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by toor2
3468 days ago
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> Why is enforcing the law and following policies so everybody can make a successful transition to become a US citizen a bad thing? Because the laws are unjust. There is clearly an immigration problem in the United States and I personally don't believe tracking and deporting he people already here will ever contribute to a successful solution. > If your illegal, and most likely your not going to pay your fair share for the entitlements and services you and others use then I have zero respect for you. Many illegal immigrants still pay taxes and will never receive direct benifits for their contribution [0] Illegal immigrants also work jobs that you would never think of working. Remember when they deported a bunch of immigrants in the south and food was rotting in the fields because no one was there to pick it a few years ago? |
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Then change the laws, but in order to do that you need to get your own people elected.
It's funny how ultimately the camps that allegedly is for a strong federal government would be better off with a weak "confederate style" federation. If the federal government wouldn't be in charge of immigration policies then whatever state you live in could set whatever immigration laws you want.
It's also curious how only in US immigration laws are seen as as immoral. Try to move to Canada and see how hard it is to survive there illegally. Yet Canada is somehow seen as the heaven of progressiveness somehow ...
Here is the thing, the more illegal immigrants you accept and defend, the harder it is for the people who actually want to respect US laws and go through the official process. That's the only thing that is immoral here. But you don't care about these people.