't even understand this simple example.
um, illegals aren't kids who try to cut in line, immigration isn't a rock concert, and a country isn't a venue.
Do you live near a place called the "United States of Madison Square"?
So the gist of your logic is we should just have open boarders, have no checks on what infectious diseases people coming into our country may have, don't worry about what criminal background they may have and certainly don't have a care about how the flood may affect our economy. Tell me something Lothar, does the Morman faith allow people in without going through a baptism into the faith? Why not just let everyone in without any baptism? And when thousands join up and they then firgure the Church has to take care of them...what then? In short I think your explanation is short sighted and based too much on emotion. After-all, you will not have to take care of the millions of immigrants that would flood our country.Lothar wrote:I think this is a spot where conservatives need to rethink their position.woodchip wrote:I want illegals to get in line like everyone else
Most of the time we're all about small government, and getting rid of bad laws and bad regulations. And in this circumstance, the US's immigration laws are absolutely bad laws and bad regulations and a terrible system that doesn't even remotely match up with the reality on the ground. We don't have millions of illegals because they're just bad people who want to break our laws; we have millions of illegals because we have a broken system that doesn't bring in enough people legally to fill the economic demand and that doesn't keep families together effectively and so on. We have a bunch of illegals because big government is doing a bad job of managing immigration, so why are we siding with big government?
I don't think we need illegals to "get in line", and I don't think we need to punish illegals. That's like trying to hand out speeding tickets to everyone who's ever been over the limit, on a stretch of road with a stupidly low limit. If the law is wrong, you don't retroactively punish people; you fix the law. We need to rewrite the immigration system such that it allows people in who can find work, and gets them documented and above-board so they're paying their own taxes instead of someone else's and so that we the taxpayers don't end up on the hook for costs that their employers are passing on to us by paying under the table and ignoring the requirements the rest of us are forced to live by. And if that means we need Reagan-style (Simpson-Mazzoli) amnesty, then let's stop treating amnesty like a bad word, and let's do the right thing by bringing the government in line with reality and giving up our support for big, bad, overbearing government.
I think that would depend on whether living here on social services would be better than where they came from, if they can’t find employment.callmeslick wrote:under his, or ANY logical thinking, the economic supply and demand laws would make that a non-starter, Woody.
huh? No, they are coming to work. If there are jobs offered to 3 or 4 million, that many will eventually get here(this is the sort of reality we've had for, well, forever). But, your scenario of tens of millions and massive tent camps on public areas or some such twaddle isn't going to happen. They can find better conditions elsewhere with no need for that.woodchip wrote:Only if you think of immigrants as a commodity.
well, we haven't really done that since Reagan, so hardly a regular occurance.Spidey wrote:I think that would depend on whether living here on social services would be better than where they came from, if they can’t find employment.callmeslick wrote:under his, or ANY logical thinking, the economic supply and demand laws would make that a non-starter, Woody.
My problem with amnesty is this…it’s not giving people amnesty, but having to do it every so many years, because the system is broken.
No. The gist of my logic is that our border policy should be sensible, and match the economic realities of supply and demand, as well as the social realities of families etc. I'm not an "open borders" advocate. I'm an advocate for a properly balanced system. Not "less regulation" or "more regulation" but "correct regulation". Right now we have a system that is legally overly restrictive, and that as a result misdirects resources toward detaining and deporting harmless people instead of keeping out the true troublemakers.woodchip wrote:So the gist of your logic is we should just have open boarders, have no checks on what infectious diseases people coming into our country may have, don't worry about what criminal background they may have and certainly don't have a care about how the flood may affect our economy
I'm not Mormon. Mormonism is a cult group (technical definition of a cult: a group which uses religious terminology from one religion to disguise its completely different beliefs. A new religion masquerading as a part of another religion.) It's based on the teachings of known con man and child rapist Joseph Smith. I'm pretty sure Mormons wouldn't tolerate immigrants near Temple Square, since the religion itself is actually a business, much like scientology, and it wouldn't make them happy to have poor people disrupting the profitability of their upscale mall.Tell me something Lothar, does the Morman faith allow people in without going through a baptism into the faith? ..... Would you have second thoughts if 5 million immigrants set up shanty towns in Salt Lake City on the grounds of of your temple and surrounding areas? I don't think you or other church members would be very tolerant.
woodchip wrote:
I guess you don't get out often as there are adults going to rock concerts also. Immigration is not a rock concert but our country has the attraction of one.