The Rule Of Law Resolution Works: Another Example
By Greg L | 12 March 2008 | Illegal Aliens, Prince William County | 11 Comments

Today’s edition of the Washington Post provides yet another example of how the Rule of Law Resolution is discouraging the unlawful presence of illegal aliens in Prince William County. It appears that soccer leagues have depended to a large degree on illegal aliens as players and spectators, and now that they’re self-deporting either to their home countries, or to more welcoming jurisdictions in the area. Prince William County is now considered off-limits:
Jose Platero said most players on his team, Fiorentina, told him they will no longer go to Manassas because they have moved or fear their fan base has vanished. Melvin Ortez, president of Honduras de Manassas, is switching his team to a Fairfax league because half of his players are illegal immigrants. (emphasis added)
Perhaps now all those children who have been on the waiting list for public recreational facilities will now have a decent chance of being able to use them, since the illegal aliens are moving on. Somehow the Post managed to miss that one, despite their extensive investigation effort in this article. I doubt they missed any potential sources who could have bemoaned the decline of illegal aliens in the county, however.

Maryland and Fairfax County, you apparently are the recipients of a significant number of illegal aliens who have come to the conclusion that it is safer for them to depend on your taxpayer-funded services rather than risk the consequences of depending on Prince William County taxpayers and finally being held to account by our law enforcement officials. If these jurisdictions really want illegal aliens in their communities, they’re welcome to all of ours.

Although it’s a positive development that illegal aliens consider Prince William County a place that does not welcome illegal aliens, the concerns that illegal aliens are expressing in this article border on, if not go beyond the irrational. They clearly are concerned that they could become subject to enforcement of the Rule of Law Resolution, but can they really be more concerned about Help Save Manassas than they are with the Prince William County Police Department, which is actually able to do something to impose penalties for breaking the law? From the looks of this article, that might be the case.

I wonder how they got that impression. It wouldn’t happen to have anything to do with a local organization that has for years contended that the United States is the most terrorist nation in world history now, would it?

UPDATE: CNN has an interesting video about the effect of the Rule of Law Resolution here: http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/us/200 ... ideosearch

http://www.bvbl.net/index.php/2008/03/1 ... r-example/