"I'm not racist but fuck those illegal immigrants, they subjugate our culture and destroy everything we stand for!" That sounds oddly familiar.
I feel like that's less of a problem with our immigration system and more of a problem with our education system. Most countries in Europe require students to learn English even if it is not their native tongue, since it is difficult to find a job without that skill. The same thing should be done here. Learning Spanish should be a required course for all schools in the U.S. especially in those states near the border.aprilmarie said:my big issue(being an American AND living in Southern California) comes from the fact that now, at age 26 I am suddenly expected to learn spanish to get a job since now, from illegal immigration and people being too lazy to learn english, more than half our population is mexican. Personally it doesnae seem fair that I should have to do that in my native country. I have a few friends who their parents had them after crossing the border and I have a few friends who their parents came over here legally. So I have seen both sides of the coin so to speak. It is expensive and a pain in the ass to legally become an American citizen. However, that being said, we need to actually, you know, uphold our own damn constitution and laws regarding immigration instead of just looking the other way. What's the point of having a law if you're going to ignore it? At least Arizona is upholding the law. They had to make their own law a similar one to the countries to do so but at least it is happening somewhere. And yes, I am trying to get out of the States, legally. I want to live over in the UK. Mostly for the weather, but that's another topic altogether.
I disagree. Just because a bunch of people want to live here but don't want to learn the language should not mean that I should have to learn it. Off the top of my head (and I don't remember which country it is but IF I recall correctly and anyone who knows what I'm talking about please feel free to correct me I think it is one of the Scandinavian countries though) there is a country in Europe where if you are living there or trying to become a resident and the mayor or person in charge comes up to you and can't hold a basic conversation with you in the native language you get kicked out until you can learn the basics of the language. Honestly I would have no problem with America adopting that policy. And for godssake if you call someone up and they answer in English DON'T speak rapid fire Spanish at them!(/end rant of customer service jobs)Evilbunny said:I feel like that's less of a problem with our immigration system and more of a problem with our education system. Most countries in Europe require students to learn English even if it is not their native tongue, since it is difficult to find a job without that skill. The same thing should be done here. Learning Spanish should be a required course for all schools in the U.S. especially in those states near the border.aprilmarie said:my big issue(being an American AND living in Southern California) comes from the fact that now, at age 26 I am suddenly expected to learn spanish to get a job since now, from illegal immigration and people being too lazy to learn english, more than half our population is mexican. Personally it doesnae seem fair that I should have to do that in my native country. I have a few friends who their parents had them after crossing the border and I have a few friends who their parents came over here legally. So I have seen both sides of the coin so to speak. It is expensive and a pain in the ass to legally become an American citizen. However, that being said, we need to actually, you know, uphold our own damn constitution and laws regarding immigration instead of just looking the other way. What's the point of having a law if you're going to ignore it? At least Arizona is upholding the law. They had to make their own law a similar one to the countries to do so but at least it is happening somewhere. And yes, I am trying to get out of the States, legally. I want to live over in the UK. Mostly for the weather, but that's another topic altogether.
If you grant them amnesty, they become legal citizens. Hence more tax money and more welfare. it just speeds up the process.dystopiaINC said:yeah but are they paying taxes? they may be working but it's very unlikely they are paying taxes on what they earn. thats why citizenship is important not just to them but to the country. if we can get them to be legal citizens we can tax them. if we can tax them we get back some of what we give them in welfare.
gotta agree with Hammertroll here. it just encourages them to come in. and i don't think they will pay taxes if you automatically make them a citizen especially if they didn't already. you need to work them through the system legally, from what i see they want to be here for the benefits but not pay for them like a normal citizen.electric_warrior said:If you grant them amnesty, they become legal citizens. Hence more tax money and more welfare. it just speeds up the process.dystopiaINC said:yeah but are they paying taxes? they may be working but it's very unlikely they are paying taxes on what they earn. thats why citizenship is important not just to them but to the country. if we can get them to be legal citizens we can tax them. if we can tax them we get back some of what we give them in welfare.
agreed here man.Hammartroll said:The Belgium fellow above put it very well, it encourages people to break the law for 5 years just to be rewarded. It would cause more illigal immigration because if you could manage to stay here for 5 years, which isn't that hard with government assistance, you get a free ticket. While it would be easier for us and them (who've been here for over 5 years) to just grant amnesty, it would be a bad precedent and make our immigration problem worse.electric_warrior said:Why force someone who's been living and working in the country for ten years to begin the process when you can just take their continued and substantial contribution to your country as a substitute for that process?Hammartroll said:why give them amnesty when they can start the process becoming a citizen any time they want?electric_warrior said:So long as illegals have every intention of working, and prove so by either working or searching for jobs, then I see absolutely no problem with them being here.
I also think there should be an amnesty for those who have been here for so many years (five or ten or something).
If you pay your way, you can stay.
