30,000 Rally in Atlanta against immigration laws

#1

Jewbaccah

Redemption
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Aug 19, 2007
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#1
I find the immigration issue to be the number 2 issue after the economy in this upcoming election. The recent Zona laws that have swept the country have created a stir. Many conservatives want some form of change in how immigration is handled. I want this change as well. I do not however find anyway to approve of these laws. They are a state's way of trying to do something when they cannot fix the real problem. They result in a FUBARed situation. What say you?
 
#3
#3
Why do we need those silly little immigration laws when the plan is to merge US, Mexico & Canada?
 
#8
#8
You kidding? JEWbaccah? Gs was never his friend
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#12
#12
Until snipers start taking head shots at men, women, and children (especially the women and children) crossing the border I'm afraid nothing is going to stop illegal immigration. Even if you punish the businesses who hire them and constantly deport them, things are so bad in Mexico they'll come here regardless.

Ultimately for this to end Mexico has to get their shizz together and they seem to have no desire to do anything about their @$$hole of a country.
 
#14
#14
Until snipers start taking head shots at men, women, and children (especially the women and children) crossing the border I'm afraid nothing is going to stop illegal immigration. Even if you punish the businesses who hire them and constantly deport them, things are so bad in Mexico they'll come here regardless.

Ultimately for this to end Mexico has to get their shizz together and they seem to have no desire to do anything about their @$$hole of a country.

They're in a heated battle for the most corrupt country in the world.
 
#16
#16
Advisory this is a rant...

We cannot afford to deport them. We cannot afford to enforce these Zona laws. The only thing they will do is allow a person of evil intent to use these laws for their design. It really IRL pisses me off...I often fear the day I will lose my job because of these laws. I teach kids and if some cop came in and laid one hand on one of my children I am not sure of what I would do. Most of my kids are citizens. Some have parents who are not. It does not matter though because they do not have ID most of the time anyways. So they are "mexican" looking or happen to speak spanish in front of a person with hate in their heart and boom they are going to have a bad experience. The humorous part is many of these people are not mexican. They are from Colombia or El Salvador. They come all the way up through Mexico to get into our country. Some came in through legal process. Laws like this do not distinguish. So how many guys here under 15 carried an ID with them around? Do you think someone is going to stop a white or black looking person and check for ID?

The reality is the politicians that pass this crap know the law is not functional and there is no money to enforce it. We cannot even pay the bills we have now in Georgia and its counties. They think no biggie will keep me in office and appease a bunch of radicals or hicks. I am not so forgiving. If I was a cop I would stalk every elected official and stop their children in the street asking for ID. I would then cuff them and take them in. Too far? I think not they need to have a greater sense of personal responsibility when they pass legislation.

I am a conservative. I am for a complete end to things like welfare. I find that being a conservative means I am for things that are ethical and have some form of logical purpose. I do not find it means I will follow a party blindly or hoot and holler to get them illegals. The illegals I know have a better work ethic and ethical foundation them many of the paper approved Americans I know. I understand Amnesty will only bring more. However, did anyone ever consider that if we fixed education, then we could turn more people into effective workers? I have never heard of a business that said no F*** more resources I am fine with fat entitled labor I have....send those spics back they make the rest of us look bad.
 
#20
#20
i assume the officals in az and ga have no intention of enforcing the laws equally across the board. i don't see them hurting agriculture in az, which i assume relies on illegal immigrants for cheap labor, and the same for the carpet industry in the dalton area. it's a tough issue because on one hand they provide cheap labor which in theory equals lower prices, but they do often hurt legal competing businesses, which isn't fair.
 
#21
#21
If Obama does anything to support legalizing illegal immigrants he might as well not even run for re-election. He would be an idiot to even touch this issue. He has approval rating now below 50% already.
 
#24
#24
If Obama does anything to support legalizing illegal immigrants he might as well not even run for re-election. He would be an idiot to even touch this issue. He has approval rating now below 50% already.

Maybe he wants to go out with a bang
 
#25
#25
I find the immigration issue to be the number 2 issue after the economy in this upcoming election. The recent Zona laws that have swept the country have created a stir. Many conservatives want some form of change in how immigration is handled. I want this change as well. I do not however find anyway to approve of these laws. They are a state's way of trying to do something when they cannot fix the real problem. They result in a FUBARed situation. What say you?

If one supports a free society, or at least a free market, then one should also support the free exchange of labor. Protect the borders and make the path to citizenship (or legal work status) simple to navigate, thus eliminating the incentive for illegal immigration.
 

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