I about dropped dead when I heard Fat Boy Ted say that James A. Trafficant was a disgrace to the government and needed to be jailed.
Hillary should be in jail too, along with her husband, I Fuck Real Ugly Chicks Bill for fraud. They're not there because of who they are.
Theodore Roosevelt on Immigration 100 years ago
- Buffmaster
- Posts: 3570
- Joined: Fri May 12, 2006 11:37 am
- Location: The Alamo
Big Red died 23 NOV 2001
You owe your success to your first wife. You owe your second wife to your success---Sean Connery
You owe your success to your first wife. You owe your second wife to your success---Sean Connery
BBcode: | |
Hide post links |
- gmsnctry
- Posts: 642
- Joined: Wed Apr 11, 2007 11:56 am
- Location: THE LeftCoast just outside Porn Capitol USA
Some things Kennedy didnt vote for
<-------- Team DD -------->
Liberalism is not an affiliation; its a curable disease
Always do right. This will gratify many people, and astonish the rest.
~Wisdom of Shawnshuefus
---------------------- [ ∞ ] ----------------------
Liberalism is not an affiliation; its a curable disease
Always do right. This will gratify many people, and astonish the rest.
~Wisdom of Shawnshuefus
---------------------- [ ∞ ] ----------------------
BBcode: | |
Hide post links |
- gmsnctry
- Posts: 642
- Joined: Wed Apr 11, 2007 11:56 am
- Location: THE LeftCoast just outside Porn Capitol USA
and some more
Ted Kennedy on Immigration [Mark Krikorian]
1965: "The bill will not flood our cities with immigrants. It will not upset the ethnic mix of our society. It will not relax the standards of admission. It will not cause American workers to lose their jobs."
1986: "This amnesty will give citizenship to only 1.1 to 1.3 million illegal aliens. We will secure the borders henceforth. We will never again bring forward another amnesty bill like this."
2007: "Now it is time for action. 2007 is the year we must fix our broken system."
Taken from various sources - AP, CNN, Discover the news, Sen Fat Boys' Website]
Since 9/11, has been opposed to National Security measures including the National Security Entry-Exit Registration System
Kennedy's opposition to the National Security Entry-Exit Registration System (NSEERS), which, since its implementation in 2002, has stopped several hundred known foreign criminals and several known terrorists who attempted to come into the country at certain official ports of entry. In addition, the targeted registration of certain foreign nationals already in the country has resulted in the apprehension of at least 15 illegal alien felons. Among the people caught by the NSEERS program are the following:
A Tunisian convicted of multiple drug-trafficking offenses, in addition to previous violations of immigration law;
A national of the Dominican Republic convicted of aggravated assault and burglary on a prior visit to the United States and who had been deported after that prior visit;
A Canadian with multiple narcotics convictions;
An Iranian who had been convicted three times of assault with a deadly weapon and had been convicted twice of grand theft in addition to immigration violations;
An Iranian twice convicted of child molestation;
An Iranian who had been convicted of theft and narcotics possession;
Two suspected al Qaeda operatives who were caught trying to enter the U.S. after their fingerprints matched ones lifted by our military officials from papers found in Afghanistan caves.
Kennedy signed a letter in December 2002, along with Rep. John Conyers (D-Michigan) and Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wisconsin), demanding that the program be suspended. Immigration lawyers, ethnic lobbyists and civil liberties extremists aligned with Kennedy joined his crusade against NSEERS, despite the fact that the program is in line with alien registration systems around the world
[Taken from Sen Fat Boys' Website]
Among the measures Kennedy supports today are the following: increasing the eligibility of legal immigrants for certain social programs such as public housing and food stamps; using federal money to reimburse states for providing services to illegal aliens; implementing a government-run, universal health care program; keeping and expanding upon federal affirmative action programs; and increasing the minimum wage. Among the measures he opposes are these: implementing any reductions in current levels of immigration; allowing workers to invest a portion of their payroll tax in private accounts which they manage themselves, or which are managed by private firms contracted by the government; and allowing parents to use vouchers to send their children to any participating school - public, private or religious.
