Results 11 to 12 of 12
Thread Information
Users Browsing this Thread
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
- 02-09-2012, 10:21 PM #11
DHS appoints public advocate for illegal immigrants
Thursday, February 9, 2012 - by Peter Bell
Illegal 1) adj. in violation of statute, regulation or ordinance, which may be criminal or merely not in conformity. Thus, an armed robbery is illegal, and so is an access road which is narrower than the county allows, but the violation is not criminal. 2) status of a person residing in a country of which he/she is not a citizen and who has no official permission to be there. (Dictionary law.com)
CHICAGO, February 9, 2012— President Obama is an attorney. He graduated from Harvard Law School, one of the preeminent law schools in the nation. The president edited the putatively eminent Harvard Law Review. President Obama taught at the University of Chicago Law School, another prominent legal institution. He even dabbled in the practice of law for a time.
In some rarified circles, the president is considered an intellectual and the smartest guy the world.
One would think that this attorney, a trained, intellectual, and legal scholar, would know the difference between two simple words- legal and illegal. Even the most illiterate know the difference.
Under some convoluted logic, the administration appointed a public advocate for illegal immigrants and their lobbyists. The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, touted the appointment as a positive move for the “stakeholders.”
Andrew Lorenzen-Strait was appointed as the public advocate to handle questions and issues regarding the “stakeholder community involved in immigration policy and enforcement...Engaging stakeholders and building partnerships to facilitate communication, foster collaboration and solicit input on immigration enforcement initiatives and operations.” (ICE press release)
The “stakeholder community” who entered the country or reside here illegally now have their very own public advocate. The agency that is supposed to enforce the laws of the land against them gave the stakeholder community an ombudsman.
Maybe the government should have public advocates for other “stakeholder communities” such as organized crime, drug cartels, major street gangs, biker gangs, and other organized perpetrators of illegal activity.
They are all “stakeholders” who have real interests and valid concerns about the policies of law enforcement agencies.
Aren’t other illegal “stakeholder” communities entitled to partnerships to facilitate and foster communication, collaboration, and to solicit input? Doesn’t any stakeholder community that willingly violates the law deserve its own ombudsman?
Since when does our government lobby on behalf of illegal activities? "Advocate" is just a palatable word for lobbyist. Advocates work on Main Street instead of K Street, or in the case of ombudsmen, in bureaucracies.
By the way, immigrants, legal and illegal, already have public advocates and ombudsmen. They are the consulates and embassies of their native lands.
For too many decades advocates, on both sides of the political spectrum, have been pushing for an immigration policy. We do not need another new policy, transformational or not. We already have a policy.
The policy is the federal statutes, also known as laws. It is the legal system, which enforces, prosecutes, and adjudicates laws. What we need to do is utilize the system we already have in place.
The United States is turning into a nation of politically palatable policy debates instead of a nation of laws.
Laws are supposed to be enforced by the government. Illegal immigrants, who cross our borders, overstay their visas, or come here under false pretenses, know they are committing illegal acts. They are well aware they are violating our laws. They do so willingly and sometimes cheerfully.
The people who hire them also violate the law willingly and cheerfully, while feigning ignorance with a wink and a nod.
Many illegal immigrants break more of our laws by obtaining fake Social Security numbers through identity thieves or other means, so they can work, open bank accounts, and obtain credit.
When illegal aliens are caught, they demand mercy, pity, and amnesty for themselves and their families. Their extenuating circumstances, excuses, and cries for social or moral justice must be considered. They are entitled to solicitude.
There is no such thing as social, economic, or moral justice except in ethical or philosophical debates. We do not have systems with those appellations. There is only the legal system of criminal and civil justice. Giving voice or an advocate to people who break our laws threatens the very foundation of our legal system.
It is a foot in the door for any illegal group to seek redress from the government instead of enforcement and punishment.
This administration will pander to any group in return for adulation, votes, and campaign contributions. They will always put politics before the country. They create more useless government jobs to appease more voting blocs.
The Obama administration merrily does whatever it wants. They just don’t care. If they can squeeze a vote or a dollar out of the lowest common denominator, they will do it.
Illegal immigrants and their lobbyists do not need a government public advocate. They did not play by the rules, obey the laws, and earn entitlements. They broke the rules, disobeyed the laws, and should suffer whatever consequences befall them.
They are illegal immigrants. They are not undocumented workers, families, children, or undocumented Democrats.
Appointing an advocate for the stakeholders of an illegal group sets a bad precedent and is poor public policy. It is good politics. That is all this administration really cares about.
Peter V. Bella is a retired Chicago Police Officer, freelance writer and photographer, cook, and raconteur. He likes to be the sharp stick that pokes, prods, and annoys. His opinions are his and his alone.
DHS appoints public advocate for illegal immigrants | Washington Times CommunitiesWe have immigration laws that just need to be enforced.
- 02-09-2012, 10:45 PM #12
Immigration and Customs Enforcement Hires Officer to Chat With Detainees
February 9, 2012
Ben Shapiro
In a time when America’s immigration system is swamped – when illegal immigrants are routinely caught and released, many of whom are dangerous – it seems that one of ICE’s top priorities is public relations with illegal immigration advocates. Yesterday, Andrew Lorenzen-Strait announced via the Department of Homeland Security website that he had been named ICE’s “first-ever public advocate.”
His job will be to “serve as a point of contact for individuals, including those in immigration proceedings, NGOs, and other community and advocacy groups, who have concerns, questions, recommendations or important issues they would like to raise.” This new role, says Lorenzen-Strait, will help ICE “focus the agency’s immigration enforcement resources on sensible priorities” – code for doing less, since the Obama Administration consistently makes a big deal out of the notion that most illegal immigrants aren’t dangerous and therefore should be left to their own devices – and “implement policies and processes that priorities the health and safety of detainees in our custody.” And he has one more job, according to ICE Enforcement Director John Morton: he’ll have to explain to all of us why ICE lets illegal immigrants off the hook.
What did Lorenzen-Strait used to do? He’s been with ICE since 2008. Before that, he was a pro bono attorney in Maryland, doing child advocacy and divorce work via Community Legal Services. How does that qualify you for working in immigration, exactly? And then there’s the question of money spent. It’s more and more obvious these days that working for the government is the quickest road to a healthy paycheck – and Lorenzen-Strait’s salary proves it. In 2010, he was paid $112,224 by the feds. We can only imagine that the salary has risen since then. Not bad for being a public relations officer who does nothing to actually enforce immigration law.
We’re constantly hearing that the government has trouble finding places to cut spending. This seems like a good place to start.
» Immigration and Customs Enforcement Hires Officer to Chat With Detainees - Big GovernmentWe have immigration laws that just need to be enforced.




1Likes
LinkBack URL
About LinkBacks



Reply With Quote




Bookmarks