Posted on 07/05/2002 4:25:39 AM PDT by Pythagoras
In a little-noticed statement, Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) Commissioner James Ziglar has said that most of the millions of illegal aliens living in this country do not have to worry about the U.S. government enforcing the law and deporting them.
"No one likes the idea that people came into the country illegally, but its not practical or reasonable to think that youre going to be able to round them all up and send them home," Ziglar said at a May 23 press conference that he held with Javier Moctezuma Barragan, the Mexican undersecretary of population and migrant services, and Felipe de Jesus Preciado Coronado, commissioner of Mexicos migration institute. The press conference was held at the Tucson (Ariz.) Border Patrol office.
Estimates of the number of aliens living illegally in this country vary from seven million to 11 million. The INS estimates seven to eight million.
An INS spokesman said that Ziglar merely repeated what other INS commissioners, including Clinton commissioner Doris Meissner, have said in recent years. "I havent heard any controversy over his remarks," he said. "Commissioner Ziglar was recognizing the long-standing reality. The priorities for our 1,950 internal enforcement agents are deporting criminal aliens, combating trafficking. . . . We dont have the resources to pull those agents away from those priorities."
The Arizona Daily Star, the only newspaper to report Ziglars comments, paraphrased the INS director as saying that deportation of all illegal aliens would "have too severe an impact on the U.S. economy."
Spokesmen for congressional Republican leaders on immigrationHouse Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Sensenbrenner (R.-Wis.), House immigration subcommittee chairman George Gekas (R.-Pa.), and Senate immigration subcommittee ranking member Sam Brownback (R.-Kan.)had no immediate reaction to Ziglars comments during Memorial Day week, which Congress took off. The spokesmen were not aware of Ziglars comment.
Barragán said at the press conference, "The mobility of people has been a reality throughout human history. Only by recognizing that reality, through agreements, through laws, can we avoid what is happening."
Ziglar said that he wanted to make policing the border more efficient in order to free up resources to focus on the most serious threats to the United States. "We need to set up a regime where we dont have to spend so much of our time and effort in enforcement activities dealing with people who are not terrorists, who are not threats to our national security, who are economic refugees," he said.
Ziglar discussed the installation of six 30-foot beacons in the Yuma area that illegal migrants can see from up to five miles away. The beacons would allow the illegal immigrants to call for help from the Border Patrolwhich could then deport them. Though the beacons have been up for several months, no one has yet used them. Since October 1 of last year, the Border Patrol has discovered the bodies of 124 dead migrants in the mostly desert regions of its Yuma and Tucson sectors.
Ziglar also announced the use of pepperball launchers by Border Patrol agents. The weapons are supposed to disable violent migrants without hurting them, he said.
The next day, at an appearance in San Ysidro, Calif., Ziglar said that the INS would establish more commuter lanes to help people who make daily trips across the border. "If its hard for people to move across the border fluidly, that is going to have a severe economic impact on the economy of this community," he said. He said that a system of rapid entry, with minimal inspection times, for Mexican trucks would be expanded around the country.
I give up. I live in Mexico now. Buenos dias.
Oh well, just let everybody come here. They don't need to pay taxes and our welfare system will take care of their families. </ sarcasm>
At some point, the system will break. When we had our first child, in the next labor room was a 17 year-old Mexican girl that could speak no English. They weren't footing the bill and they wanted their daughter to be born in America. The nurses kept coming around, asking if anybody could speak Spanish because they couldn't talk to her. Right after their daughter was born, the proud father tried to find a pay phone to call home to Mexico. Citizenship means nothing, just COME ON OVER!
Illegal alien is confronted by Border Patrol, and starts to behave in a violent manner.
Try the old fashioned bullet remedy.
If the government won't do it, some citizens will.
This was originally reported in May-and June.
Will this be a regular monthly feature ?
"No one likes the idea that Germans went into Europe illegally, but its not practical or reasonable to think that youre going to be able to round them all up and send them home," - F. Roosevelt, 1940
"No one likes the idea that the Soviets have launched a sattelite, but its not practical or reasonable to think that youre going to be able to send a man to the moon and return him safely," - J. Kennedy, 1961
"No one likes the idea that the Soviets control Eastern Europe illegally, but its not practical or reasonable to think that Gorbachev will tear down that wall and go home," - R. Reagan, 1987
Isn't it criminal to break US immigration laws?
If the guy at the top won't enforce the laws of this great land then he should find a new job. Maybe in Mexico!
Efff the worthless Public Servants, including Presidente Jorge and his greedy NWO plans, including his INS piece of you-know-what Commissioner who has done this to our nation.
They are INTENTIONALLY turning us into a 3rd World nation.
Things WILL get nasty ... plan on it.
Help preserve America's Borders, Language and Culture at Michael Savage & www.thepaulreveresociety.com
Presidente 'boy blunder' Jorge, the first Mexican President of the the USSA, already has a Mexican job ... kissin' his way right up Mexican Presidente Fox's a$$.
The only thing that will stop him will be a huge political fallout in the mid-term elctions coming up, and I don't think the sheeple are quite mad enough yet for that.
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