Ted Kennedy on Immigration [Mark Krikorian]
1965: "The bill will not flood our cities with immigrants. It will not upset the ethnic mix of our society. It will not relax the standards of admission. It will not cause American workers to lose their jobs."
1986: "This amnesty will give citizenship to only 1.1 to 1.3 million illegal aliens. We will secure the borders henceforth. We will never again bring forward another amnesty bill like this."
2007: "Now it is time for action. 2007 is the year we must fix our broken system."
Taken from various sources - AP, CNN, Discover the news, Sen Fat Boys' Website]
Since 9/11, has been opposed to National Security measures including the National Security Entry-Exit Registration System
Kennedy's opposition to the National Security Entry-Exit Registration System (NSEERS), which, since its implementation in 2002, has stopped several hundred known foreign criminals and several known terrorists who attempted to come into the country at certain official ports of entry. In addition, the targeted registration of certain foreign nationals already in the country has resulted in the apprehension of at least 15 illegal alien felons. Among the people caught by the NSEERS program are the following:
A Tunisian convicted of multiple drug-trafficking offenses, in addition to previous violations of immigration law;
A national of the Dominican Republic convicted of aggravated assault and burglary on a prior visit to the United States and who had been deported after that prior visit;
A Canadian with multiple narcotics convictions;
An Iranian who had been convicted three times of assault with a deadly weapon and had been convicted twice of grand theft in addition to immigration violations;
An Iranian twice convicted of child molestation;
An Iranian who had been convicted of theft and narcotics possession;
Two suspected al Qaeda operatives who were caught trying to enter the U.S. after their fingerprints matched ones lifted by our military officials from papers found in Afghanistan caves.
Kennedy signed a letter in December 2002, along with Rep. John Conyers (D-Michigan) and Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wisconsin), demanding that the program be suspended. Immigration lawyers, ethnic lobbyists and civil liberties extremists aligned with Kennedy joined his crusade against NSEERS, despite the fact that the program is in line with alien registration systems around the world
[Taken from Sen Fat Boys' Website]
Among the measures Kennedy supports today are the following: increasing the eligibility of legal immigrants for certain social programs such as public housing and food stamps; using federal money to reimburse states for providing services to illegal aliens; implementing a government-run, universal health care program; keeping and expanding upon federal affirmative action programs; and increasing the minimum wage. Among the measures he opposes are these: implementing any reductions in current levels of immigration; allowing workers to invest a portion of their payroll tax in private accounts which they manage themselves, or which are managed by private firms contracted by the government; and allowing parents to use vouchers to send their children to any participating school - public, private or religious.
<-------- Team DD -------->
Liberalism is not an affiliation; its a curable disease
Always do right. This will gratify many people, and astonish the rest.
~Wisdom of Shawnshuefus
---------------------- [ ∞ ] ----------------------
Liberalism is not an affiliation; its a curable disease
Always do right. This will gratify many people, and astonish the rest.
~Wisdom of Shawnshuefus
---------------------- [ ∞ ] ----------------------
BBcode: | |
Hide post links |
- Buffmaster
- Posts: 3570
- Joined: Fri May 12, 2006 11:37 am
- Location: The Alamo
You can get a copy for cheap at amazon.com.
Disclaimer: I'm not pushing for sales on Amazon.com, I only strive to get the truth out .
Disclaimer: I'm not pushing for sales on Amazon.com, I only strive to get the truth out .
Big Red died 23 NOV 2001
You owe your success to your first wife. You owe your second wife to your success---Sean Connery
You owe your success to your first wife. You owe your second wife to your success---Sean Connery
BBcode: | |
Hide post links |
- Buffmaster
- Posts: 3570
- Joined: Fri May 12, 2006 11:37 am
- Location: The Alamo
Bait-and-Switch Immigration Enforcement
May 28, 2007
By James Jay Carafano
The Senate™s draft omnibus bill on immigration reform and border security is what the military might call a œtarget-rich environment. There are so many bad provisions that it™s difficult to determine which is the worst.