If we just cut all funding to illigals, those who've been here for more than 5 years would find citizinship ASAP... or leave, which is fine too.
Actually, the "anchor baby" loophole stems from the 14th Amendment that stipulates that anyone "born and naturalized" in the US is a citizen and therefore granted all the rights that entails. It was written post-Civil War to handle how ex-slaves should be treated. I don't think it could be done away with without a major retooling, possible losing some important things in the process.Jodah said:Get rid of anchor baby and marriage loopholes.
Surely they've broken the law simply by being an illegal immigrant? I'm not saying reward breaking the law, what I am saying it don't bother with forcing them to take the citizenship test when you could just give them citizenship. I mean, if they've been there for that long surely the test would be pretty much a formality. Of course they'd have to prove how long they've been in the country.wilsontheterrible said:Problem is that illegal immigrants routinely take more than they put back into the system. While in the U.S they enjoy the protection of the U.S military, law and order provided by police and justice system, welfare support, medicaid, hospital access, food stamps, public education, and a number of other services that they don't pay for because they don't pay taxes.
The route to citizenship should be streamlined but that does not mean we can be lax on those who did, in fact, break the law. This is a society, society means rules, if you can't live with those rules you can leave.
Pretty much this. Come here legally, I could give two shits. But, if you hop the border, and then have the balls to protest that you deserve the rights of other US citizens, you can get the fuck out.Hagenzz said:Belgium here. Yes, we do have this problem.
Yes, it bothers me. There are legal ways to gain citizenship of my country. If you are denied the privilege, then you do not have the right to come here anyway and live, more often than not, off money that comes from crime.
More than that, a majority of illegal immigrants never even bother trying to apply via a legal course first.
Because the law here states that if you can prove you've lived in my country, illegaly or not, for 5 years, you gain citizenship. Because you've created ties in that time.
Essentially rewarding people for breaking the law 5 years running.
As for the American problem, I really don't know enough about the situation there to have an informed opinion.
What I think of it? Well, let me give an example.
I remember a couple years back, some collossal assholes climbed a crane at a construction site and refused to come down until they got Belgian citizenship.
Let's make an estimate that with goverment funded living(housing, food, social workers, etc), courses in my language, help finding jobs, subsidies for companies that do employ them, and so on and so forth, these fuckers would cost the state a quarter million ? each before they became self sufficient, IF they ever became self sufficient, because evidence suggests they'd parasite on my taxes until the day they died.
A quarter million.
Yet if I were to climb a crane and demand something equally ludicrous, like have a banner with me that says 'Gimme a goddamn 250000? Lamborghini or I'm not coming down", I'd be the crazy one.
Even though technically, if anyone has a right to 250000? of MY country's money (or any amount, really), it's me. As I have already paid at least a tenth of that amount in taxes, and in another decade or so will have paid say... a fifth. If I were older, I'd have paid it already.
I'm obviously not saying I expect a car, I'm very happy I'm paying for firemen and the like.
But these motherfuckers come from their third world crapholes, thousans every fucking year (not to mention the tens of thousands who do it legally and also live off my money), expecting me and my countrymen to pay for them?
Fuck that.
This is a sovereign nation, and if they want to live here, they have to live by its rules.
If those rules say they cannot live here, they need to get the fuck out.
The people of this nation have spoken. They voted representatives into office who decided that no, not every single person on earth is good enough to live here. They must qualify.
This is the law, and it is the voice of the people by virtue of the fact that this is a democracy.
Close down the borders, that's what I say. With an electrified fence and goddamn landmines.
There are legal ways of getting in, and if their literally very first act on the soil of my country is to break the law, because the moment they set foot on our soil they're breaking the law, they have no right, and it baffles me that anyone in their right minds would have the fucking gall to straight facedly tell me we should be lenient with this scum.
No fucking way. Over my dead body.
I say deal with the ones that are already here and do something about the borders. As for anchor babies, I would change it to where only people born to US citizens or green card holders. I know that sounds rather harsh but some countries do not allow dual citizenship. I also can't understand why there are Chinese citizens coming over just to have babies. China will not and does not recognize dual citizenship. I'm speaking this as an immigrant in the US. (I came here legally because my parents were political refugees.)dystopiaINC said:Ok so i was doing some random research of different topics for a possible research paper. and one of the topics hat caught my interest was Illegal Immigration. so i want to ask you fellow escapists.
for Americans, what are your views on it? people living off the government and not paying taxes? sanctuary towns? gangs like ms-13? drug trafficking over the border?
for everyone else do you have this problem in your countries? does it bother you? what do you think about the problem in America? should the close the borders down or open them up?
whats your opinion on illegal immigration?
EDIT: also what do you think of "anchor babies"? An America if your born in the US your automatically a citizen, so an anchor babies is a child born in the states the help keep the parents from being deported. also these babies are eligible for well fare and education on the government's dime, (tax payers money really)