This Senate immigration plan sounds terrible
No intending illegal alien is going to be deterred from trying to enter by learning that the only thing that stands between him and legal status is paying a fine and taxes. Kaus’s point here is critical: Far from making illegal aliens go to the “back of the line,” this proposal gives them the immeasurable advantage of legal presence in the U.S. while waiting for their green card, unlike aliens obeying the law and waiting in their own country for permission to enter.
The outline is silent on what would cause the revocation of probationary status. Perhaps the commission of “serious crimes,” but the statement of principles is impenetrably ambiguous on this point. If the commission of “serious crime” is indeed the trigger for potentially (emphasis on the “potential” part) losing probationary status, it means that a whole host of “unserious crimes” may still be committed with impunity by “probationary” illegals without jeopardizing their safe haven from the law. The distinction between “serious” and “unserious” crime should have in any case been long since retired; New York City’s triumph over all crime through the enforcement of low-level misdemeanor statutes shows that enforcement of misdemeanor laws is as critical to public safety as felony arrests (and even more important to a community’s sense of order and safety)…
At the press conference, Senators Menendez and Rubio delivered their remarks in Spanish as well as English, sometimes embroidering on their English version, as when Menendez said to his non-English-speaking listeners that their “voices have been heard.” No one spoke in Chinese or German. I am a big advocate of learning foreign languages to better understand other cultures and human thought itself, but doing so should not be necessary to communicate with one’s fellow citizens. It is remarkable therefore that the growing Spanish-language imperative trumped any fears that a bilingual press conference does not exactly establish that assimilation is keeping pace with the growth of a parallel Hispanophone culture.











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It’s sounds a lot better in Spanish.
Rocks on January 29, 2013 at 4:25 PM
We have an entilement problem in the country of biblical proportions. So, the best action to do right now is to legalize people who will be net users and producers in the system burdening the system even to the breaking point.
On just this fact alone we shouldn’t be doing it. Let alone, the legal, fairness, cultural problems illegalization will bring.
Oil Can on January 29, 2013 at 4:26 PM
Actually, it sounds great. It’s just that it’s all bullsh!t. Bullsh!t always sounds great.
Dusty on January 29, 2013 at 4:31 PM
Well done, lol.
xblade on January 29, 2013 at 4:52 PM
Has anyone asked Menedez whether the Hispanic minors whom he’s been boning will be covered by this plan?
BuckeyeSam on January 29, 2013 at 4:59 PM
Baiscally, stand our ground. Giving an inch or a half mile, or appeasement, is not going to make the problem go away. It’s the opposite. Tell that to the RINOs McCain et al.
Hispanic pressure will only increase, until finally they, in cahoots with the white liberal allies, will have enough clout to demand de facto open borders. That will be the sad outcome of our democracy. Then it’s fullout redistribution of assets from the haves to the have-not immigrants. Don’t just go out with a whimper. Try at least to fight it.
anotherJoe on January 29, 2013 at 5:21 PM