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  1. #1
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    Bush Shows Immigrants' Efforts to Join U.S. Society

    Bush Shows Immigrants' Efforts to Join U.S. Society
    By Johanna Neuman, Times Staff Writer
    June 8, 2006


    OMAHA — President Bush on Wednesday highlighted efforts by immigrants to assimilate into U.S. culture as he spent a second day on the road promoting his vision for changes to immigration law.

    Immigration has become a divisive issue in Congress, as many conservatives in Bush's party oppose his proposals to create a guest worker program and create a path toward citizenship for millions of illegal immigrants.

    To draw more support from those conservatives, Bush has been focusing on efforts to better secure the U.S.-Mexico border and to crack down on employers who hire illegal workers.

    On Wednesday, however, he sought to show that immigrants take steps to assimilate, such as learning English, when they enter the United States.

    Bush visited an Omaha community center that offers civics classes to immigrants, as well as help in starting businesses.

    "I saw a place where people are learning to speak English and learning the civic lessons of what it means to be an American citizen," Bush said later in a speech at an Omaha community college.

    "I sat around a table with entrepreneurs, people from different countries, all of whom are bound by a common dream of owning their own business.

    "When you hear people like me talk about assimilation, that's what we're talking about: helping people assimilate into America, helping us remain one nation under God," he said.

    After returning to Washington later in the day, Bush signed an executive order creating a task force on new Americans, to be headed by Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff.

    The task force is to guide the government on how to help legal immigrants become part of American society. It is also intended to encourage businesses, through public-private partnerships, to offer English language and civics classes to employees, and to look for ways to expand such instruction through faith-based, community and other groups.

    "It's going to work to help people at the grass-roots level expand the teaching of English and civics and history instruction programs, to help others assimilate into America," Bush said in Omaha.

    In visiting Nebraska, Bush came to a state that has been divided over immigration. Sen. Chuck Hagel, a Republican, is allied with Bush in calling for a guest worker program and for a path to citizenship for many illegal immigrants, as well as for more border security.

    But in a twist, Sen. Ben Nelson (D-Neb.) broke with most lawmakers in his party and voted against Senate legislation that would create a guest worker program and a path to citizenship.

    Bush, in his speech at Metropolitan Community College, praised Hagel several times.

    For the most part, Bush talked as he had before about the need to enforce border security, calling for 6,000 more Border Patrol agents by the end of his term. He also repeated his call for a broadened guest worker program so that U.S. businesses could fill jobs "that Americans aren't doing."

    "You can't enforce the border like the American people expect us with just Border Patrol and technology alone," he said. "So long as there's that strong desire for people to improve their lives, to do whatever it takes to come to America to work, it's going to make it really hard to enforce that border. And so the best way to do it is to have a plan so people don't feel like they have to sneak in."

    At the Juan Diego Center, Bush visited several classes. He sat with a group of immigrants who had used the center's business resources, urging them to continue to work hard so their children could go to college.

    He said he imagined that in the early 1900s, there were similar gatherings of European immigrants trying to start businesses.

    "I suspect you'd find a table with Italians, Germans and others escaping oppression sitting around the table," he said.

  2. #2
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    What he says makes absolutely no sense at all. People in third world countries will always want to make a better life for themselves so how does a Guest Worker Program stop them from coming?

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    "You can't enforce the border like the American people expect us with just Border Patrol and technology alone," he said. "So long as there's that strong desire for people to improve their lives, to do whatever it takes to come to America to work, it's going to make it really hard to enforce that border. And so the best way to do it is to have a plan so people don't feel like they have to sneak in."
    All right. Just put a welcome mat out to cover the entire southern border and another one to cover the entire northern border and have a free-for-all.

    Would the last American to leave the country please bring the flag... we will have to set up shop somewhere else.

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    After returning to Washington later in the day, Bush signed an executive order creating a task force on new Americans, to be headed by Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff.
    dumb and dumber
    We are NOT a nation of immigrants!

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    "You can't enforce the border like the American people expect us with just Border Patrol and technology alone," he said. "So long as there's that strong desire for people to improve their lives, to do whatever it takes to come to America to work, it's going to make it really hard to enforce that border. And so the best way to do it is to have a plan so people don't feel like they have to sneak in."
    Blah, blah, blah, more excuses from this do nothing treasonous moron. Maybe Bush will act when the illegals start setting up shop on his ranch and treat his place like they treat everything else.

    Hey Jorge, I want a better life too, how about forking over a few hudred grand to help me pay off my mortgage?
    Please support our fight against illegal immigration by joining ALIPAC's email alerts here https://eepurl.com/cktGTn

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    Senior Member concernedmother's Avatar
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    I get so tired of the mantra "it won't work 100% of the time, so why try" that the Bush Administration loves so much. If manpower and technology are not sufficient to secure a perimeter, then why are we wasting our money in So. Korea, Iraq and oh yeah, the White House to do just that? No one ever said that manpower and technology will necessarily stop 100% of illegal immigration, but maybe it will stop 80% or 90%--and isn't that a good place to start? Plus it's a deterrent for those who might even try. Once the border is secured, then you can shift effort to other methods of enforcement, including interior enforcement and pressuring Mexico to do more on its side of the border to stop illegal immigration--among other things.
    <div>"True patriotism hates injustice in its own land more than anywhere else."
    - Clarence Darrow</div>

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    I think it will work and wonderfully if they would actually do something. The fence the minutemen are building is based on the design used by Isreal and that fence keeps up to 95% from crossing the Isreali border.

    I would be perfectly happy with 95%, that is a pretty good number.

  8. #8
    Senior Member concernedmother's Avatar
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    dlm, I agree. Goodness we can do better than we are doing now. Take the White House example--it's a reasonably small area with a fence and full-time perimeter security cameras, patrols, etc. Every once in awhile a nut job still attempts to jump the fence. Sometimes they actually make it to the other side, but they are always apprehended and prosecuted. That's how I envision border security. Border enforcement is a deterrent--stop most attempts at the border, then the ones that make it across, catch them and deport them.
    <div>"True patriotism hates injustice in its own land more than anywhere else."
    - Clarence Darrow</div>

  9. #9
    Senior Member LegalUSCitizen's Avatar
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    Bush
    "You can't enforce the border like the American people expect us with just Border Patrol and technology alone," he said. "So long as there's that strong desire for people to improve their lives, to do whatever it takes to come to America to work, it's going to make it really hard to enforce that border. And so the best way to do it is to have a plan so people don't feel like they have to sneak in."
    Excuse me, President Bush, here's something that just might HELP:

    FOR YOU TO STOP PLAYING PATTY CAKE WITH THEM

    And here's a REALLY WILD AND RADICAL IDEA:

    How about if YOU come on the television and say: "It is against the law to enter another country illegally. As the President of the United States and I am hear today to tell anyone whose intention is to enter this country illegally NOT TO DO IT. We are ENFORCING U.S. Immigration laws and failure to obey our laws will result in Deportation and further possible consequences."

    YIKES THAT'S A SCAREY IDEA FOR YOU, ISN'T IT MISTER PRESIDENT !! :P

    Perhaps you would have preferred to be President of the PTA.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  10. #10
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    How about if YOU come on the television and say: "It is against the law to enter another country illegally. As the President of the United States and I am hear today to tell anyone whose intention is to enter this country illegally NOT TO DO IT. We are ENFORCING U.S. Immigration laws and failure to obey our laws will result in Deportation and further possible consequences."
    What I would not give to see a president, any president, stand up and say just what you wrote above and then carry through on it. Excuse my but I need to go day dream....

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