While Kennedy's 1965 Immigration act is without a doubt the worst ever piece of legislation signed into law...it will eventually kill the country, the Presidents at the helm as the act kicked into high gear have done nothing to stop the act and have actually accelerated its effects through their willful non enforcement of immigration law and blatant encouragement of illegal immigration.
Our current stammerer-in-chief is worse than either his father or Clinton on encouraging illegal immigration. His continuous dishonest stutterings the past few years about "reform" (amnesty) or "temporary worker program" (amnesty), his perfidious collusion with the Mexican Junta's matricula card stealth amnesty, his overall refusal to guard the borders, earn him a spot in the all time open border rogue's gallery.
Our current stammerer-in-chief is worse than either his father or Clinton on encouraging illegal immigration. His continuous dishonest stutterings the past few years about "reform" (amnesty) or "temporary worker program" (amnesty), his perfidious collusion with the Mexican Junta's matricula card stealth amnesty, his overall refusal to guard the borders, earn him a spot in the all time open border rogue's gallery.
Your blaming the wrong person and the wrong branch of government.
Congress giveth, the EOIR ignoreth, the ACLU and AILA attacketh, and the federal courts taketh away.
Examole, On March 8, 2005 from the Washington Times
The Supreme Court yesterday let stand a lower court ruling that a California company could not inquire about the immigration status of a group of Hispanic and Southeast Asian women who filed a lawsuit against the firm for job discrimination.
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco, in an opinion by Judge Stephen Reinhardt, had agreed with a federal magistrate who barred the questioning, saying many of the millions of illegal aliens now in the country were reluctant to report discriminatory employment practices.
"Granting employers the right to inquire into workers' immigration status in cases like this would allow them to raise implicitly the threat of deportation and criminal prosecution every time a worker, documented or undocumented, reports illegal practices or files a Title VII action," wrote Judge Reinhardt, named to the bench in 1980 by President Carter.
I repeat, your blaming the wrong person and the wrong branch of government.