Doing nothing is not a solution

Posted in Illegal Aliens & Immigration Reforms on September 17th, 2007 by MorningStar
http://fungazi.com/wordpress/?cat=2

The United States government does not want to deport any more illegal aliens than they are absolutely forced to deport. From the presidential administration to the lowest level bureaucrat in the descending chain of multiple agencies, this policy may not be written down in black and white, but it would be impossible to make it any clearer. This policy has not changed much in thirty years and despite which party controls the congress or the oval office, it has remained relatively consistent. Not only does the federal government not want to deport the illegal aliens, they don’t want to even think of such a thing, because the fact of the matter is, they couldn’t do it if they wanted to.

There is no federal agency of the United States government that hunts down illegal aliens and deports them.

The widely dispersed Border Patrol is charged with keeping illegal aliens out of the country along the border, however, the fact that approximately 8,000 illegal aliens successfully enter the country without authorization every day is not exactly a testament to the Border Patrol’s competence, and it should come as news to no one that the low morale of the Border Patrol agents is the result of giving too big a job and to too few people in a top-heavy agency with an over-abundance of poor quality, empire building, narcissists, politically appointed management control-freaks attempting to enforce on the rank and file agent, an operational policy that is entirely contrary to the express purpose for which they were created, and that is, the detection and prevention of the illegal entry of aliens and smuggling of illegal contraband into the United States across either the northern or the southern borders. Once an illegal alien is past the Border Patrol’s area of surveillance, they are pretty much home free. Unless they are caught committing a crime in one of the few scattered areas where the local police check the immigration status of those they arrest, they can go where they want without fear of being apprehended.

The Office of Detention and Removal Operations (DRO) is responsible for promoting public safety and national security by making certain through the enforcement of U.S. immigration laws that all removable aliens depart the United States, however by their own admission, they are not very good at what they do. DRO is one of several support divisions in the investigative arm of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). The DRO does not actively pursue the illegal aliens on their list and most federal and state law enforcement agencies along with the Social Security Administration and the IRS absolutely refuse to give them any assistance or information on the people they are suppose to be looking for. The DRO merely waits until some other law enforcement agency apprehends one of their listed illegal aliens for a crime, and if by some miracle, they are notified, or they hear about one of their charges in the newspaper after he got drunk and ploughed his broken-down, uninsured car into a mini-van full of kindergarten children, then they can take action (such as it might be). If they are not notified because of sanctuary policies or for some other reason, they are SOL. Despite there being more than 20 million estimated illegal aliens currently in the country, this agencies list has less than 900,000 names on it.

The Compliance Enforcement Unit (CEU) of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is dedicated to the enforcement of nonimmigrant visa violations. Their job is to monitor the millions of foreign students, tourists, and temporary workers present in the U.S. at any one time and identify those that violate the rules of their immigration status or overstay their visa. The lack of resources and massive snags in their software development has rendered this group fairly inoperable. Of the estimated 500,000 Visa violations recorded every year CEU manages to deal with approximately 3,000 cases.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has the overall responsibility for identify and remove illegal aliens, however, beyond the illegal aliens that make it to the DRO list of what the federal government considers to be a “criminal alien,â€