Providence and Illegal Immigration
#1
Posted 20 June 2007 - 05:29 PM
http://www.projo.com...KI.328246e.html
What do you guys think about this?
#2
Posted 20 June 2007 - 06:20 PM
webbage, on Jun 20 2007, 05:29 PM, said:
http://www.projo.com...KI.328246e.html
What do you guys think about this?
It is an outrage. You have here an elected official sworn to obey the laws deliberately acting to stop enforcement of law..federal law in this case. It is a clear effort to permit non-enforcement of the invasion of illegal aliens into our nation.
Note the use of "undocumented" instead of illegal. Let me ask you, if I break into your home, hide in a room for several days, and then are discovered, do you call the police and have me arrested and removed or have I earned the right to stay? Am I an uninvited guest or a criminal intruder?
Does the next ordinance stop police from enforcing the burglary of your home if it is done by an "undocu
mented"? How about being a sanctuary for all criminals - foreign and domestic?
This guy must be stopped and I, now that I am a resident of the city, will take this one to the wall. I intend to write to him, th Mayor, my Councilman, and Esserman.
#3
Posted 20 June 2007 - 06:24 PM
Baines, on Jun 20 2007, 06:20 PM, said:
Note the use of "undocumented" instead of illegal. Let me ask you, if I break into your home, hide in a room for several days, and then are discovered, do you call the police and have me arrested and removed or have I earned the right to stay? Am I an uninvited guest or a criminal intruder?
Does the next ordinance stop police from enforcing the burglary of your home if it is done by an "undocu
mented"? How about being a sanctuary for all criminals - foreign and domestic?
This guy must be stopped and I, now that I am a resident of the city, will take this one to the wall. I intend to write to him, th Mayor, my Councilman, and Esserman.
That's exactly the way I feel. My favorite example of that term is that a drug dealer is technically an "undocumented" pharmacist.
Sadly since I don't live in PVD I really can't write anyone.
#4
Posted 20 June 2007 - 08:41 PM
webbage, on Jun 20 2007, 08:24 PM, said:
Sadly since I don't live in PVD I really can't write anyone.
I don't know how Rhode Island views it but Massachusetts makes a distinction between an illegal alien who was illegal from the moment they set foot in this country and an undocumented alien who entered the country on a valid visa and didn't leave when the visa expired.
#5
Posted 20 June 2007 - 09:03 PM
illegal immigrants are important to our country, whether you think so or not. they work jobs that most americans wouldn't even consider working, some of these jobs are important, like farm hands and maintenance. in many cases, they work for less than minimum wage. why? because it's still a whole lot more money than they'd make if they were in their own countries. in that way, they're better off here. however, i think that those laws should be changed rather than kicking out the immigrants and building walls that will be scaled and fences that will be cut and having armed guards at the nations borders watching for people looking for a better life for their children. isn't that what this country is about to begin with?
#7
Posted 20 June 2007 - 11:19 PM
#8
Posted 21 June 2007 - 05:26 AM
webbage, on Jun 20 2007, 11:35 PM, said:
i have a feeling they work more jobs that americans won't do than they have "taken" from americans.
and honestly... it's simple economics. if someone is willing to work for less, why pay them more? sure, "it's the right thing to do". but this is a capitalist country. the right thing to do never involves spending more money than necessary.
i'm all for amnesty for illegal immigrants, but they need some sort of punishment and we need to make sure more don't cross the border to "make the cut". however, i also don't think armed guards, walls, and fences are the answer. because, as semass mentioned, many of these "illegal" immigrants started off legal and just stayed longer than their visa allowed.
#9
Posted 21 June 2007 - 07:34 AM
webbage, on Jun 20 2007, 11:35 PM, said:
i hate that argument even on the main board. I know the owners of a company (cleaning) and they couldn't get an american to work that job. they don't pay below min. wage, they pay somewhere in the 9 dollar range, which is still decent. But you would never get americans to do these jobs(and keep them past a month) and people say it is the business owners who are at fault. If anything they are helpnig keep the economy in a cycle. The american dream is not about dropping out of school and becoming a maintance worker, it is getting an education and living a successful and comfortable life. Why should we cater to americans who wont take advantage of an education?
Edited by dgreco, 21 June 2007 - 07:40 AM.
#10
Posted 21 June 2007 - 11:50 AM
6/20/2007
"One ordinance would make Providence a “sanctuary city” — preventing city employees or the police from inquiring into the immigration status of city residents, or from reporting undocumented immigrants to federal immigration officers, unless the person has committed a felony offense."
#11
Posted 21 June 2007 - 01:10 PM
#12
Posted 21 June 2007 - 04:10 PM
dgreco, on Jun 21 2007, 07:34 AM, said:
http://www.californi...?articleID=7801
Who was doing the jobs before illegal immigrants came? Ghosts? Zombies? Other mythical creatures?
Edited by webbage, 21 June 2007 - 04:12 PM.
