English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

law breakers and criminals? right or wrong?

2006-09-01 08:56:18 · 15 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Immigration

bluntmo-your a criminal, we are not
undocumented migrants--Hohenlohe no such name

2006-09-01 12:00:35 · update #1

bluntmo-your a criminal, we are not
undocumented migrants--Hohenlohe no such name

2006-09-01 12:00:38 · update #2

bluntmo-your a criminal, we are not
undocumented migrants--Haaaaaaaaaaaa no such name

2006-09-01 12:01:03 · update #3

15 answers

Totally right!!

2006-09-01 09:31:28 · answer #1 · answered by ramall1to 5 · 0 0

The difference between an illegal and unlawful? One is a sick bird (ill eagle). What is so hard to figure? We are not talking wedding party crashers here. If I were to go anywhere in the world, upon entering the country I would need to (1) present identification of myself, and (2) receive approval to enter. Even if I already got approval by getting a visa for that country, they have the right to refuse me entry for any or even no reason. If I am in that country without this approval, then I am there outside the bounds of law. They can arrest me--and almost always will if I'm caught. They can deport me, send me back--and almost all will, usually after I spent some time in their jails.

Duh, they are law breakers, they are criminals, they are wrong. What is so hard to understand?

2006-09-01 16:07:02 · answer #2 · answered by Rabbit 7 · 0 0

Hope this answers your question specifically

Etymology
il + legal


Pronunciation

Rhymes: -iːɡəl

Adjective
illegal

(law) Contrary to or forbidden by law, usually criminal rather than civil law (see unlawful).
Not permitted by rules, but not necessarily against the law.
Moving a pawn backward is an illegal move in chess.
(stamp-collecting) a totally fictitious issue printed for collectors, often issued on behalf of a non-existent territory or country. Also known as bogus.

Synonyms
criminal, felonious, illicit, unlawful

Antonyms
lawful, legal

Noun
illegal

(slang) A person within a country, typically the United States, who is present in violation of the immigration laws.

Synonyms
(person in violation of immigration): illegal alien, mojado, wet back

Derived terms
illegal alien
Retrieved from "http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/illegal"

As to right and wrong, that is a question of opinions. btw I never use any of the slang terms above as they are politically incorrect and not very polite.

2006-09-01 19:32:46 · answer #3 · answered by David Y 4 · 0 0

Law breakers, criminals, trespassers, in a country illegally and without proper authorization.

Here legally = your neighbor, perhaps your roommate.
Here because searching for amnesty = someone you let in your home because it's raining at the moment
Illegal = the burglar that breaks in at 2 am looking for something to steal.

2006-09-01 16:02:15 · answer #4 · answered by oklatom 7 · 1 0

They are law breakers. I guess Criminals too.

Except when I think criminal I think Ted Bundy and armed robber, not just simply living unpapered in a country.

Now that we ALL know that, what's your point? Its not like when you turn over an illegal he gets let go. The problem is catching them and securing our boarders and its not up to the illegals to help with that!!!!!

2006-09-01 16:00:26 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

I look at it this way, the only people who were not illegal’s immigrants are the Native American who were on this land long before anyone else and the Mexican because don’t forget Arizona, New Mexico Texas, Southern California was all Mexico at one point. Not until the white people came in who brought there slaves and migrated to this new land that they supposedly found. So all the European, English, French, Asian, African, Middle Eastern, Brazilians, ect. are all illegal’s. So quite talking your **** and lets just share this free land that doesn’t belong to any of us.

2006-09-01 16:15:28 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

Yes. Broke the law. Wrongfully here.

2006-09-01 23:37:46 · answer #7 · answered by *** The Earth has Hadenough*** 7 · 0 0

I'm sure you broke the law many times more than me!
Or what, you're perfect?
Just because my visa has expired and I have a reason to stay here, doesn't make me a criminal. I pay my taxes and they go in your pocket!
I didn't steal anything, not killed anyone.

2006-09-01 16:07:08 · answer #8 · answered by bunt 3 · 0 3

Right.

2006-09-01 16:10:17 · answer #9 · answered by P P 5 · 1 0

wrong.....illegals refer to undocumented immigrants. They broke one law...they are not ongoing lawbreakers or criminals.

2006-09-01 16:48:08 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers