http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/06/15/arizona.immigration.children/index.html?hpt=C1
6/15/2010 8:53:56 AM
Can two wrongs make a right?
6/15/2010 9:07:18 AM
If you go back to the original intent of the constitution, you would count your slaves as 3/5ths of the population, women couldn’t vote, and you were a lesser class of citizen if you don’t own land.And i’m skeptical that the original intent of the constitution was to stop people who were born here from being citizens, because at that time they were trying to get settlers to come and settle the land, and would have welcomed all the hard working anchor babies they could find.Basically Kavanagh is entirely talking out his ass, and is just trying to rationalize his xenophobia by manufacturing his own delusional version of history.
6/15/2010 9:41:28 AM
^
6/15/2010 9:49:58 AM
6/15/2010 10:04:43 AM
^I didn't know babies were "willing to work, and able to find work".
6/15/2010 10:14:51 AM
6/15/2010 10:16:29 AM
That's exactly the point. These are both equally valid statements:If you go back to the original intent of the drafters ... it was never intended to bestow citizenship upon (illegal) aliensIf you go back to the original intent of the drafters ... it was never intended not to bestow citizenship upon (illegal) aliensor more accurately, the drafters never considered illegal aliens.Our current woes with immigration are not addressed by the constitution. I don't see any reason why we can't fix this situation without changing birthright citizenship.[Edited on June 15, 2010 at 10:23 AM. Reason : ?]
6/15/2010 10:22:47 AM
If you go back to the original intent of the drafters ... it was never intended to bestow citizenship upon (illegal) aliens Arizonians
6/15/2010 10:27:19 AM
It was originally put in bc of slaves. We are the only country that has this law/rule. Its probably time to change it.
6/15/2010 10:38:15 AM
huh, explain?I see, birthright citizenship comes from the 14th amendment. How was citizenship defined before then?[Edited on June 15, 2010 at 10:50 AM. Reason : ?]
6/15/2010 10:45:01 AM
can't we just make it illegal because intentional abuse of the system is wrong?Why not just say you are granted citizenship if you are born to current citizens and leave it at that?
6/15/2010 10:47:47 AM
If you entered America illegally, I don't care how many children you give birth to on American soil. You are an illegal alien and should be deported. If you want to leave your American citizen-by-birth children in an orphanage, your prerogative. However, broadly saying that the children, born on American soil, of illegal alien parents are also illegal aliens causes some problems. What happens if an American citizen knocks up an illegal alien? Do we flip a coin - "Sorry, Josefina, tails. Back to Guatemala." - What happens if an illegal alien is raped by an unknown attacker and gives birth to a resulting child? For now, I think you have to give children born on American soil citizenship, if only for lack of a better way to regulate.
6/15/2010 10:57:56 AM
I really like how folks here are encouraging punishing a child for the sins of the parent. On both sides of this discussion.
6/15/2010 11:05:19 AM
all this dumb shit is a response to our broken immigration system. It needs to be far far easier for someone looking to contribute to the country to enter legally and gain citizenship.
6/15/2010 11:07:23 AM
6/15/2010 11:12:28 AM
its a punishment to live anywhere thats not america :fsmug:
6/15/2010 11:20:06 AM
We should let people come here, live here, and work here as they please, provided we have decent border security. If we did that, Mexico and the United States would be much better off. I don't see a problem with children born here becoming citizens.You can't look at the intent of the founders without looking at how they might view our current system. They wouldn't be happy with it. Relations between the United States and Mexico are worsened by our laws. The minimum wage here provides an incentive for immigrants to come here and work illegally, because it's illegal to work for less than 7.25 an hour. Many illegals are more than happy to work for less than that. Drug prohibition has created a drug trade that must come through Mexico and Latin America, which has resulted in more violent crime and human suffering than prohibition has ever prevented. Also, we inflated a housing bubble here, resulting in artificially high demand for construction jobs. Now, we're attempting to re-inflate the bubble, and we foolishly wonder why there's an influx of immigrants.We should never be discouraging people from coming here and being productive. We all benefit from that. However, the free market is being distorted by government mandates, and one of the negative consequences of that is higher immigration and a black market for labor.
6/15/2010 11:29:59 AM
Maybe we should put land mines on the border like Tom Mullins (R) suggested.http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/06/15/new-mexico-republican-candidate-suggests-land-mines-mexico-border/
6/15/2010 11:53:08 AM
6/15/2010 12:06:42 PM
Arizona has totally lost it as of late. It's as if they're trying to win a xenophobia contest.
