Ok, I need to know where the majority of the DU stands, or where anyone really stands on the immigration issue.
Right now it's now a civil violation..
There is one thing where I can understand protesting for doing jobs American citizens aren't doing, that need to be done.
Therefore a work visa.
Which would make everything nice and legal, if you came for , under, and because of that work visa.
For instance:
I want to go to New Zealand, I will get either/or both a student/work visa, legally, It may take a while to get a work visa since I really don't have anything work related to offer for long term stay.
Now, the majority of the protestors in a national day of action billed as a "campaign for immigrants' dignity, and ~11million of people involved in this are <i>illegal</i>immigrants.
Standing law says that.
That's a prosecutable offense, no?
Doesn't it subvert U.S. Policy to extend the right to protest to non-citizens, to allow any illegal persons to congregate en masse to not be charged as they should; as illegal immigrants?
Other issues regarding that is the rights to education, scholarships, govt. funding, jobs, etc.
And how workplaces are regulated. Currently those rights are extended to known illegal immigrants.
I'd have less issue, if the many solutions didn't involve making it easier/less difficult for the current illegal immigrants over the people that came before.
When I say these things I'm told that I'm being racist, or classist or somesuch, that I'm not FOR THE PEOPLE, which as a supposed democrat I should be for.
But how can these people be THE PEOPLE, when they are in this country illegally.
The laws for rights typically stand for people who are citizens, or on their way to be right?
I'm not sure if this whole issue goes back to how the irish, felt about the black slaves being freed, and then how everyone felt about the increase in immigration of the hispanics and asians, but it sort of seems like it.
help me out!?
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060410/ap_on_re_us/immigration_protests