l don't think we can legislate our way out of the immigration problem. We need to secure the border and enforce the laws that are already in existence. If we can't do that, then we don't have the national will to fix the problem.
I guess some don't see the difference in applying the 14th Amendment between people who were brought here against there will and made citizens, along with their children, and those that chose to come here illegally.You have to remember, that is the part of the Constitution the right wingers don't support.
Their motto is ..... Support only the parts of the Constitution you agree with......the rest blame the left.
As part of that effort we should also stop giving them jobs and stop giving them govt benefits to which they aren't entitled. Also, the GOP should kill any chance of these parasites getting amnesty. If they can't get these goodies they're after they'll leave on their own or won't come in the first place.l don't think we can legislate our way out of the immigration problem. We need to secure the border and enforce the laws that are already in existence. If we can't do that, then we don't have the national will to fix the problem.
In 2010, the average unlawful immigrant household received around $24,721 in government benefits and services while paying some $10,334 in taxes. This generated an average annual fiscal deficit (benefits received minus taxes paid) of around $14,387 per household. This cost had to be borne by U.S. taxpayers. Amnesty would provide unlawful households with access to over 80 means-tested welfare programs, Obamacare, Social Security, and Medicare. The fiscal deficit for each household would soar.
http://www.heritage.org/research/re...ful-immigrants-and-amnesty-to-the-us-taxpayer
Walls don't work...... Never have, never will.
OVM - it would require a change to the US constitution, and it would require 100s of legislators across the country to alienate their Hispanic constituency. Or would require a constitutional convention, which is even more unlikely.
Praise for a brutal dictatorship like East Germany, why am I not surprised.They worked extremely well for East Germany. They have worked. They can work extremely well if they're properly utilized.
The purpose of the wall, fence or other physical barrier would be to keep undesirables out - not in - and would force immigrants to become citizens by the proper means. It could be extremely effective if properly designed and supported with modern technology and an armed military presence. If the USA has the means and ability to build and maintain nearly 48,000 miles of interstate highway they can certainly build a 1900 mile wall along the Mexican border. Considering the corruption and incompetence of the Mexican govt and the condition of their economy and society we would do well to discourage their illiterate, unskilled illegal immigrants from invading our society. We have enough problems of our own without having to absorb theirs.That wall was to keep people in, not out. And was the bain of world events for decades.
Apparently, you think "subject to American jurisdiction" means the same as some kind of police jurisdiction or something. That's just one of the definitions. It doesn't mean that at all in the context of the Constitution. In the Constitution it means authority, dominion, sovereignty. Under American (or US) jurisdiction means having a sovereign allegiance to the US. That's why children born overseas of American citizen parents are considered US citizens at birth, even though they weren't on US soil, because their parents have a sovereign allegiance to the US (under the jurisdiction of). The kid is the same jurisdiction as the parents.Of course we could pass a law that illegal aliens are not subject to American jurisdiction. Unfortunately that would mean they aren't subject to our laws or to arrest.
The only way to "fix" the 14th amendment is to amend the Constitution.
It really wouldn't require changing the Constitution at all.
Yes and no. Prior to the 14th Amendment "citizen" meant solely a citizen of some state. But it gets mentioned many times in the Constitution long before the 14th Amendment cane along. Article IV Section II, for starters. The first section of the 14th Amendment defined what it meant to be a citizen of the United States. That was done almost verbatim from the Civil Rights Act of 1866 which granted citizenship to all persons born in the United States if they were not subject to a foreign power, and that clause of the Fourteenth Amendment constitutionalized this rule. The Civil Rights Act of 1866 was in large part a response from Congress to the Supreme Court for ruling that black people were not citizens, nor could they become citizens or enjoy the benefits of citizenship (the Dred Scott decision - it's a famous one).The practice began because of British common law. It wasn't until the 14th amendment that citizenship was "defined".
I don't know why the Supreme Court would overturn it. They know very well what "jurisdiction of" means, and they know fully well that the Civil Rights Act of 1866 spelled it out to one thing, and the Immigration Act of 1964 altered the meaning to take into account children of illegals, despite the fact that the parents of an anchor baby are, absolutely, subject to a foreign power. (We're actually having some serious problems with that right now, with one or both parents (usually the father) being from a Muslim country and asserting his allegiance to get the baby deported to whatever country dad moved back to).I don't think a law as suggested would stand SCOTUS scrutiny, and would be overturned. Hence my comments that it would require amending the constitution. This is why I keep stressing strengthen the border and start following the laws that are in the books.
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Immigration and Customs Enforcement Director Sarah Saldana, who has been on the job less than 90 days, told Congress she would welcome new laws to crack down on states and localities that refuse to cooperate with her agents who are trying to apprehend and deport illegal immigrants.
“Thank you, Amen,” she said Thursday when asked if she would support Congress passing a law insisting local officials cooperate.
Her remarks drew fire from immigrant-rights advocates, and on Friday she had to issue a new statement saying she does not, in fact, want to see Congress pass any new crackdown laws.
“Any effort at federal legislation now to mandate state and local law enforcement’s compliance with ICE detainers will, in our view, be a highly counterproductive step and lead to more resistance and less cooperation in our overall efforts to promote public safety,” she said in an effort to walk back her previous statement to Congress.
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news...ef-backtracks-sanctuary-cities/#ixzz3fK6fHeBr