http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100427/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_mexico_us_immigration
4/27/2010 9:18:04 PM
http://www.cnn.com/2010/OPINION/04/27/saenz.arizona.immigration/index.html?hpt=T1interesting comparison to a similar law that California tried to enact in 1994
4/27/2010 9:59:26 PM
^yeah, i used to live in california when pete wilson tried to push prop 187. it pretty much defined him as a racist and ended his careeri'd be impressed if arizona law enforcers found a bunch of canadians who were here illegally. at least then it wouldn't appear so obviously bigoted.[Edited on April 27, 2010 at 10:46 PM. Reason : canadians]
4/27/2010 10:28:01 PM
4/28/2010 12:22:01 AM
4/28/2010 12:40:22 AM
Fun fact: my high school bff's Venezuelan mom would always ask "Do you have your papers?" before we went out anywhere. She just meant drivers' licenses, though, because North Carolina isn't a fucking police state requiring internal passports for brown people.]
4/28/2010 12:28:58 PM
I support the legislation in Arizona. In fact, I think we should expand it. Every citizen should be required to carry proof of citizenship beyond a driver's license.Soccer mom gets pulled over in her minivan on the way to the grocery? Sorry bitch, you should have had your birth certificate. Enjoy these handcuffs.
4/28/2010 12:41:49 PM
4/28/2010 1:40:27 PM
4/28/2010 1:43:55 PM
i had no idea AZ could be so fucking awesomesweet!
4/28/2010 1:55:08 PM
4/28/2010 1:55:22 PM
4/28/2010 2:27:41 PM
^I don't see any language in there that requires police to approach any "suspicious" looking people and request their papers...and it certainly doesn't include language that encourages people to to sue their police departments if they don't believe law enforcement officers are checking people's papers diligently enough.But congrats on an awful argument?
4/28/2010 2:35:14 PM
Every Alien, idiot.Not every "legal citizen born in the US who happens to be a Latino."
4/28/2010 2:35:46 PM
So you are suggesting that police will just now walk up to every person who looks mexican and arrest them if they dont have papers? Thats is whats going on in your mind?They are simply enforcing federal law.[Edited on April 28, 2010 at 2:47 PM. Reason : .]
4/28/2010 2:46:01 PM
4/28/2010 3:14:53 PM
We're asked for our driver's license or identification almost every day. Want to get a job? Let's see your ID. Randomly stopped by the cops? Let's see your ID. And a lot of the times, that's not enough...you have to show other documentation too. "Let's see your papers" is not new in the United States. We lost the freedom to live in a way that we see fit a long time ago. This isn't a critical blow to freedom; freedom is already dead.
4/28/2010 3:33:09 PM
^^Absolutely!^^^Yes, they will be legally required to approach anybody who looks "suspicious" and request to see their papers. That's what the law says they will have to do.And I'm procrastinating on a paper so I did some quick reading on Arizona's demographics. They have a large population of native Latinos (people who have lived there longer most of the white folks). I suspect the hysteria that Arizona is enduring probably has a lot to do with their inability to distinguish between native Americans and undocumented immigrants/workers. Basically, "OMG, illegals are everywhere! And they're bringing drugs!" when, in reality, most of the brown people they see have lived there forever.Seriously though, this is utter hysteria. They've only got less than half a million undocumented workers. North Carolina isn't far behind: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illegal_immigration_to_the_United_StatesBasically, they have a large brown population, not a large illegal alien population. But since they confound two, they think they're under siege or some shit. Plus, they're different than other states where Latino groups (regardless of legal status) have come together to lobby for their rights.I think there are some serious issues associated with immigration that we need to address, and I've spoke fairly openly about them. But requiring the police to harass "suspicious" people is not the way to handle shit. For one, I like to get my tan on in the summer, and I ain't tryna get hassled when I'm getting drunk by the pool.And, man, as if police didn't have a hard enough time getting people to trust them already...this legislation totally removes their discretion to ignore a person's status in pursuit of a more serious criminal. Shit, not to be crude, but it sounds like it's open season on undocumented women and children in Arizona--not like they're gonna go to the police...[Edited on April 28, 2010 at 4:00 PM. Reason : ]
4/28/2010 4:00:06 PM
4/28/2010 6:06:56 PM
4/28/2010 6:15:44 PM
because police officers always follow the letter of the law, right?
4/28/2010 6:33:07 PM
what are you guys reading, the reasonable suspicion can only occur after lawful contact is already made and can be immediately discounted if you show federal, state, or local issued ID directly from the bill
4/28/2010 6:35:26 PM
^ they did, but they didn't have as much power to do anything about it.Now, with this law, they could bring someone in and claim they didn't have an ID. The person would eventually get off, but not before the cop had made his point.This is an outside case, but this is how civil rights start to erode. People are taking out their frustrations on another race that they blame for their own problems.
4/28/2010 6:39:09 PM
4/28/2010 6:39:17 PM
^^ really? so today a police officer could not just bring someone in and claim they [fill something in here that is illegal] when they didn't in reality?besides, with the law you had to ALREADY have done something unlawful so they could have brought you for that[Edited on April 28, 2010 at 6:44 PM. Reason : ex]
4/28/2010 6:42:04 PM
^ you mean you've never heard of a cop not following proper procedures? Do you think most cops have a lawyer's knowledge of the law?I know a friend to got a drunk driving charge dropped because the cop laughed in his face when he asked for a witness to the breathalyzer (or something along those lines).[Edited on April 28, 2010 at 6:45 PM. Reason : ]
4/28/2010 6:43:36 PM
The part where it says you can be arrested and have your car impounded if you transport an illegal, even if you don't know that he's here illegally because of "reckless disregard." That sounds like something that's real easy to prove.
