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    Senior Member Ratbstard's Avatar
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    Remarks cited by judge as biased were from Democrats who opposed Alabama immigration

    Remarks cited by judge as biased were from Democrats who opposed Alabama immigration law

    al.com
    By The Associated Press
    Published: Sunday, December 18, 2011, 11:04 AM Updated: Sunday, December 18, 2011, 3:37 PM

    MONTGOMERY, Alabama — A federal judge who put part of Alabama's immigration law on hold said one reason he did it was because the Legislature's debate on the law "was laced with derogatory comments about Hispanics."

    The two examples he cited were from Democratic legislators who voted against the bill, not from Republicans who supported it. The law's sponsor says that's unfair. But a lawyer challenging the law says it shows the feelings that exist in the Alabama Legislature about Hispanics.

    On Monday, U.S. District Judge Myron Thompson issued a preliminary injunction against state officials requiring any mobile home occupants to prove their residency before getting the annual registrations for homes. Thompson said there enough evidence of discriminatory bias against Hispanics to warrant the move before he makes a final ruling.

    Thompson cited comments made by two legislators during the debate, but he did not note that they were Democrats or that they voted against the bill.


    Remarks by Rep. John Rogers, D-Birmingham, were cited by a federal judge last week who said he saw bias among lawmakers against Hispanics. Rogers noted he was among the lawmakers who filibustered against the Republican-backed immigration law. (Birmingham News file)

    The judge recounted how Rep. John Rogers of Birmingham talked about seeing 30 Hispanics get out of a car in the Hoover area. "I thought it was a circus. They kept getting out and kept getting out," Rogers said.

    Then the judge recounted how Rep. Thomas Jackson of Thomasville talked about visiting chicken houses and seeing "4-foot Mexicans in there catching them chickens."

    The judge said the comments reinforce the contention that the target of the bill — illegal immigrants — "was just a racially discriminatory code for Hispanics."

    Rogers said he, Jackson and other black Democrats filibustered against the bill for two days in an effort to kill it before white Republicans ran over them and passed it.

    Rogers said his comment was meant as a compliment about Hispanics' tenacity and hard work even while making low wages.

    "I was saying they survive because they pool their resources on housing and transportation. I wasn't saying it disparagingly," he said.

    The bill's primary sponsor, Republican Rep. Micky Hammon of Decatur, was surprised to see the judge use two opponents' remarks against the proponents. "It's hard to understand how that could be used," he said.

    One of the attorneys challenging the law in federal court, Sam Brooke of the Southern Poverty Law Center, said the debate shows that everyone — proponents and opponents — knew the law was aimed at Hispanics. He said it was even more telling that no proponents objected to the remarks by Rogers and Thomas.

    "It would be one thing if proponents said that's not what we are doing, but no one said that," he said.

    Hammon said proponents did point out repeatedly that the law contains prohibitions against profiling.

    In Hammon's view, the judge's decision will change the tone of legislative debates and encourage opponents of a bill to make outrageous comments in hope of using them in legal challenges.

    "If you are opponents of any legislation, now you have a new tool," Hammon said.

    Phillip Rawls of the Associated Press' Montgomery office wrote this report.

    http://blog.al.com/wire/2011/12/lawm...migration.html
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    "I was saying they survive because they pool their resources on housing and transportation. I wasn't saying it disparagingly,"

    Oh yea! Thats Living the American Dream, Living 15 to a household..I can't wait. Nothing " disparagingly " about it. Dem Dem's. How dare we think we still live in a first world country!

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    Senior Member Ratbstard's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by airdale View Post
    "I was saying they survive because they pool their resources on housing and transportation. I wasn't saying it disparagingly,"

    Oh yea! Thats Living the American Dream, Living 15 to a household..I can't wait. Nothing " disparagingly " about it. Dem Dem's. How dare we think we still live in a first world country!
    Oh yeah, that's the reason the rents here in Brooklyn have reached $2000 a month. How can a young American just starting out afford his or her own place today?
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

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