Sean Hayden wrote: ↑Fri Oct 26, 2018 3:03 pm
You shouldn't take that to mean that I support your idea of immigration law. You really are a black and white guy man. If I say I support enforcing immigration law then you say good, because Trump is getting serious about it. But there is more than one way to enforce immigration law. Obama, for example, made a point of prioritizing who should be deported, who should be allowed to stay while their case was heard, and who for all intents and purposes should be left alone. That is one way of enforcing immigration law.
It's not if you support immigration law you support this. If illegal immigrants are criminals, and you support justice, then you support this kind of immigration enforcement. You keep trying to make the world like that. But I'm not getting on that ride with you man.
The world IS like that.
I would like to see NO illegal immigrants in any country. See if you disagree with my methods.
1. Deport anyone who won't pursue a legal resident status (citizen, temporary foreign worker, student visa etc.)
2. Divide ICE into two groups. One to enforce, another to aid. (in Canada, the only person to help you with immigration here in the north, is the immigration officer. A decent woman, doing a difficult job, but really, a bit of a conflict seems to be there)
3. Work hard to move anyone who suits into a lawful immigration stream, then prioritize that as fairly as possible ('fair' meaning what the voters choose)
As to deporting, I think there should be a prison available for those who choose to refuse deportation. This is a contraversial idea, but let me go on a bit...
I have long advocated for prison improvements. As a measure of 'good enough', a judge should have no problem meeting their granddaughter for lunch in such a place. It would take more staff, and more scrutiny. A lot more. It might not ever be achievable, but that is the quality of 'institution' we should be running.
In such a prison, the place should also be elective. For example, if you decide you 'just can't', you can self-sentence for a period of time. If someone needs respite, prison should be safe and appealing enough that they would choose it for their own care. This is the kind of 'prison' I suggest, and if someone is being deported into danger, they shouldn't mind choosing this kind of lockup.
I don't want to hurt people. Even criminals. Even violent criminals. I really like that, as a country, we don't kill people for crimes (at least not openly). It's expensive to have that kind of arrangement, but I think it's worth spending a lot on.
So are we so far apart in our views? I honestly have sympathy for the LEO's who have to carry out these orders. Sure, everyone
says they hate Trump, but what ends up really playing out, is that ICE and the other staff are vilified for doing their jobs. Not for doing them badly, but for doing it at all.
This is why I would like you to consider your young daughter working for ICE. Trying to be respectful of those victims of circumstance, instead of just the moist-eyed separated families.