To: boris
Just some questions:
What chance would the average US citizen have of getting a driver's license in Mexico? Or Canada? Or any other country?
And if the US issues driver's licenses to Mexicans shouldn't the US also issue them to El Salvadorans, Columbians, Canadians, Danes, Chinese, etc.?
Do other countries routinely issue driver's licenses to non-citizens?
Does being a citizen of the US have any meaning at all?
8 posted on
10/13/2003 7:47:09 AM PDT by
Sabatier
To: Sabatier
The law that Davis signed isn't naming mexicans, it applies to all illegals.
In 1985, a conversation that I had with immigrations officials at Brown Field, San Diego, they stated that about 20% of the illegals coming across the California border were orientals and middle easterners.
Welcome terrorists etc!
17 posted on
10/13/2003 9:22:25 AM PDT by
dalereed
(,)
To: Sabatier
What chance would the average US citizen have of getting a driver's license in Mexico? Or Canada? Or any other country? In almost all countries, including the most backward, third-world of them, Americans must have legal sponsorship to obtain a drivers license in country. You must also be able to produce a current, valid US drivers license. You can get an International Drivers License that is valid in many industrial countries, but again, you must have legal sponsorship in order to get one and use it.
The US may very well be the only nation in the world where criminal aliens can get drivers licenses.
34 posted on
10/13/2003 1:00:15 PM PDT by
Allegra
(If conservatives are "to the right," then liberals are "to the wrong.")
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