Posted on 05/30/2006 8:53:57 PM PDT by nj26
The first sentence of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution -- often called the "citizenship clause" -- reads as follows:
"All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside."
The original intent of this provision was to guarantee citizenship to the former slaves and their descendants following the Civil War. However, the Supreme Court held in U.S. v. Wong Kim Ark (1898) that the "citizenship clause" applied to anyone born in the US, of any ethnicity or national origin -- and, in Afroyim v. Rusk (1967) and Vance v. Terrazas (1980), that the clause prevented Congress from revoking a person's US citizenship without evidence of his or her intent to give up said citizenship.
He did the same thing in the ports scandal; suggested that anyone who stands against the UAE operating our ports were racists. He is taking a page from Al Sharpton's diary.
I can't speak for Churchillbuff, but everything the President has said about illegal immigration, (er, pardon me, "temporary guest workers"), certainly indicates that he not only supports the Senate bill, but could have personally drafted it.
An extraordinary exchange just took place on the Senate floor over the last 40 minutes. It's the most important debate of the year, in my opinion.
The questions are these: Who do we let into this country and how many? Under the Senate bill.... There would be, in effect, no limits. If the current legal immigration level (950,000 a year for 20 years or 18.9 million over 20 years) is excluded from the total, according to Sessions, the Senate bill could be described as increasing legal immigration by 59 million to 198.2 million over 20 years.
You've got to watch the exchange for yourselves. We'll have video at Hot Air shortly. (1213pm EDT: Video of first exchange between McCain and Bingaman is up here.) In the meantime, re-read Sen. Sessions' analysis:
Senate Immigration Bill Would Allow 100 Million by 2020 (updated numbers)
How Many Illegal Aliens are in the US?--Here is the most careful estimate of the number of illegal aliens in the country that I have seen. The current estimate is about 29 million and is updated daily.--The Tucson sector Border Patrol union local 2544 on the number of illegal aliens in our nation: "There are currently 15 to 20 million illegal aliens in this country by many estimates, but the real numbers could be much higher and the numbers increase every day because our borders are not secure (no matter what the politicians tell you - don't believe them for a second)". (Visit the local's website).
The Heritage Foundation and Senator Jeff Sessions try to blow the whistle on the Senate's compromise immigration "reform" bill, via the Washington Times:The Senate immigration reform bill would allow for up to 193 million new legal immigrants -- a number greater than 60 percent of the current U.S. population -- in the next 20 years, according to a study released yesterday.
Sen. Jeff Sessions, Alabama Republican who conducted a separate analysis that reached similar results, said Congress is "blissfully ignorant of the scope and impact" of the bill...
There is NO law that we "fully enforce" - there are always limited resources for instance. That doesn't means Senators are not interested in securing the border - you simply disagree about how best to do that. Also, you are going to have to explain how you think REPUBLICAN Senators are "buying votes" especially if said votes are presumably going to be Democratic "with a decidedly leftist tilt favoring more and bigger government."
O.K., so there is, in effect, some limit - 193 million, right? I think it will be much lower - I mean, come on, there are only 100 million left in Mexico. 60 million is a much more reasonable estimate:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1641076/posts
Cheap labor for corporate supporters?
The bone they throw to the conservatives...
The over 6 million illegal aliens expelled from the U.S. since Bush took office is also a "bone"?
And there's still 10 to 12 million left. Some enforcement. If there was actually a political will in this government to send them home, most of these folks would be gone, too.
That only dealt with legal immigrants. There has never been a case to my knowledge that was specifically ruled on as it related to illegals. In any event since Congress has legislative authority over immigration matters they could write a law around the jurisdiction clause denying automatic citizenship then let the USSC hear it when it's challenged.
presumably going to be Democrat with a decidedly leftist tilt ............ ...sorry its a pet peve ...
This Bill is not just about Mexico.
There are billions of people in the Third World. How many do you think would come to the USA if they could? This Bill opens wide the door.
Muslims from Islamic countries alone would probably stream in by the boat load. Do you think they would assimilate nicely - or peacefully?
Like the great wave (Horde) of migrants begin !!!
It is time for the South Western States (California, Arizona, New Mexico, Colrado, Texas etc.) to share the fun with the rest of the country !!!
I have no doubt that you are paying for the lack of control over our borders. My point is that the long term impact of the Senate bill's significant increase in legal immigration will affect us more than the current impact of illegals already here, presuming we can gain control over our borders.
Robert Samuelson explains to his Washington Post readers what the Senate failed to communicate when it passed its Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act (CIRA) last week. Many people wrote about the Heritage Foundation's analysis of the proposal, which estimated that 100 million people would emigrate to the US over the next twenty years under CIRA's provisions. Robert Rector adjusted that figure to 66 million after CIRA passed with several new amendments which provided some limitation to entry.
Samuelson points out that the White House and the CBO actually have similar numbers...
Of course not, but no one is going to tell me that reducing the flow of illegals from over 1 million per year to less than 100k per year is going to be prohibitively costly.
That doesn't means Senators are not interested in securing the border
If they're so interested in securing the border, why have they waited this long to act? It's not as if this problem is new, and it's not as if everyone's been ignoring it until recently.
Large numbers of congressmen have been attempting to call their attention to it for over a decade. Border state voters have been attempting to do something about it on their own since 1994, only to be foiled by the courts. For crying out loud, the Senate and our panderer in chief ignored it even in the face of 9-11. And only now are they finally doing something about it? Forgive me if I doubt their sincerity.
Furthermore, if they're so interested in securing the border, why are they holding border security hostage to their desire to amnesty illegals and double (perhaps triple) the rate of unskilled legal immigration?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.