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Raising Arizona: No MA listed?
At least 15 state legislatures are considering measures modeled after provisions of SB1070 that made Arizona the first state to allow police to question the immigration status of anyone they suspect is in the country illegally. The list does not include Wyoming, where a House committee this week killed a bill that would have allowed police to check the immigration status of anyone who is stopped for another violation. (Includes measures that had formally been introduced as of Feb. 2.)
• California The Assembly is considering a measure that would require police to question the immigration status of anyone they suspect is in the country illegally. • Colorado The House is considering a measure that would allow police to question the immigration status of anyone they suspect is in the country illegally. The Senate is considering a measure that would require them to. • Florida The Senate is considering a measure that would allow police to question the immigration status of anyone they suspect is in the country illegally. It would go further than the Arizona law by increasing criminal penalties if a crime is committed by an illegal immigrant. • Georgia The House is considering a measure that would allow police to question the immigration status of anyone they suspect is in the country illegally. • Indiana The House is considering a measure that would allow police to question the immigration status of anyone they suspect is in the country illegally. A hearing on the bill was this week postponed because of wintry weather. • Kentucky The Senate has passed a measure that would allow police to question the immigration status of anyone they suspect is in the country illegally. Action in the House is pending. • Maine The House is considering a measure that would allow police to question the immigration status of anyone they suspect is in the country illegally. • Maryland The House is considering a measure that would allow police to question the immigration status of anyone they suspect is in the country illegally. • Mississippi Senate- and House-passed measures would allow police to check the immigration status of anyone who is stopped for a traffic violation. The House and the Senate are negotiating their differences over the legislation, which Gov. Haley Barbour has signaled he would sign. That would make Mississippi the first state to join Arizona in enacting such a bill. • Nebraska The Senate is considering a measure that would require non-U.S. citizens to carry proof of their legal status and would require police to question the immigration status of anyone they suspect is in the country illegally. A countermeasure would declare immigration a federal policy issue and direct Nebraska's congressional delegation to seek "a workable immigration system." • Oregon A bill in the House would require all public officials to "enforce immigration law" or be held legally liable. The bill's sponsor said she doesn't expect it to pass but hopes it stimulates debate on illegal immigration. • South Carolina A measure that would allow police to check the immigration status of anyone who is stopped for another violation is before the Senate Judiciary Committee. • Texas Several bills that would require police to check the immigration status of anyone who is stopped for another violation have been introduced after Gov. Rick Perry asked legislators to make illegal immigration a priority this session. • Utah The House is considering a measure that would allow police to question the immigration status of anyone they suspect is in the country illegally. An alternative proposal would allow illegal immigrants to register so they could live and work in Utah without fear of deportation. • Virginia A measure that would require police to check the immigration status of anyone who is stopped for another violation was introduced in the House this week. |
I just read an article about that. This could be a slippery slope for a lot of Republicans who campaigned on the illegal immigration issue.
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I think
they should only be able to check immigration status for those caught red handed committing a crime ....not traffic infractions either...
hey! your tail light's out Buddy.... |
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i disagree
not everyone that looks like an Illegal is an illegal
which is what all the fuss is about right from the beginning which turns us from a free society to one closer to NAZI Germany when anyone could be asked "your Papers Please". |
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I think they should be able to check immigration status without taking away someones “human rights”. Why can’t States just list on a drivers license if the person is a citizen or not? Here in Massachusetts driving is a “privilege” not a “right”. If it’s a privilege, then change the law to read that “US Citizen” or “Non US Citizen” be listed on that “privileged” license. |
If you get stopped they should be allowed to check your status. They do the same for everyone that gets stopped as far as there being any outstanding warrants and such
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As long as there is a legitimate reason for stopping them, I see no problem with the ICE database being available to the police. I do worry that the legitimate reason becomes less clear to some people however.... |
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Let's do the same as is done with drunk driving check points, no profiling no nothing: stop EVERYONE and check!
