Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Unlawful Foreign Nationals

The term "illegal immigrant" is a misnomer that allows proponents to distort the issue of illegal entry and residency. Foreign Nationals entering the United States illegally are in no way "immigrants". They only become that when the paper work is done allowing them legal entry and residency. Using the word immigrant, legal in conjunction with illegal, only fuzzes up the issue and allows some sense of legitimacy for those who are entering the U.S. without legal authorization.
The argument that poor foreign nationals are of benefit to the U.S. is illegitimate--unlawful foreign nationals are in truth "thieves"; taking away the many benefits earned by legitimate residents of this nation. Unlawful foreign nationals resident in this country steal our birthright by having children in this country without contributing to the tax base (property taxes), which makes schools and education possible. They take jobs from the lower classes of our country and often deprive others from creating small businesses, such as janitorial jobs, landscaping, etc., by legitimate residents of this country. Often times business and employment taxes are avoided by such businesses, thus robbing our tax base. Often unlawful foreign nationals work "under the table", hired by fly-by-night contractors.
The idea that "it is just to hard to do, to return 11 million illegal foreign nationals to their own countries", is like saying it is just too hard to fight a war with Japan because they bombed Pearl Harbor, or fight terrorists because they fight from the shadows, or enforce our laws because, "it is too hard." Since when did we stop doing what we had to do because of its difficulty?
Since when did we give in to a foreign invasion that is obviously intent on "taking over". They declare the fact openly, wave foreign flags in defiance to our attempts to establish order.
The argument we need to "legalize" the presence of foreign nationals so we can establish who they are has got to be the dumbest argument yet. Especially when that was already tried, and failed, in 1986.
The argument that it would disrupt lives if we returned unlawfully resident foreign nationals back to their own countries is not the issue, their unlawful presence is the issue. Validating this argument based on numbers of people displaced or inconvenienced is asking for double the present number at some future date because then it would then be the accepted "norm"; just as it is now to allow "guest workers" to stay for years in this country.
If Americans want a taste of what is to come watch closely the commotion going on in the streets of Los Angeles and elsewhere. If measures are not taken to stem the invasion then our country will not be ours for long, but theirs.

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