The laws regarding the immigration of any and all individuals wanting to immigrate to the United States of America is quite clear. The sad part is that the federal government does not want to and does not enforce these laws.
2007-05-05 21:20:48
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answer #1
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answered by Monsieur Rick 7
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Well, deportation of the already present illegal immigrants is highly unlikely and extremely difficult. And although it is frustrating sometimes, the reality is that the presence of Mexican immigrants does provide benefits. Cultural diversity. Linguistic diversity. Economic success.
The best answer here is to prevent the further influx of illegal immigrants. The borders should be better protected and measures should be instituted which target the source, not the result. Because most people know that when immigrants get deported, they often just come right back. Or a new group comes in; thus, its a futile effort.
2007-05-05 21:14:28
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answer #2
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answered by eastchic2001 5
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Unless there is a mass purge in Washington DC (President & Congress), you will never see the current government deport illegals in mass.
Eisenhower deported 95% of illegal aliens in an massive operation in 1954. http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0706/p09s01-coop.html
Republicans love the cheap, uneducated labor. Democrats love the fact that odds are they will vote for them - now illegally or after amnesty legally.
Dr. Ron Paul - The only credible American candidate for 2008!
2007-05-05 20:37:01
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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It'll be a very slow process since the illegals are undocumented.
I think there will be a protest against illegal immigration somewhere on June, but I'm not sure when. Someone posted that somewhere in this category somewhere(websites and dates). I had answered it but when I looked for it on my profile it was gone. Strange..
2007-05-05 20:43:16
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answer #4
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answered by Soficetica 2
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politics of oil from Mexico allowed them in - go on ethanol ASAP
Thought of expelling 12,000,000 not so credible, but how is this thought
Allow new workers to enter the US after registration as workers not immigrants seeking citizenship, They must be literate in English. This way they pay taxes and are accountable to our laws. Then have owners of companies who heir non-registered immigrant workers fined and face jail sentences. For the current illegal immigrant workers - do the following. They can apply for immigrant worker, they too must be literate in English, however because they are registrating while already here they must pay double the tax rate (to help compensate us for all the services they stole from us). These workers could return to Mexico and apply for a US work permit and when approved to come here they would avoid the double tax.
2007-05-05 20:57:29
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Unlawful Entry is a CRIME. America love it or leave it. Unlawful Entry is a CRIME. Leave it Now. Zero tolerance for immigration-law violators! No amnesty, no "stealth-amnesty." No "change of status," marriage fraud, "exceptional leave to remain," no "Temporary Protected Status." If you break the law, depart or be deported. Illegal aliens kill more US citizens each year than the war in Iraq has killed in four years. Apologists for illegal immigration like to paint it as a victimless crime. But in fact, illegal immigration causes substantial harm to American citizens and legal immigrants, particularly those in the most vulnerable sectors of our population--the poor, minorities, and children. Additionally, job competition by waves of illegal immigrants willing to work at substandard wages and working conditions depresses the wages of American workers, hitting hardest at minority workers and those without high school degrees. Illegal immigration also contributes to the dramatic population growth overwhelming communities across America--crowding school classrooms, consuming already limited affordable housing, and straining precious natural resources like water, energy, and forestland. Taxpayers are being forced to pay for the free health care, education, and other welfare programs being given to illegal aliens; Those tax dollars could be given back to U.S. taxpayers or used to keep our borders secure; They may be here illegally, but they sure know how to "work the system" to collect "free" medical care, "free" education, "free" food, Section 8 housing vouchers and other housing assistance, and hundreds of other social services. It costs citizens additional hundreds of billions of tax dollars at every level: local, state, and federal. It gobbles up billions of our charitable contributions. And much of that money ends up siphoned out of our economy and into offshore accounts. Illegal aliens, over half of whom work "under the table" with neither job nor income reported (nor taxed), are not counted as employed or unemployed. But some of those day-labor and off-the-books "job-lets" would be "real" jobs - available to American citizen job-seekers - if employment regulations were enforced. Illegal aliens can get away with tax evasion, et al., which citizens cannot. In short, we have too many workforce entrants and too few jobs created. The ratio works out to roughly 7-10 workforce entrants per job created. If all illegal aliens depart or are deported, all legal immigration halted, and all temporary employment visas abolished, we still have a problem with more US-born workforce entrants than new jobs created. Illegal immigration damages our country and our citizens every day at every level. And not even the attacks of 2/26 and 9/11 have awakened many Americans to the vast dangers illegal immigration poses to our selves, our families, our communities, our society, our values, our principles, our civilization. Zero Tolerance for Immigration-Law Violators! We must remember the lessons of 2/26, 9/11, and the costs we bear every single day. God Bless the U S A !
2007-05-06 00:44:16
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Sick of what? It is obvious that you are ignorant to how the economy works. In order to maintain low prices, businesses must either pay workers low wages or there must be a greater supply than demand. If the latter occurs, then businesses begin to layoff people. With people not working, the economy slows down, there is less spending, and the country enters into a recession. If you want to pay low prices for fruits and vegetables, then you need the people you want to deport. But if you want to pay $6 an orange, then deportation would be appropriate.
2007-05-05 20:43:42
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answer #7
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answered by DB D 1
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unfortunately... we have many in the Government who love to spend the citizens money on everything but the citizens. They are cowards and don't want to be seen as anti-minority. Funny though, they try to impress the very people who aren't tolerant to illegal immigration in their own countries....
2007-05-05 20:34:17
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answer #8
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answered by Mr. Perfect 5
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it is not clear how much longer deportation could take, but amnesty could come sooner....
2007-05-06 11:35:10
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answer #9
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answered by Redeemed 5
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http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/metropolitan/4778692.html
ICE did not even respond to a van with 15-20 illegal aliens which was involved in a possible human smuggling murder!
So what good is ICE?
2007-05-06 03:02:08
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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