One top contender, though, is that the bill would establish a massive, electronic database that would require every American to check in with Washington before taking a job.
This must rank as one of the most inefficient, ineffective, expensive, unnecessary and dangerous proposals lawmakers have ever come up with.
In a sense, they™re engaging in the oldest con in the world ” promising us something too good to be true.
You see, the draft immigration law offers a œsilver bullet to ensure that people who have entered or remain in the U.S. illegally cannot get a job.
It would require the Department of Homeland Security to build a national electronic system that every employer in the United States would have to use to verify that any person they hire is entitled to get a job. Yet Congress already knows this idea is unlikely to work.
Bait-and-Switch Immigration EnforcementCuring a Bad Sick-Leave PolicyAt the Border: Ideas That Make a DifferenceCasting Soldiers as Victims of WarNYC Mayor Goes Wrong Way on Traffic CongestionFull-page Heritage Foundation Archive
That™s because the Department of Homeland Security already has an electronic worker verification system. It is called Basic Pilot, and a decade of experience with the program illustrates why trying to shoehorn every employer into an electronic verification system is a really bad idea.
Congress created Basic Pilot in 1996 as a part of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act. It was born along with the Citizen Attestation Verification Pilot and the Machine Readable Document Pilot programs with the goal of allowing companies to electronically verify that newly hired employees were eligible to work.
Participation in the program is voluntary, and although about 6,000 companies are registered, less than half actually use the program.
Basic Pilot has already shown it doesn™t stop illegals from getting jobs. Most are able to circumvent the system through document fraud. They often present a valid address, name or Social Security number as their own. Basic Pilot, however, has never been able to identify imposters or stop unauthorized workers from creating false documentation, nor can it hinder employers from illegally hiring unauthorized workers.
Besides, even if the program worked, it™s unnecessary.
Relatively few professions are open to undocumented workers. They tend to work in construction, not consulting, in agriculture, not accounting. There™s no reason to saddle all employers with the costs of electronic verification. It would be better to focus on the employers that habitually (and intentionally) break the law. Our government can do that with existing information systems.
Basic Pilot is also impractical. The notion that Washington could take a program that oversees a few thousand companies and expand it to seven million employers nationwide in 18 months is laughable.
Given the often inaccurate and outdated data in Social Security Administration records and the traditional poor performance of government information technology programs, chances are that a small percentage of false records would affect millions of Americans who have a legitimate right to work. This would also cause an unacceptable loss of productivity totaling billions of dollars.
Meanwhile, it would be intrusive. Basic Pilot has already run afoul of legitimate privacy concerns.
A national program would have unprecedented problems. Both the government and employers would have access to massive databases of information, which would surely tempt some to traffic in identity theft or exploit data for other malicious purposes.
At the same time, electronic verification of every single U.S. worker would end up costing a lot. Not only would the infrastructure of building a technology system that could handle millions of transactions be expensive, but providing training, insurance, oversight and redress would take years to implement and prove incredibly expensive.
Supporters of the bill seem to have accepted an electronic workplace verification requirement as a trade for granting amnesty to millions living illegally in the United States. These lawmakers don™t seem too worried about the program™s predictable shortfalls.
As soon as the law is passed, they™re likely to work to make sure a national system is never implemented. Here, the history of the REAL ID Act is instructive. REAL ID requires national standards for driver™s licenses, including a certification that the receiver of the license is a U.S. citizen or a legitimate visitor, such as someone on a long-term visa.
Many of the same politicians who support the Senate draft immigration bill are also trying to gut the requirements of REAL ID. No doubt the proposed electronic verification system would suffer the same fate (and deservedly so).
Our country needs immigration reform. But it doesn™t need an ineffective, intrusive and expensive new system to keep track of legal employees.
May 28, 2007
By James Jay Carafano
The Senate™s draft omnibus bill on immigration reform and border security is what the military might call a œtarget-rich environment. There are so many bad provisions that it™s difficult to determine which is the worst.