#13
Posted 21 June 2007 - 05:19 PM
webbage, on Jun 21 2007, 06:10 PM, said:
Who was doing the jobs before illegal immigrants came? Ghosts? Zombies? Other mythical creatures?
that's hardly an unbiased source. i'd also be willing to bet his numbers are way off.
the thing about illegal immigrants working is they work hard, they work for less money (or in some cases, the same money but don't have stupid demands like the construction unions), and they get the job done more efficiently in many cases without needing coffee breaks once an hour. they take pride in their work, unlike many americans just doing it to make some money.
the only thing i can agree with him on is the 28% of illegal immigrants in prison... they should be deported, regardless of the crime they commit. the ones who are here just trying to make a better life for themselves should have some way of getting citizenship.
#14
Posted 21 June 2007 - 05:21 PM
webbage, on Jun 21 2007, 06:10 PM, said:
Who was doing the jobs before illegal immigrants came? Ghosts? Zombies? Other mythical creatures?
There are so many holes and false arguments in that article, I almost don't know where to begin. For starters:
1. Everyone outside the industrial world would be guaranteed to "live a better life" in America? Who are we to say our way of life is any better than anyone else's?
2. A greater proportion of immigrants are on welfare than native families. So what? It has always been the case that immigrants to this country start at the bottom of the socioeconomic ladder. That many of these immigrants are illegal simply speaks to how difficult the legal immigration process has become.
3. "Currently, an alien living illegally in the United States often pays no taxes but receives unemployment, welfare, free medical care and other federal benefits." Exactly how often does this happen? There are no stats to back this claim up.
4. All of the 9/11 hijackers were in the US legally. Using 9/11 to attack illegal immigrants is nothing more than dishonest fearmongering.
Who were doing these jobs before the illegals? In many cases nobody, as most of those service sector jobs didn't exist a couple decades ago. Of the remaning jobs, many fell to recent immigrants who were here legally, but only because the immigration process was once much simpler than it is now.
#15
Posted 22 June 2007 - 03:07 PM
Dan, on Jun 21 2007, 01:50 PM, said:
6/20/2007
"One ordinance would make Providence a “sanctuary city” — preventing city employees or the police from inquiring into the immigration status of city residents, or from reporting undocumented immigrants to federal immigration officers, unless the person has committed a felony offense."
I think this is a great idea. Im totally behind Mr Luna on this.
#16
Posted 27 September 2007 - 10:41 AM
"Edgar Velásquez, who sliced his face open with a chain saw last year while working for a Warwick tree service... arrived [this morning] in Rhode Island. ...He and his attorney were scheduled to appear in court for a pretrial hearing this morning before Judge Bruce E. Morin, on a claim against Gorman for medical bills, permanent disfigurement and weekly benefits."
It does clearly indicate Velásquez slashed himself with the saw he was running, and he's not claiming the equipment wasn't up to snuff operationally. But even if he was legally authorized to work in that position with the tree service, Gorman wasn't carrying Workers Compensation.
They're both negligent here if you ask me. I honestly don't know what the WC standards are for heavy equipment operators (in other words - if he was a legal citizen - maybe he gets denied WC but can collect TDI in Rhode Island). I think Gorman should be responsible for payment of Velásquez's medical bills and his business should be closed indefinitely until he can show that he's not running an illegal operation. Velásquez goes home.
There are plenty of Rhode Islanders skilled in this kind of work who are presently unemployed - through no fault of their own. R.I. has lost countless machine operator jobs as manufacturing companies, one after another, have relocated out of this state. We're not talking about cleaning toilets and washing dishes here.
These jobs Americans will do, shame on us for looking the other way on Gorman and Velásquez. Equal justice under the law.
#17
Posted 29 February 2008 - 03:39 PM
Rhode Island General Assembly
- All undocumented persons, including most criminal offenders arrested by Rhode Island law enforcement, would be shielded from U.S. immigration laws. Undocumented criminals in RI would be exempt from federal immigration laws except if charged with a felony.
- Drivers' licenses would be made available to any person, regardless of citizenship.
- Proposed restrictions would create opportunity for discrimination lawsuits against employers, landlords, and other private businesses who make eligibility decisions based in part on verification of clients' legal status.
- Proposed creation of new state interpreter jobs at the RI Department of Human Services office, and expanded state benefits to non-taxpayers.
If I didn't know better, I'd have to say some of these community-hero lawmakers are nothing but selfish lawyers looking for more than their fair share of job security.
#18
Posted 29 February 2008 - 03:49 PM
Dan, on Feb 29 2008, 04:39 PM, said:
Rhode Island General Assembly
- All undocumented persons, including most criminal offenders arrested by Rhode Island law enforcement, would be shielded from U.S. immigration laws. Undocumented criminals in RI would be exempt from federal immigration laws except if charged with a felony.
- Drivers' licenses would be made available to any person, regardless of citizenship.
- Proposed restrictions would create opportunity for discrimination lawsuits against employers, landlords, and other private businesses who make eligibility decisions based in part on verification of clients' legal status.
- Proposed creation of new state interpreter jobs at the RI Department of Human Services office, and expanded state benefits to non-taxpayers.
If I didn't know better, I'd have to say some of these community-hero lawmakers are nothing but selfish lawyers looking for more than their fair share of job security.
1 user(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users













