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  1. #1
    Senior Member lorrie's Avatar
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    Countries’ immigration laws strongly differ

    Countries’ immigration laws strongly differ

    September 6, 2018

    The Aug. 26 newspaper’s Associated Press article “No love for ankle monitors on captured immigrants” caused an upward spike in my medication-controlled blood pressure. Apparently the latest attempt by ICE to “humanely” deal with the flood of illegal immigrants, with children in tow, that break our laws crossing our borders is being labeled as “inappropriate and inhumane.”

    The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has stopped separating the U.S. law breaking parents from their children; the federal agency is now fitting the illegal immigrants with electronic monitoring devices and quickly releasing them. While many U.S. citizens are fitted with electronic ankle monitors as a house arrest punishment in lieu of serving a prison term, these same devices are now being called grilletes, or ankle shackles, by the immigrants.

    The government officials do say that the devices are effective in getting the law breakers to show up in immigration court. They seem to “stop” working once deportation proceedings begin.

    The batteries don’t die once the illegal aliens realize they lost their court case and will be deported, along with their children. They just cut the monitor off and disappear into the various illegal alien havens throughout the country. I am thinking they would also show up in court and hang around for deportation if the government was taking care of their children up until they were deported.

    It seems that both immigration advocates and legal experts (lawyers) agree that using the devices on American criminals is perfectly fine. Using those same devices on people seeking U.S. asylum illegally is “inappropriate and inhumane.” The American Bar Association goes even further, stating that the electronic monitoring devices are “a form of restriction on liberty similar to detention, rather than a meaningful alternative to detention.”

    As a comparison, if the situation were reversed and it was U.S. citizens flocking to the paradise country of Mexico, here are some of the laws they would encounter:

    Mexico welcomes only foreigners who will be useful to Mexican society.

    • Foreigners are admitted into Mexico “according to their possibilities of contributing to national progress.”

    • Immigration officials must “ensure” that “immigrants will be useful elements for the country and that they have the necessary funds for their sustenance” and for their dependents.

    • Foreigners may be barred if their presence upsets “the equilibrium of the national demographics,” when foreigners are deemed detrimental to “economic or national interests” when they do not behave like good citizens in their own country, when they have broken Mexican laws and when “they are not found to be physically or mentally healthy.”

    • The Secretary of Governance may “suspend or prohibit the admission of foreigners when he determines it to be in the national interest.”

    • A National Population Registry keeps track of “every single individual who comprises the population of the country” and verifies each individual’s identity.

    • A national Catalog of Foreigners tracks foreign tourists and immigrants, and assigns each individual with a unique tracking number.

    (Wow. Six easy-to-understand, common sense immigration laws the United States can easily enact and enforce.)

    If you violate these laws, your punishment is:

    • Foreigners with fake papers, or who enter the country under false pretenses, may be imprisoned.

    • Foreigners with fake immigration papers may be fined or imprisoned.

    • Foreigners who sign government documents “with a signature that is false or different from that which he normally uses” are subject to fine and imprisonment.

    • Foreigners who fail to obey rules will be fined, deported and/or imprisoned as felons. Failure to obey a deportation order means punishment.

    • Foreigners who are deported and try to re-enter the country without authorization can be imprisoned for up to 10 years.

    • Foreigners who violate the visa terms may get up to six years in prison.

    • Foreigners who misrepresent visa terms, such as working without a permit, can also be imprisoned.

    Under Mexican law, illegal immigration is a felony.

    Mexicans who help illegal aliens enter the country are considered criminals under the law. A Mexican who marries a foreigner with the sole objective of helping the foreigner live in the country is subject to up to five years in prison.

    It is somewhat strange. Under Mexican immigration laws, I didn’t see any words like undocumented workers, humanely, inappropriate, inhumane or “a meaningful alternative to detention.” I did see words like foreigners, punished, fined, felons and imprisoned.

    Two Democratically governed, civilized countries — one with highly defined, easy-to-understand immigration laws and one with immigration laws as vague as a politician’s promise.

    Respectfully,

    https://www.republicanherald.com/opi...ffer-1.2382371


    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty
    by joining our E-mail Alerts athttp://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  2. #2
    Moderator Beezer's Avatar
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    Also, Mexican law states that if their citizens give birth on foreign soil...then that child IS a citizen of Mexico.

    DEPORT THE WHOLE FAMILY!

    NO PATH TO STAY!
    ILLEGAL ALIENS HAVE "BROKEN" OUR IMMIGRATION SYSTEM

    DO NOT REWARD THEM - DEPORT THEM ALL

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