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brought into custody?
sounds like they got arrested which is quite different
post 9-11 ......... its "almost" a necessary evil considering one of the Saudi's involved was stopped and issued a citation and then sent on his way i have lived places where there were signs ahead saying mandatory checkpoint ahead and i didn't like it i don't wanna be on foot out shopping and be carded just because i sport a beard yet i had to show my ID at CVS wednesday just to buy Vick's cherry flavored Nyquil :doh: |
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The chances that a white guy driving an Audi SUV is and illegal is a whole lot less than a van filled with 6 people that don't speak English. Not to mention, illegals that are driving more than likely don't have car insurance - something that puts ever other person on the road at risk. I can't imagine it would be overly difficult to also check immigration status during the the 15 minutes they are back there in their cruiser making me wonder if I'm getting a ticket or not. |
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Maybe if a less than properly compliant and documented immigrant cannot produce quality driver's ID and proof of insurance they can make sure esso is all legit. Homes. |
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That being said I would not mind having a citizen id card issued like the passport card. This way there would be no excuse by employers for saying they were not able to effectively check who they were hiring. Anyone who hires an illegal should pay treble the current fines. |
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Example: New Mexico, AZ or Cali police pose as a small contractor in need of day-labor and drive to the local Home Depot or Lowes. They drive up then corral the multiple people standing outside trying to get a job for the day. The officer asks for their identification to check them for warrants and confirm their immigration status. Chances are pretty damn good (so good that I'd give 5:1 odds to anyone who disagrees) that at least one of them is here illegally. Just to re-emphasize, I'm not saying profiling is pleasant or even fair, but removing bias and utilizing data to create profiles would be the most efficient method of enforcement. |
i guess i'll get a Sombrero and drive around.... :love:
the mandatory checkpoints i spoke of were for vehicle emissions (on the spot inspections) dmv sniffer rigs... in Cali with the Porosity of the Southern Border including the many Tunnels and the fact Canada has plenty of holes too into Maine...ect. there's plenty of Opportunities for Bad guys to get into this country from groups whose only purpose is to Harm Americans in the name of their cause. From that standpoint, i suppose it's necessary for security since the shift is now from large scale operations to small scale seems to be the new way. |
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Just as ever Muslim is more scrutinized by people around them when they travel by plane (and that is undeniable), every Hispanic is going to me more scrutinized in border states. It's just more efficient. Until Europeans that want to enter the country illegally start funneling through Mexico en masse, there's no denying the effectiveness of questioning the group of non-English speaking guys standing outside a hardware store begging for work more than the Asian wearing a suit and driving a Mercedes. Unfortunately, this entire country is so race-sensitive and dictated by Politically Correctness that the most effective security measure for this country must yield to the PR whores. Hell, I'm surprised I haven't been called a racist yet. |
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Lieberman, Collins: FBI and Pentagon could have stopped the Fort Hood shootings By Joseph I. Lieberman and Susan M. Collins Friday, February 4, 2011; 12:00 AM Maj. Nidal Hasan, accused in the murders of 13 people and the attempted murders of 32 others in the shooting spree at Fort Hood, Tex., in November 2009, appears to be the toughest kind of terrorist to spot: a lone wolf who plots without the overt support of domestic cells or foreign sponsors. Still, the attack did not come as a complete surprise to some in the Army and the FBI, and that makes this incident all the more tragic. Our Senate committee's 14-month investigation of the Fort Hood killings has concluded that the Department of Defense and the FBI "collectively had sufficient information to have detected Hasan's radicalization to violent Islamist extremism but failed both to understand and to act on it." The deaths at Fort Hood could and should have been prevented. The Defense Department's failure to acknowledge the threat of violent Islamist extremism within its ranks, coupled with organizational and communication flaws in the FBI's counterterrorism operations, contributed to the tragedy. At various times while stationed at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Hasan, a psychiatrist, openly expressed his beliefs that suicide bombings were justified, that U.S. military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan were wars against Islam, that Muslim Americans in the U.S. military might engage in fratricide against their comrades and that his loyalty to his religion was greater than his sworn obligation as a military officer to support and defend the Constitution. Some of Hasan's colleagues complained about these statements. Two fellow officers described him as "a ticking time bomb." But astonishingly, Hasan's commanders took no action against him. They gave various excuses for this, including an outrageously misguided argument that Hasan's radical statements provided insights into violent Islamist extremism that could benefit our military. :confused::confused: Rather than discipline or discharge him, Hasan's superiors sanitized his personnel evaluations so that evidence of his radicalization was praised as research on terrorism and Islam. Lieberman, Collins: FBI and Pentagon could have stopped the Fort Hood shootings |
Sounds more like weak leadership.
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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And then it has something not going its way — a federal crackdown on its immigrant labor force that has so far forced Chipotle to fire hundreds of allegedly illegal workers in the state of Minnesota, perhaps more than half its staff there. |
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While the punditry is throwing mud, the Feds are making progress. -spence |
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