One top contender, though, is that the bill would establish a massive, electronic database that would require every American to check in with Washington before taking a job.
This must rank as one of the most inefficient, ineffective, expensive, unnecessary and dangerous proposals lawmakers have ever come up with.
In a sense, they™re engaging in the oldest con in the world ” promising us something too good to be true.
You see, the draft immigration law offers a œsilver bullet to ensure that people who have entered or remain in the U.S. illegally cannot get a job.
It would require the Department of Homeland Security to build a national electronic system that every employer in the United States would have to use to verify that any person they hire is entitled to get a job. Yet Congress already knows this idea is unlikely to work.
Bait-and-Switch Immigration EnforcementCuring a Bad Sick-Leave PolicyAt the Border: Ideas That Make a DifferenceCasting Soldiers as Victims of WarNYC Mayor Goes Wrong Way on Traffic CongestionFull-page Heritage Foundation Archive
That™s because the Department of Homeland Security already has an electronic worker verification system. It is called Basic Pilot, and a decade of experience with the program illustrates why trying to shoehorn every employer into an electronic verification system is a really bad idea.
Congress created Basic Pilot in 1996 as a part of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act. It was born along with the Citizen Attestation Verification Pilot and the Machine Readable Document Pilot programs with the goal of allowing companies to electronically verify that newly hired employees were eligible to work.
Participation in the program is voluntary, and although about 6,000 companies are registered, less than half actually use the program.
Basic Pilot has already shown it doesn™t stop illegals from getting jobs. Most are able to circumvent the system through document fraud. They often present a valid address, name or Social Security number as their own. Basic Pilot, however, has never been able to identify imposters or stop unauthorized workers from creating false documentation, nor can it hinder employers from illegally hiring unauthorized workers.
Besides, even if the program worked, it™s unnecessary.
Relatively few professions are open to undocumented workers. They tend to work in construction, not consulting, in agriculture, not accounting. There™s no reason to saddle all employers with the costs of electronic verification. It would be better to focus on the employers that habitually (and intentionally) break the law. Our government can do that with existing information systems.
Basic Pilot is also impractical. The notion that Washington could take a program that oversees a few thousand companies and expand it to seven million employers nationwide in 18 months is laughable.
Given the often inaccurate and outdated data in Social Security Administration records and the traditional poor performance of government information technology programs, chances are that a small percentage of false records would affect millions of Americans who have a legitimate right to work. This would also cause an unacceptable loss of productivity totaling billions of dollars.
Meanwhile, it would be intrusive. Basic Pilot has already run afoul of legitimate privacy concerns.
A national program would have unprecedented problems. Both the government and employers would have access to massive databases of information, which would surely tempt some to traffic in identity theft or exploit data for other malicious purposes.
At the same time, electronic verification of every single U.S. worker would end up costing a lot. Not only would the infrastructure of building a technology system that could handle millions of transactions be expensive, but providing training, insurance, oversight and redress would take years to implement and prove incredibly expensive.
Supporters of the bill seem to have accepted an electronic workplace verification requirement as a trade for granting amnesty to millions living illegally in the United States. These lawmakers don™t seem too worried about the program™s predictable shortfalls.
As soon as the law is passed, they™re likely to work to make sure a national system is never implemented. Here, the history of the REAL ID Act is instructive. REAL ID requires national standards for driver™s licenses, including a certification that the receiver of the license is a U.S. citizen or a legitimate visitor, such as someone on a long-term visa.
Many of the same politicians who support the Senate draft immigration bill are also trying to gut the requirements of REAL ID. No doubt the proposed electronic verification system would suffer the same fate (and deservedly so).
Our country needs immigration reform. But it doesn™t need an ineffective, intrusive and expensive new system to keep track of legal employees.
Big Red died 23 NOV 2001
You owe your success to your first wife. You owe your second wife to your success---Sean Connery
You owe your success to your first wife. You owe your second wife to your success---Sean Connery
BBcode: | |
Hide post links |