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Papers Please

You noticed how you shifted again here from, "There's no evidence those are increasing," to "Increased deportations of illegal immigrants is a good thing"? :rolleyes:
Theres no evidence that deportation of US citizens is increasing. That is the area of concern, not deportation of non-citizens who aren't supposed to be here.
You seem to have of thread of embarrassment about your bigotry that you can't quite reconcile.
So now I'm a bigot! Nice. Desire for enforcement of immigration law = bigotry...I guess there are a lot of bigots in the world given that most other countries actually enforce their immigration laws.

Sometimes, SG, a person can disagree with you about something without being a bigot.
 
Theres no evidence that deportation of US citizens is increasing. That is the area of concern, not deportation of non-citizens who aren't supposed to be here.
Care to address the evidence cited or are you just going to keep asserting this?

So now I'm a bigot! Nice. Desire for enforcement of immigration law = bigotry...I guess there are a lot of bigots in the world given that most other countries actually enforce their immigration laws.

Sometimes, SG, a person can disagree with you about something without being a bigot.
I'm pretty sure I addressed specifics.
 
Let's be frank: if the illegals were White Canadians,we would not be having this discussion.

If I met a Canadian illegal alien here I'd wonder what the hell he was thinking. Then I'd assume he was a pot dealer.
 
There is no data to point to. You have to live here to understand it. No one, afaik, has done a study on the prevalence of ID-carrying. I can tell you, after living here for 40+ years, carrying ID around becomes an ingrained habit because it's so convenient and necessary. I can list the myriad situations where you can get totally jammed up if you don't have any. You can infer, from the prevalence of situations where ID is required and from articles like this, foreigners are advised to always carry ID on them, that Americans generally follow the same advice given to Brits: always carry an ID. But if you want to think there are great masses of ID-less Americans wandering about, be my guest.


Once again you somehow believe that you and those you know are an absolute microcosm of a quarter of a billion people. How you can possibly believe this is beyond me.
 
You have got to be kidding.........

My aunt came to America in 1947, with just such a tattoo. So yeah, not serious about it.

But perhaps the average reader here doesn't know what Auschwitz was. Nobody else seemed to have gotten the drift started by another poster.
 
My aunt came to America in 1947, with just such a tattoo. So yeah, not serious about it.

But perhaps the average reader here doesn't know what Auschwitz was. Nobody else seemed to have gotten the drift started by another poster.
I thought it pretty obvious. But it's a sad commentary on the times we live in when not everyone does.
 
There has been no evidence cited indicating that deportations of US Citizens is on the rise, just that it's been a problem in the past.



Sure.:rolleyes:

So you ignored the increase from 100 to 160 deportations the CA legislator reported that I cited?
 
Re checking on increased deportations, there are mixed news reports but this one is fairly specific:

Under Trump order, immigration agents raid 'target-rich' communities in Texas, elsewhere

We do know the mother of two who checked in for the 8th year in a row was deported when the previous seven years she was not.

I din't find that in your link.

Trump hasn't even been president for a month yet, how can anybody possibly figure an increase in the rate of ANYDAMNTHUNG???

The 100 vs 160 were two different estimates for the same weekend, NOT a camparison of rates.
 
I din't find that in your link.
About the mother? Of course not, it was discussed in multiple posts up-thread.

The 100 vs 160 were two different estimates for the same weekend, NOT a camparison of rates.
The CA legislator said he was given information it was business as usual then found out it wasn't.

How is you you read that link and missed the deportation of the mother?
 
She was already caught and there was already a process determined acceptable for her to make restitution for it. Now, despite her compliance with that process, she is to be given a punishment far worse than what the crime you refer to would impose.
She was given a removal order in 2013 and then granted a stay. There is no obligation to keep granting stays.

Look, I don't necessarily agree that in this particular case she should have been deported. I can acknowledge some nuance in interpretation and following the letter of the law. She should have been way down on the list. But the fact of the matter is she was on the list and she knew it.

If someone is on the list for arrest because he failed to pay a speeding ticket, I think we all agree that he should be low priority for arrest. If he gets pulled over and the office exercises discretion and doesn't arrest him, he got lucky. If he gets arrested one time, that sucks but he did have a warrant out. Same kind of situation here.

Seriously, if most of you 'no mercy/absolute letter of the law' types actually had to live under that kind of system, you probably wouldn't last.
I've done pretty good so far . . . I'm not sure what you mean, in any case. Don't do illegal things and you never have to worry about interacting with the law.
It's just that it's easy to make claims like that when you're relatively assured it wouldn't ever actually be turned against you.
I have been that guy that got arrested for failing to pay a speeding ticket. I think the law is stupid in those cases and feel it's not just unjust but a waste of resources. But I knew the law and messed up. Lesson learned. I'm still "lasting" under a 'no mercy/absolute letter of the law' system.

Also, once again the language usage in which a person is described as being illegal. Not even hiding behind the 'immigrant' part now, illegal is directly applied as an adjective to the person.
It's just shorthand. It's tedious to type in illegal immigrant everytime. You are reading too much into it.
 
So you ignored the increase from 100 to 160 deportations the CA legislator reported that I cited?

An increase of illegal immigrant deportations. There is no evidence that US Citizens are being deported at an increased rate.
 
We do know the mother of two who checked in for the 8th year in a row was deported when the previous seven years she was not.
This is not really a criticism but potentially it is added context. Many civil rights movements started with lawsuits, and those lawsuits involved carefully vetted plaintiffs. This mom fits the general profile. Obviously something changed in the interim - Trump was elected president. Her felony was of the lowest order, something judges can reduce to misdemeanors and even set aside if circumstances warrant. She has U.S. citizen kids and a husband who is allowed to stay because he did not have a record.

I've known enough of these situations personally to understand the sorrow, but I do believe this woman was probably handpicked to bring on public sympathy.
 
It hasn't stopped.

Guadalupe Plascencia said she was alarmed when a San Bernardino County sheriff’s deputy asked her to sign papers related to her immigration status.

The 59-year-old hairdresser from San Bernardino had spent the night of March 29 in jail because of a decade-old bench warrant related to her alleged failure to appear as a witness in a court case. During her night in jail, Plascencia said a deputy asked her to sign documents acknowledging that officials with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement had inquired about her.

“Why?” Plascencia asked. “I’m an American citizen.”

Confused and scared, Plascencia did as she was asked, assuring herself that the entire ordeal was a mistake that would soon be cleared up.

But as she tried to leave the West Valley Detention Center in Rancho Cucamonga, Plascencia said she was met by immigration enforcement agents, handcuffed and placed in the back of a van. Plascencia would spend the rest of the day in ICE custody, fearful that she would be deported despite becoming an American citizen some 20 years ago, following an amnesty program initiated by President Ronald Reagan.

“I felt helpless, like I was no one,” she said in a recent interview. “Here, they talk about rights … in that moment, I realized, we don’t have rights.”

ICE is still harassing and detaining Latinos who are citizens.
 

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