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Old 10-08-2011, 10:31 AM
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Jeanfromfillmore Jeanfromfillmore is offline
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Default Alabama Official: Self-Deportation is What We Want

Alabama Official: Self-Deportation is What We Want
An official from the Alabama city of Albertville – which has become a flashpoint for the effects of the state’s new immigration law – says the absence of scores of students from the local schools was good for the community.
“A large portion of the illegal Hispanic community has moved, self-deportation is a real thing,” City Councilman Chuck Ellis is quoted as saying in the website The Daily Caller. "It is amazing to see the effects" of the law.
Ellis said the drop in school attendance by the children of migrant workers would alleviate overcrowding in classrooms.
The national news website said Ellis said that some 150 children apparently had left the school district, and he expected that as many as 500 more might leave out of their parents’ fear of being arrested and deported.
“It is tough on those kids,” Ellis said, according to The Daily Caller, but the councilman added that teachers would have more time to help other Hispanic students improve their English.
Albertville’s student exodus has grabbed national headlines as one of the more visible, immediate effects of HB 56, termed the strictest state-level immigration law in the United States.
The exodus, which began when the law was just a proposal, intensified after a federal judge in Birmingham recently upheld most provisions. Key parts left intact were those allowing police to check immigration papers during traffic stops and schools to check the status of students during enrollment.
Ellis also said that unemployment in Marshall County, where Albertville is located, had slipped to 9.3 from 9.5 in the last month. He said that employers in the county were hiring eligible workers in the aftermath of the enforcement of the law.
“A lot of meat-packing plants that have been using migrant workers are beginning to be more stringent in checking things,” Ellis said, according to the website.
Immigration advocates from Alabama, and around the country, have condemned the law, saying it presents “a crisis.”
During a telephonic press conference Thursday, Auburn [Alabama] University professor Pamela Long said: “I’m witnessing a lot of fear among immigrant families including families that own small businesses and employ taxpaying workers.”
“They have revitalized the state with their hard work and entrepeneurship...As an educator, my duty is to educate students not check their immigration status.”
Jack Kane, a Catholic pastor and the director of Hispanic Ministry for the Archdiocese of Mobile in Alabama, said in the press conference: “Everybody is suffering and the children are suffering the most. It is a dark day for Alabama and for America when politicians praise a law that dehumanizes people and pushes children out of school.”
Those who favor strict immigration enforcement have been equally emphatic in their praise of Arizona’s law, saying that the federal government’s inaction on enforcing immigration laws and securing U.S. borders have forced states to take matters into their own hands.
Alabama Rep. Mo Brooks, a Republican, told the website POLITICO that the exodus of undocumented immigrants from schools and jobs was exactly what his state’s law intended.
“Those are the intended consequences of Alabama’s legislation with respect to (undocumented immigrants),” Brooks said according to POLITICO. “We don’t have the money in America to keep paying for the education of everybody else’s children from around the world."
"We simply don’t have the financial resources to do that. Second, with respect to (undocumented workers) who are now leaving jobs in Alabama, that’s exactly what we want.”

Read more: http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/pol...#ixzz1aDTMdAnh
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Old 10-08-2011, 10:58 AM
Twoller Twoller is offline
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That's great and we commend the attitude of that state official.

But we really need to remove completely the notion of "self-deportation" as a desired goal of the anti-illegal movement.

Again, the issue is one of border control and border control means controlling illegal traffic in both directions across the border. No illegal immigrant should ever imagine they can just come or go any time they feel like it. Being able to leave as an illegal any time they feel like is part of the appeal of being an illegal in the US. Amnesty for anti-illegals should mean the ability to leave under supervision without prosecution. Otherwise illegals should assume they are just as liable for prosecution for trying to cross our borders illegally on the way out as they are on the way in.

Notice that this state official is being a little narrow minded. He isn't looking at the big picture, he's just wrapped up in Alabama, which is a hazardous posture for this problem, which is an international problem. Really, when he says Alabama's illegals are "self-deporting", they aren't really "self-deporting" at all. They're just leaving Alabama for some other more friendly state, like California. Alabama doesn't have any international borders and so for a state official to brag about it's illegals "self-deporting" is a little too grand.

We commend Alabama's successes in getting rid of their illegals, but hope they keep a national perspective on this, at least. And even better, an international one. That's what it is at its roots, an international problem.
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Old 10-08-2011, 12:41 PM
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Jeanfromfillmore Jeanfromfillmore is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Twoller View Post
That's great and we commend the attitude of that state official.

But we really need to remove completely the notion of "self-deportation" as a desired goal of the anti-illegal movement.

Again, the issue is one of border control and border control means controlling illegal traffic in both directions across the border. No illegal immigrant should ever imagine they can just come or go any time they feel like it. Being able to leave as an illegal any time they feel like is part of the appeal of being an illegal in the US. Amnesty for anti-illegals should mean the ability to leave under supervision without prosecution. Otherwise illegals should assume they are just as liable for prosecution for trying to cross our borders illegally on the way out as they are on the way in.

Notice that this state official is being a little narrow minded. He isn't looking at the big picture, he's just wrapped up in Alabama, which is a hazardous posture for this problem, which is an international problem. Really, when he says Alabama's illegals are "self-deporting", they aren't really "self-deporting" at all. They're just leaving Alabama for some other more friendly state, like California. Alabama doesn't have any international borders and so for a state official to brag about it's illegals "self-deporting" is a little too grand.

We commend Alabama's successes in getting rid of their illegals, but hope they keep a national perspective on this, at least. And even better, an international one. That's what it is at its roots, an international problem.
This is a huge start and an example of how enforcing our laws can work. Sure they'll scatter to other states, but eventually those states will become overwhelmed by the influx and have to address their lax ways. This is a far cry from just five years ago when basically no one was talking, more less, doing anything about illegal aliens. THIS IS A START!
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Old 10-08-2011, 01:08 PM
Twoller Twoller is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeanfromfillmore View Post
This is a huge start and an example of how enforcing our laws can work. Sure they'll scatter to other states, but eventually those states will become overwhelmed by the influx and have to address their lax ways. This is a far cry from just five years ago when basically no one was talking, more less, doing anything about illegal aliens. THIS IS A START!
I completely agree!
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