Posted on 08/14/2011 7:12:33 PM PDT by Clairity
Supports a path to citizenship, but no amnesty for illegals
Q: Should undocumented immigrants all should be deported?
A: There is no way that in the US we would roundup every illegal immigrant - there are about 12 million of the illegal immigrants - not only economically is that just an impossibility but that's not a humane way anyway to deal with the issue.
Q: Do you then favor an amnesty for the 12 million undocumented immigrants?
A: No, I do not. Not total amnesty. You know, people have got to follow the rules. We have got to make sure that there is equal opportunity and those who are here legally should be first in line for services being provided and those opportunities that this great country provides.
Q: So you support a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants?
A: I do because I understand why people would want to be in America. To seek the safety and prosperity, the opportunities, the health that is here. It is so important that yes, people follow the rules so that people can be treated equally and fairly in this country.
Source: Univision Interview with Sarah Palin, by Jorge Ramos Oct 26, 2008
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Took no action on Alaska's "sanctuary cities" Lou Dobbs notes that at least two of Alaska's cities have been officially designated as sanctuary cities: "An August 14, 2006 report produced by the Congressional Research Service listed 31 cities and counties that have 'don't ask, don't tell' sanctuary policies in place. They [include] Anchorage, Alaska [and] Fairbanks, Alaska. Alaska and Oregon both have state-wide policies that forbid state agencies from using resources to enforce federal immigration law."
Apparently, this is by design from the highest levels.
In fact, a resolution to that effect was passed in the Alaska state legislature in 2003 (before Palin's election): "[Alaska] House Joint Resolution 22 - May 2003: Establishes that state agencies and instrumentalities may not use state resources or institutions for the enforcement of federal immigration laws, which are the responsibility of the federal government."
Itâs not clear whether Gov. Palin has ever weighed in, pro or con, on Alaskaâs sanctuary policies.
Source: Lou Dobbs reported on lafrontera.mojo4m.com Sep 5, 2006
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Tightened restrictions on illegal alien's drivers licenses
There has been an ongoing fight in Alaska over drivers' licenses for illegals. A bill banning drivers' licenses for illegals passed the Alaska state senate in 2003 [before Palin was elected governor]: "JUNEAU (AP) - The state Senate approved a bill that tightens the standards for getting a driverâs license by requiring applicants prove they are in the country legally and by placing time limits on licenses for legal aliens."
The measure did not pass into law. In any event, Palin's DMV subsequently tightened the administrative regulations on drivers' licenses, thereby giving rise to a lawsuit by some folks who found the new restrictions inconvenient.
Thats why hes been elected for the last 27 YEARS.For what party? 23 yrs ago .Rick Perry Was Al Gores Texas Campaign Chairman...
11 years before Perry chaired Gores presidential campaign in Texas, in 1976, Gore held the first Congressional hearings on climate change. Gores reputation on environmental issues was so solidified by 1988 that the first President Bush took to the habit of calling him ozone man.
Could not resist :)
Good to see you, dearest Jeff! I pray you’re doing better!
Thank you very much for posting more recent dialogue from Sarah Palin, herself!
Starting a thread using old info about a non-declared candidate, who the poster of the thread, thinks the non-declared isn’t running, is starting a flame war, but it’s all calmed now.
Hello and a good late night to you!
Yeah. Reagan was a Democrat too, before that conservative party switched. Rick was slow in catching on on the national scale, but in Texas, MOST conservatives voted Democrat up till that time. You can be snarky, or you can educate yourself on the weird world or TX politics. Either way, Perry has been a conservative all his life.
Indeed, there is a big difference giving up one's term as governor to serve as President and giving it up to go camping with Kate Plus Eight.
I just said *Good night* with my messages to you on the FReepathon thread!
See you tomorry!
Please keep it up....LOL.
I'm *done* voting for the lesser of two evils, after what Bush and Rove did to the GOP.
Cheers!
Her negatives are high and she know it, but she can’t bring them down without first entering the primaries.
No guarantees that she will win, but she has to run.
The debate has to be elevated and she has exellent solutions.
Oh, you hadn't heard? Onyx dear, I think it's you who'd better get a grip. You don't want to get the stern talking to that I did last night from DRey:
"Dont be an idiot Winifred. I dont have time to explain Texas politics to you, or Conservatism, and I really dont care if you understand it or not because frankly, you dont matter. But if youre ever in the mood to get educated, do a little research. As for me, please dont worry yourself about my street cred. You have no idea who youre talking to."
She's obviously some sort of supernatural demi-god of Texas politics or something. *rolls eyes*
“The deport them all position is probably politically untenable at this point, so that is where the negotiation must focus. I would support permanent residency status for these people, as long as they are law-abiding; but NO voting rights nor chance of citizenship.”
I think you’re coming closest to “where things are going to end up” regarding the “illegals question”. I’ve thought of the very same “solution” as you have.
The illegals — the vast majority of them — are NEVER going to be involuntarily deported. It doesn’t matter if we “cut off their benefits”. The reality is that, even without benefits, many if not most of them are light-years better off here than they would be back home (at least from _their_ viewpoint).
But even if they’re never going back, they should also NEVER be permitted to enjoy the full benefits of citizenship, because they chose to enter America illegally. And like you said above, NO voting rights, EVER. They should be tolerated, but never be given a direct voice (through the vote) in the future of the country.
What this really does is little more than “slow down” the browning of America.
