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All have four of these, the other three come with citizenship
Freedom to express yourself. Freedom to worship as you wish. Right to a prompt, fair trial by jury. Right to vote in elections for public officials. Right to apply for federal employment requiring U.S. citizenship. Right to run for elected office. Freedom to pursue “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” |
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Actually, i wasn't having a snowflake moment over the story. I am pretty happy with my stance on it. Become a citizen, enjoy your voting rights. Pretty cut and dry.
I was actually having a "snowflake" moment at your asinine assumption that since we don't think they should be allowed the right to vote until they are granted citizenship, that we somehow lack the intellect to understand the whole sentence/thought process. ....and you know what is an even weaker argument, thinking that just because they didn't do it before, doesn't make it a good idea to do it now. |
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heres one never made it into law but it make the point The amendment, introduced by Rep. David Schweikert (R-Ariz.) and approved on May 9, 2012, was aimed at preventing the Justice Department from using its funds “to bring any action against any state for implementation of a state law requiring voter identification.”almost entirely with Republican votes. In other words, even if the Department of Justice thought a voter ID law discriminated against African Americans or Latinos, it could not sue to protect them. |
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In order to drive you need ID To collect benefits you need an ID To board a plane you need ID To enter the country you need ID To open a bank account you need ID To cash a check you need ID The list of things goes on and on, and it is not discriminatory to require it |
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is not discriminatory to require it.. your correct if the reason to to start requiring them . "to combat voter fraud :bs:" But prior to the 2006 election, no state ever required a voter to produce a government-issued photo ID as a condition to voting. to start with ... So yes its discriminatory enacted a law to solve a problem that never and still does not exist .. |
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No, you dummies. It discriminated against people without identification.
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Your list of things are not enumerations. Some of them may fall within the enumerated power of the Federal Government to regulate. Others may not, and can either be a state right to regulate, or may not be within the purview of any government to regulate. |
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July 18, 2018 10:38 AM
San Francisco began registering non-citizens, including undocumented immigrants, to register to vote Monday in the November election for the city school board, reported The San Francisco Chronicle. The move follows passage of a 2016 ballot measure by San Francisco voters opening school elections to non-citizens who are over the age of 18, city residents and have children under age 19, reported the publication. “This is no-brainer legislation,” Hillary Ronen, a San Francisco supervisor, told the Chronicle. |
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