There's more at the link. This needs to be stopped.
It looks as if the Senate vote on the "DREAM Act" partial immigration amnesty will actually happen on Saturday, though it also wouldn't surprise me if Majority Leader Reid puts it off yet again or cancels it at the last minute.You can voice your views to swing senators by using this page (from anti-DREAM Numbers USA) or this page (from pro-DREAM America's Voice).I'm anti-DREAM. The key point to make, at this moment, is that nobody who is reasonable in this debate wants to deport the appealing would-be beneficiaries of the proposed law: those brought across the border when they were young, who've known no other country—the high school valedictorians, the law student who calls himself "a typical American kid who grew up in Brooklyn and roots for the Yankees," and "dreams of becoming a J.A.G. officer to defend the country I love." The DREAM "kids" like these that you read about are clearly carefully selected for their appeal, and they lay it on a bit thick, but I assume their stories are real and there are tens of thousands of other stories sufficiently like theirs.Many DREAM opponents also want take care of these "kids" (or former kids) by making them legal. Mark Krikorian, the anti-amnesty advocate whom I cite most,wants to take care of them. Even Roy Beck of NUMBERS USA seems to want to take care of them. But there is a way to do it that minimizes the unwanted long term side effects of encouraging future illegal immigration from parents now living in other countries (who'd understandably liketheir kids to be made Americans too), which would set the stage for another amnesty, which in turn would build up a constituency for the next amnesty in a cycle that doesn't seem to have any end point.And there is a way to do it that maximizes those long term effects, by maximizing the number of immigrants who would be covered by DREAM, by offering no effective way to combat fraudulent applications, by creating rules so complex they'll collapse of the own weight, by passing the bill in a wave of ethnic passion and recklessly including no additional enforcement measures. That's the bill they'll vote on Saturday.
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Friday, December 17, 2010
The Final Argument Against the DREAM Act
Mickey Kaus at Newsweek doesn't like the DREAM (Amnesty) Act:
1 comment:
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There is no no enforcement- no one is going to check millions of illegals to make sure they graduated from high school.(Buy a degree dot com). My town has several "real" charter schools that have went under and their graduates can not get a copy of their diploma or transcript. The government had to call people out of retirement when Americans needed passports for travel to Canada and Mexico. There is nothing in place to verify a 2.1 million core dump of illegals. They don't intend to.
ReplyDelete2.1 million illegals will be given 10 year work permits- at a time of record high unemployment.
Do you really think the government who currently gives a massive number of deportation waivers- of known illegals , is going to look for these people 10 years later and make sure they have completed 2 years of college or military?
How many of their own kids will they have by then, that they will use as their humanitarian reason to not be deported?
Stop this job killing bill
Numbersusa.com