The inescapable reality of the illegals is that it doesn’t matter if they are “legalized”, “amnestied”, or given citizenship. Because, within twenty years, many are going to “auto-legalize” THROUGH THEIR CHILDREN (shouting intentional). Every baby born to an illegal on U.S. soil is an automatic citizen, who will someday have the same “citizenship rights” as those children of native Americans. Where will we be then?
The only way to prevent this is to change the law of the land that bestows such citizenship, probably by a Constitutional Amendment that rewrites the earlier provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment. And — same as with the “deport them all” argument — this isn’t going to happen, either.
Before I’m attacked for being pessimistic, I would wholeheartedly endorse deporting them all, and wholeheartedly endorse rewriting the Fourteenth.
But the essence of conservatism is a willingness to see things in the cold light of reality, and understand what can be changed, and what can’t. That’s what separates us from the liberal mindset.
And the reality is that once, earlier on, we might have properly dealt with the illegal problem — but lost the opportunity to do so by waiting, waiting, and waiting some more until their numbers had grown so large as to make such efforts politically (as well as logistically) impossible. It’s simply too late, at least for some areas of the country.
The solution? Wish I had one. Actually, I think it’s time for conservative Euro-Americans to start migrating to those states where they can rebuild their demographical majorities so as to be un-challengeable, at least within those state borders, and let the “multicultural states simply go their own way. We may even see a Soviet-style breakup in our future — a “Commonwealth of North American States”. It could happen peacefully, perhaps not. We’ll just have to wait and see.
Just sayin’...
Do those things and illegal aliens would deport themselves muy pronto!
I will do my best to support and vote for the most conservative candidate that can win the general election! From my state of Georgia, Saxby may need a primary challenge. Tom Price from my congressional district seems to be doing a fine job.
My support extends beyond my state and districts though. I give extensively to all sorts of candidates’ campaigns (that have the potential to win).
So, I will be eager to be pinged about right races that need support.
The lesser of two evils is all there is. No candidate is perfect. No candidate will measure up completely. Remember Reagan? He used to be a Democrat and his wife was a kook. She brought palm readers into the white house and reintroduced booze to their parties. Reagan was a divorcee with kids that hated him. That wouldn’t fly today. But thank God for Reagan. Who will be the force we need? Who will beat Obama? They are ALL the lesser of two evils.
He tried to get a sanctuary cities law through the legislature that he said would give the police the tools they needed to find and deport illegals. When it failed in regular session (because it needed 2/3rds senate, and the democrats have more than a 3rd), he added it to the special session, where they only needed majority vote.
Unfortunately, the republicans in the house and senate got into some pissing contest, passed competing bills, and nothing ended up happening.
I’m not a fan of allowing illegal immigrant kids to go to college on in-state tuition. Virginia doesn’t allow it. But if Texas wants to do so, I don’t think it is a particulary “pro-illegal” stance.
The argument against seems to be that, knowing their kids could one day get in-state college tuition, mexicans will risk crossing the border with their 2-year-olds, and then live in the country for 16 years while their kids go through school, just so they can get cheaper college.
I DO think mexicans and others sneak into our country to benefit their kids; many come here to HAVE kids to take advantage of the stupid birth-citizenship laws. But I don’t think they are coming here because they can get cheap college 16 years later.
The problem is that we let them stay here for 16 years. But the “law” forces us to educate their children in our public schools. They live in our communities, they are on our sports teams, they make friends, they even become americanized (if we are lucky). Now they are 18-year-olds that don’t even remember their home country, speak english, are ingrained in our culture. They are smart enough to go to college. They have lived in the state essentially their whole lives.
So, if the taxpayers of that state want to give them taxpayer-subsidized college education, I understand it. (I think people who see college as something kids pay for might feel more like this than people who think that the cheap tuition is a benefit to the kid’s parents).
Again, to me the problem is that we let these people hang around in our country for decades. We let them have jobs, pay taxes, send their kids to our schools. That is what we have to stop. But the kids? I’m not quite as worried about them, on a state level, if the state sees a reason to help them.
I would however oppose allowing the illegal kids to bump legal kids out of college slots (OK, I already said I personally oppose letting them have cheap college as well, so I mean I “more oppose”, and would hold it more against Perry if that was what happened).
I certainly don’t “credit” Perry for this, but I am not letting it turn me off to him — I’m more interested in what his FEDERAL platform will be for immigration. No Federal Dream Act, Secure the Borders, go back to actually deporting people.
I hold Sarah to the same standard. I don’t really care what she said when running for VP, and in fact I have agreed with some of her less “strident” comments on the subject, as well as the ones people say are “different” — I don’t see them as different, just a broader view.
But she’s not a candidate yet. When she becomes a candidate, she’ll have to put out a platform, and that’s what we will judge her on, not words she said 3 years ago, or whether she took harsh enough action against sanctuary cities in Alaska.
BTW, unlike some supporters here, I don’t think it is a foregone conclusion that she will run. She has repeatedly said that she is still thinking about it, and that she has NOT made a decision.
And again, unlike some supporters, I tend to believe what Sarah Palin says. I like to quote what she says, and if she says hasn’t made a decision, I choose to believe her, rather than thinking she already knows she is running and is just lying about it for political theatre.
I don’t believe Sarah would lie for political theatre, or to be a VP candidate.
But plenty of your follower Palin supporters are and I haven't seen you object to the lies and smears they post about Rick Perry and other candidates.
You haven’t exactly said things in a way that would discourage or diffuse those attacks. I’m not sure I have either, although I am trying very hard, as I support Sarah and I think I like Perry as well.
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