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4GBradley
Guest
The cleaning up of America won’t cost Americans because you charge the country of origin for their expulsion. That is only fair. Their people have been exploiting the situation and using it against the people of the United States. It is only just that the country of origin makes restitution for the damages their own people create.If I do not know, nor do I ask if they are legal or not, they are fellow human beings. Once I know they are illegal, I then become part-and-parcel to the illegal act if I assist in them remaining such, other then the necessities needed for existence. In essence, I should turn them in to the authorities, but make sure they are well fed for the trip back.
It is that law, where it would show up on one’s ID there valid dates to be here, that got defeated at our state level. We are to remain a ‘don’t ask… don’t tell’ people. More or less, let the INS track them down and do what they do, at the federal level… keeping the state in the dark. There are ways that they get caught at the state level, and that is by no ID, wrong ID with finger prints, someone turning them in at the employee level, and mostly hap-hazard, rather then proper enforcement.
I was just talking to my cousin’s wife who is from Poland. She has just come back from a month’s visit over the Christmas holidays. I asked her how are things going over there and she said there is high unemployment and very few possibilities for the citizens. They still use the Zloty which is like the Polish dollar and are waiting to adopt the Euro.
The real betrayal of Poland by the United States is the hardship placed upon Polish citizens to immigrate here. Since Latin America has been pouring across the US border the chances for a fair immigration from other countries is slim. Considering that Poland sent troops to the Middle East and many Polish soldiers died there, the “knife in the back” from the US is greater than with countries who take a siesta every time there’s work to be done.
I asked her about her own immigration experience. She said she has been a US citizen since the early 70s when becoming one was extremely difficult. You had to have sponsors who basically put their financial necks in a noose. If the immigrant did something wrong, the sponsor could lose everything they owned. That was no joke. It was the real thing and the US government took it seriously. Not like today, where US passports are handed out like peanuts and citizenship is laughable.
But I guess everything has had to be dumbed down for the third worlders. You might someday find doctors practicing medicine who passed an online exam and got their license through an e-mail. Once you start lowering standards, you’ll never stop. They won’t let you!