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  1. #1
    Senior Member jp_48504's Avatar
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    Cherokee ordinance the wave of the future

    Cherokee ordinance the wave of the future
    11/29/2006


    If historical Georgia had adopted a law similar to the proposed Cherokee County illegal alien renters’ ordinance, the Peach State would be a far different place. Our population would include fewer Irish boozers, English ne’er-do-wells, Yankee carpetbaggers and Florida refugees. We also might have a paucity of talented tenors, exceptional sailors, inspiring preachers and go-go business leaders.

    Let me explain: As you may know, some Cherokee County commissioners have decided on an innovative course to ban many migrant Hispanics. The commissioners hope to force local landlords to take charge of the illegal alien problem. Landlords would be compelled to refuse to rent apartments, houses or even tents to anyone deemed an illegal alien. It would be up to the landlords to decide who could rent property in Cherokee and who couldn’t. A landlord failing to detect an illegal tenant would be punished in accordance with the commissioners’ law.

    At first, this notion sounded nutty — sort of like the Kennesaw city ordinance that required residents to possess firearms. In addition, it seems unfair to force private owners of rental property to perform duties that the powerful federal government refuses to carry out.

    Observers might wonder why Cherokee County’s leaders are not berating their congressmen and senators who betrayed them on the immigration matter instead of threatening sanctions against local business people and homeowners.

    On second thought, the Cherokee ordinance may contain seeds of brilliance. The idea might be expanded statewide, and the rules adjusted. Landlords could be required to turn away other classes of prospective tenants, beyond simply undocumented Latinos. We can think of a long list of unworthies who should be denied domicile.

    Suppose we had a time machine and could take the Cherokee County plan back to the beginnings of Georgia.
    Consider what might have happened if:

    — Indian landlords on Georgia’s coast had told Lord Oglethorpe that only credit-worthy settlers would be allowed. Many descendants of 18th-century English deadbeats might be wallowing in London jails today instead of claiming membership in Savannah high society. (We sometimes forget why Georgia was founded: To help cleanse England of undesirables and thwart Spanish invaders. Talk about missions not accomplished.)

    — High sheriffs had informed 19th-century freeholders that they could not rent land or houses to any out-of-state person who might be prospecting for gold or to anyone else hoping to prey on gold prospectors. Cherokee County as well as most of North Georgia would still be in the hands of Cherokee Indians.

    — Plantation owners had faced severe fines if they rented to tenant farmers who were not sober, hardworking, Christian citizens. References would be required for sharecropping. Tobacco Road might have become a high-end subdivision.

    — Hotel owners were threatened with jail if they offered long-term lodging to Yankees who wanted to stay in Georgia after the Civil War. Shanty Irish would have been kept out. Atlanta would still be in ruins.

    — Before buying and building on land in the Georgia mountains, thousands of prospective new citizens had been required to renounce their Florida residency and pay income taxes in Georgia. Our hill country would be nearly pristine.

    One can see from this brief “if” list what dramatic differences a tenant enforcement law might make.

    As a statewide statute, the illegal-tenant measure could boost 21st-century tourism. In a short time, visitors could be flocking to Georgia — the only area in the United States in which quaint English remains the sole spoken and written language. Our out-of-state visitors also might tour abandoned carpet mills and dilapidated poultry plants. Guides would explain that those industries collapsed after owners of apartments and small houses chased out most of their worker-tenants.

    Of course, some things would remain the same. Old cars would still be parked on concrete blocks in front yards. Lawns would go uncut, homes unpainted. Violent crime would remain a problem, along with unwed pregnancies, school dropouts and drug abuse. Still, a silver lining would be in place. Everyone involved in those unsavory activities would have their citizenship papers in order. Their landlords would be forced to see to it.

    Syndicated columnist Bill Shipp writes on Georgia politics. E-mail him at bshipp@bellsouth.net.

    Have any thoughts about this column? Share them with us at letters@gwinnettdailypost.com. Letters should be no more than 200 words and are subject to approval by the publisher. Letters may be edited for style and space requirements. Please sign your name and provide an address and a daytime telephone number. Address letters for publication to: Letters to the Editor, Gwinnett Daily Post, P.O. Box 603, Lawrenceville, GA 30046-0603. The fax number is 770-339-8081.

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  2. #2
    Senior Member ronny's Avatar
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    I sent a thought on this to the link provided, and it was this:

    RE: Cherokee ordinance the wave of the future

    Oddly enough, I am thinking of moving to Georgia because of their tough stance on immigration. I want to live in a place I feel welcome and comfortable, to be able to go to the grocery and ask a stranger for the time or say a polite “excuse me” and be understood, not looked at snidely, as I get from the illegals who have no idea what I am saying. I want to not have my blood boil as a foreigner rudely asks the Wal mart cashier “Don’t you speak Spanish?” when the American is trying to help her with her purchase. I want to enter a convenience store where I understand what the large group of foreign men are saying, not wondering if they are planning to rob it while shouting harshly to each other in their language.
    I want to sit outside at night and have my neighbors walk by, stopping to chat about the price of fescue seed and the weather…not feeling depressed as across the street, fifteen junker cars with out of state tags circle a small home where almost twice the number of people live, hearing the loud shouts of unfamiliar language or discourtesy of the too-loud amplified Latino music, and watching the grown men urinate off of the front porch. I also want the homes in my area take pride, (as I do in my yard) and clean the trash and beer cans from the front, and not fly the Mexican flag. I want my kid to ride the bus and not feel like a stranger in his town and his country, as the foreign born children all speak Spanish and intentionally look at him and the other American kids and laugh because they do not understand the words but know they are making fun of them, and the Latino bus driver encourages the divisiveness while joining in. I want a public school system that promotes America and its history instead of “celebrating diversity” with pushing the Mexican agenda by learning Mexican culture and history. I want me 6 year old neice to be able to count to 20 in English…not Spanish as she showed us at Thanksgiving dinner, while still not knowing how to count to 20 in English.
    There are so many other things I want in my hometown that Georgia seems to offer with its new laws. I feel as if I am drowning in another culture and losing my America, my roots and my culture. If I can find a small corner in my country that still feels pride in its heritage and wants to keep it, I will pack tomorrow and bring my business with me. Yes Georgia IS on my mind.

  3. #3
    Senior Member jp_48504's Avatar
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    Great Response.
    I stay current on Americans for Legal Immigration PAC's fight to Secure Our Border and Send Illegals Home via E-mail Alerts (CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP)

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