Simply being in the US without the appropriate documentation is not a crime, it's considered a civil matter under US law. Deportation is a civil penalty, not a criminal punishment. As a result, the separation of parents and their children is illegal under the treaties the US has signed up to. — Benkei
Again I ask, what would you suggest we do? — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Whether it’s by crossing the U.S. border with a "coyote" or buying a fake U.S. passport, a foreign national who enters the U.S. illegally can be both convicted of a crime and held responsible for a civil violation under the U.S. immigration laws. Illegal entry also carries consequences for anyone who might later attempt to apply for a green card or other immigration benefit.
Nothing you have actually said justifies the continuation of this situation. — Jeremiah
You are right in that simply being in this country without appropriate documentation is not a crime. Neither is entering at a point of entry. But as soon as they enter illegally, are caught crossing the border and I think within 100 miles of the border, they have committed a crime. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
If you think changes need to be made fine, but children are not political barging chips, destroying families in the meantime to use as political pressure is morally wrong. Stop the new policy, then work on immigration reform. The only reason Trump is doing it this way is because while he lacks a soul himself he knows he can use the moral hang ups of the Dems to pressure them. It is sick and wrong. — Jeremiah
He wants secure borders. Period. Full STOP. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
The ends do not justify the means. These are children. — Jeremiah
You actually think destroying families is "better"? Is that really your potion? — Jeremiah
I think I have stated my position several times. — Jeremiah
You have stated it is wrong and it needs to stop. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Wait, let me get this clear. You are telling me that I stated my own position wrong? — Jeremiah
Are you reading my posts or are you just responding emotionally? — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Perhaps your problem is that you are not looking at this emotionally. — Jeremiah
Maybe we should also look at the economic gains of slavery without emotions. Morally is comprised of reason and emotion, you don't get a moral result if you exclude one of those elements. I really did already comment on all this. — Jeremiah
I also brought up many other point that you are glossing over. — Jeremiah
With all due respect Jeremiah, you also brought up Hitler earlier in addition to slavery now and I am not going to compare the two. Not for fear of semblance but because I will not disparage what concentration camps victims and survivors have gone through. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
In January 2017, software engineer Russel Neiss and Rabbi Charlie Schwartz set up a Twitter account which tweeted the names of each passenger who was not allowed to disembark and subsequently killed. The format of each tweet included the passenger's name, the sentence "The US turned me away at the border in 1939" and the location where each was killed.[27]
Whether it’s by crossing the U.S. border with a "coyote" or buying a fake U.S. passport, a foreign national who enters the U.S. illegally can be both convicted of a crime and held responsible for a civil violation under the U.S. immigration laws. Illegal entry also carries consequences for anyone who might later attempt to apply for a green card or other immigration benefit.
Maw, that is a chilling link — ArguingWAristotleTiff
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