6/15/2010 12:42:55 PM
6/15/2010 1:56:01 PM
western hemisphere, bestern hemisphere
6/15/2010 2:25:23 PM
6/15/2010 2:40:18 PM
Wouldn't this bill get struck down by the courts anyway? It's blatantly unconstitutional.
6/15/2010 2:51:00 PM
timswar, thanks for the info/link.
6/15/2010 3:19:39 PM
6/15/2010 3:38:31 PM
If they're born here they are under the jurisdiction of the US, and therefore citizens. I'm actually in favor of this. Yes, it would suck for the kid, but one person's citizenship should have no effect on the legal status of their parents regardless of age.
6/15/2010 4:29:37 PM
With your logic Raul Castro could come via envoy to the US for a diplomatic confrence. His wife tags along 8 months pregnant. Oh Know's! She gives birth, so now Fidel's new nephew is a US citizen! YAY!Is it really fair that an engineer coming from India has to spend years working for his naturalization while greatly contributing to our society. Meanwhile Juanita simply has to hop the fence, have a baby before INS catches her, and this kid gets handed a free citizenship card (most likely Juanita gets to stay now since we don't want to seperate a kid from his mom)[Edited on June 15, 2010 at 4:38 PM. Reason : a]
6/15/2010 4:36:25 PM
6/15/2010 4:43:19 PM
6/15/2010 4:44:41 PM
"If you go back to the original intent of the drafters ... it was never intended to bestow citizenship upon (illegal) aliens,"Right, because back then there was no such thing as an alien, legal or otherwise. Your physical presence alone in the land of the founders made you a citizen.
6/15/2010 5:09:13 PM
6/15/2010 5:19:37 PM
How common do people think this anchor baby thing is?
6/15/2010 5:53:07 PM
^good pointan uncommon thing is less of a thing [] [Edited on June 15, 2010 at 6:28 PM. Reason : my turn for a strawman?]
6/15/2010 5:59:15 PM
6/15/2010 6:59:02 PM
6/15/2010 7:01:24 PM
6/16/2010 12:50:05 AM
[Edited on June 16, 2010 at 1:39 AM. Reason : ]
6/16/2010 1:23:26 AM
^[before the edit: "Arizona should go ahead and start ethnic cleansing, because that's clearly their end goal."]Tell that to the many Hispanic Arizonans that support the law. It's sad how much some idiots want to think everything is racism-driven...Also sad is how opponents of the law want to punish [all of] Arizona, because clearly the law had 100% support, not 52%. [Edited on June 16, 2010 at 1:35 AM. Reason : ]
6/16/2010 1:31:18 AM
you can roll your eyes all you want, holmes. this, along with the illegal immigration bill, along with the state schools not being allowed to teach minority classes, along with the desire to fire school teachers who's "accents are not up to the standards of this guy demonstrate the state's paranoid agenda.
6/16/2010 1:38:09 AM
6/16/2010 2:09:26 AM
6/16/2010 2:36:55 AM
so will there be a constitutional amendment?
6/16/2010 8:32:29 AM
^I guess we'll see.
6/16/2010 8:53:13 AM
6/16/2010 7:07:22 PM
Which part of the Arizona law says that?
6/16/2010 7:11:00 PM
^what are you going on about? the 3/5 rule is a pretty apt comparison, considering the topic revolves around citizenship. could you please point me to the rule that states that once an old, racist law is amended, it is officially water under the bridge and no longer eligible for reference? so what if it was "amended a long time ago," the similarities both revolve around valuing the citizenship of someone born in the united states, and i'm not going to apologize for using it just because it offends your perceived post racial sensibilities.
6/16/2010 9:19:35 PM
6/16/2010 10:18:35 PM
^^ Have you read the law? It's worded so vaguely that any school program that might make mention of civil rights era violations, 9/11, or really any historical issue where race was a factor could theoretically be banned by the gov.It's amazing that you 2 supposed proponents of small government and "libertarianism" would want any gov. authority to have such broad power to ban a class because it might promote "resentment" of a group.ESPECIALLY when it is then subsequently used to target a single specific program, that doesn't even seem to fit what the legislation claims to be against.So if i'm a teacher teaching a class about the atrocities that spurred the civil rights movement, how exactly do i stop kids from maybe feeling resentment at what some of the whites of the time did?It's such an obviously dumb, vague, and overly broad law, i don't see why anyone would support it. It doesn't represent any of the tenants of freedom we are supposed to stand for. We may as well melt down the Statue of Liberty.
6/16/2010 10:24:30 PM