4/28/2010 6:43:48 PM
My neighbors drink Molson and like hockey a little too much. Reasonable suspicion. I'm suing my municipality for not pursuing them aggressively enough.
4/28/2010 6:48:13 PM
^^ can you pull this part out of the bill? the way I read it was, for example if you are speeding and carrying someone illegal in your car, officer can stop you for speeding, ask for ID you give him ID and done, cannot check others in vehicle if they are not doing anything unlawfulagain reasonable suspicion can only be used after lawful contact and can be discounted by federal/state/local ID provided; most states have laws that if you are already lawfully detained you can be arrested for failure to provide identification anyways[Edited on April 28, 2010 at 6:50 PM. Reason : ex]
4/28/2010 6:48:55 PM
4/28/2010 6:52:33 PM
yes if the person knows or recklessly disregards the fact that the alien is unlawfulon top of that person doing something else unlawful that person being found to be an illegal alien[Edited on April 28, 2010 at 6:57 PM. Reason : ex]
4/28/2010 6:56:58 PM
Yeah, but what the fuck is "recklessly disregards?" If my neighbor asks me for a ride to work and all I know is that he's brown and speaks Spanish, do I have to ask him if he's a citizen? Ask for proof that he's here legally?
4/28/2010 6:58:46 PM
reckless disregard would be like if you picked someone up in mexico and brought them across without "caring" to know if they were illegallike if you burned down a building that had people sleeping inside but you didn't know you may be charged with reckless disregard - meaning you knew that you might kill people but ignoring that consequence and doing it anyways (probably a bad example for proof unless someone overheard you or something~)
4/28/2010 7:01:34 PM
Sounds like bullshit to me. I drive my neighbor, I know I might be transporting an illegal alien. I've never seen his papers.
4/28/2010 7:07:47 PM
yes it isn't used very often and hard to prove/disprove you would essentially have to either do like i said and physically transport him across the border (whereas you know it is illegal to transport people who aren't documented but don't check their documentation) or you go around telling people you transport illegal aliens around and they tell on you [Edited on April 28, 2010 at 7:12 PM. Reason : besides he would also have to initiate lawful contact for you to be charged as well]
4/28/2010 7:12:04 PM
4/28/2010 7:55:03 PM
4/28/2010 8:21:51 PM
^You're skipping the first step, which is whether or not they would even ask for proof of identification in the first place.For example, when somebody calls and reports a parking lot gathering where a bunch of guys are allegedly blasting music from their car and drinking beer, the cops roll by if they have time, and nearly every step after that is up to their discretion based on what they observe--now they're supposed to be observing potential for illegal status somehow, which isn't possible.And if this law is so beautifully written as to preclude racial profiling, then why do the police have to be specially trained in how to enforce it without racially profiling people?But blah, this argument is pointless. The law is unconstitutional under some supremacy clause or something. Federal government handles immigration, not the states. I was hoping for a race war, but of course, this issue's gonna be solved with some anticlimactic legal mumbo jumbo...[Edited on April 28, 2010 at 9:22 PM. Reason : ?]
4/28/2010 9:15:21 PM
if cops rolled up on an unlawful parking lot gathering and at their discretion they asked for IDs they still could without this billsupremacy clause would be an interesting argument to make by the federal government; but I'd think AZ will argue that the federal government has defaulted on its immigration legislation
4/28/2010 9:25:52 PM
4/28/2010 9:34:20 PM
Federal law doesn't say that the states can handle immigration cases unless they step on the federal government's toes, it says the states cannot handle immigration cases period. Immigration = foreign affairs = the domain of the federal government. LOL]
4/28/2010 10:04:13 PM
^^ lol are you serious?You're going to tell a bunch of kids who barely graduated high school to arrest illegal immigrants, but **wink wink ** don't look at skin color, what do you think is going to happen?
4/28/2010 10:15:03 PM
^
4/28/2010 10:26:52 PM
4/28/2010 11:10:57 PM
We are at a crossroads in our nation. A major and potentially devastating assault is being made on white privilege on all fronts. Many are willing to do whatever it takes to defend it to the end. This recurring theme will continuously fuel the fire behind debates on healthcare, education, immigration, financial and energy reform. The problem with this law is not what it says but what it allows. This law allows officers in Arizona to detain hispanics because they look illegal. Sure, they have to get stopped first but if they do get stopped and aren't carrying id, they will most likely be detained as an illegal. A white however would not. Thats where the law is racist. We know the police aren't going to "suspect" anyone white of being illegal so the law will end up going after brown people only. If two american families load up into a minivan one white one brown and they each get pulled over for speeding. The white family will certainly be given a speed ticket and move on.The brown family, however at the officers judgment, could be all asked to show id. Whose kids carry id? The officer now believes this mexican american man is smuggling a 5 illegals into the country, packed in this van. After 4 hours of inconvenience the officer discovers that this is simply a mexican american family with their children.
4/29/2010 12:57:24 AM
You're the biggest racist on this board.
4/29/2010 12:59:46 AM
4/29/2010 1:11:05 AM
^^how am I a racist?for talking about white privilege? Do you know what that is?
4/29/2010 1:14:26 AM
^ No. Go into great detail about them for the rest of us.
4/29/2010 1:34:59 AM
4/29/2010 1:35:44 AM