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Why Is Our Government Putting People In Cages?


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6 hours ago, 3rdnlng said:

Did you know that when the Council was created in 2006 the Bush administration refused to join? Do you know why?

 

The UN Human Rights Council, like the U.N. and many other multinational agreements, treaties, and all of human interaction—is messy. Work together to fix it. Be a grown up country. Don’t just take your ball and sulk off and call names. 

 

International diplomacy requires engaged conversation, even when others are making statements we believe are absurd. 

 

To whoever said this was being duscussed in that global conspiracy thread, sorry I missed it. I don’t engage in the conspiracy stuff that dominates many here, and centers in that thread. 

 

Schumer and his gang by the way are fools. He is right that Trump could fix this with a flick of his wrist, but he could support any bill to fix it too. Either way, fix it and take the moral high ground. Ist ad he and Trump wallow in the muck. 

Edited by BeginnersMind
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5 hours ago, HappyDays said:

I'm changing my tactic in this thread.

 

I'll take you all at your word that you are genuinely concerned about child trafficking victims. That we can't know for sure which adults are lying about the children they're traveling with.

 

Luckily there's an easy solution:

 

https://dnacenter.com/blog/long-take-get-dna-paternity-test-results/

 

Paternity test results take 1-2 days and they cost a maximum of $500. Let's say we ran it on 20,000 adult men. That would cost at most a total of $10 million, or 0.00025% of the US federal budget in 2017.

 

We all agree that separating parents from their children is wrong. We all agree that even if the parents are wrong for illegally crossing the border, the children don't deserve to be punished with forced separation from the only family they know.

 

So who here would support a policy that ended zero-tolerance family separation and replaced it with state funded paternity tests?

 

I agree with this 100%. If a minor is brought across the border by a non family member , US authorities take custody of that child and try to unite with relatives in this country or Mexico. If the child is from Central America try for a safe foster family in this country, with monitor by CPS till 18.

 

Child smugglers go to prison  then deport. 

 

Real asylum seekers from Central America as a family unit need to be kept together. Treat these victims with dignity, they will pay this country back 100 fold. Just do the right thing.

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6 hours ago, HappyDays said:

 

No they are not choosing separation. Many tried to present themselves at legal ports of entry but were turned away. If it were me and my child I wouldn't think twice about trying to cross over illegally at that point. There is a perfectly legal procedure for seeking political asylum at these legal ports of entry, but what should they do when they arrive to find that procedure blocked? I suppose they should just suck it up and go home, but if you're a parent you know that is not really an option for them. Also since this policy is new the first families affected by it literally would not have known about it, and therefore couldn't be held responsible for choosing their punishment.

 

The law posted above refers to persons who are criminally prosecuted for crossing the border illegally. Past administrations would not prosecute every single person that crossed illegally, certainly not those with a "credible fear" of their country of origin (asylum seekers). The Trump administration, driven by Jeff Sessions, has changed that policy and now prosecutes every single person that illegally crosses the border regardless of their situation. There is no law which says they have to do that. They intentionally created a zero tolerance policy and are trying to hide behind a law that wouldn't apply if the zero tolerance policy wasn't in effect.

Do you have a link about the many families that went to legal ports of entry and sought asylum?

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6 hours ago, Buftex said:

And that right there is what makes you so repulsive. You know better, but you take glee. You are like a walking, talking, typing Chinese finger trap. Smug, hypocritical and so high and mighty.  Keep telling everyone you genuinely can not stand Trump, but take every opportunity you can find to contort your ethiics to support his bull ****.  

You know what I find repulsive?  When people have it plainly shown to them how the government is horrifically corrupt to the point where the top agency in the Justice Department is doing what it can to elect the most status quo candidate in history and whine about Trump's ethics.  

 

It it can be argued that every candidate from the slate of early primaries represented the status quo with two exceptions:. Trump and Sanders.  The DNC delegate selection process doomed Sanders from the start and he still put a major scare in Hillary.  Trump and his basket of deplorables easily beat most of the Republican field and had too much momentum for Cruz, Lazio and the Guy from Ohio who wanted to lose to Hillary.  Voters clearly wanted out from under the real deplorables.

 

Can anyone deny that the system needed a shakeup?  I just don't see how. It can certainly be argued that Trump isn't the best choice to do that.  But Sanders, a commie, was the only other available choice unless you want to make an argument for Cruz.  

 

And in in all of this you find LA repulsive because he chuckles at the circumstances?  Ok.  It makes some sense I guess because you looked the other way from the NBA status quo even when I told you the next four champions had been decided and who they would be, and how they would win......and then it all played out.

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6 hours ago, Doc Brown said:

I'm still confused after a week of conflicting reports from the media and the different players in Trump's administration.  Sessions, Miller, and Kelly called their policy a deterrent for those who broke the law.  Nielsen said they don't have a policy of separating children at the border.  Trump's all over the place.  The Democrats are focused solely on going over the top to make Trump look like the bad guy.

 

The problem seems to be that each administration has the "discretion" of what to do when people try to cross illegally.  It would be nice if we had a consistent policy that each administration has to follow (whether there's a Democrat or Republican president).

Why are you confused? Are you just not trying to understand? Trump implemented this policy.

 

 

 

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7 hours ago, HappyDays said:

 

No they are not choosing separation. Many tried to present themselves at legal ports of entry but were turned away. If it were me and my child I wouldn't think twice about trying to cross over illegally at that point. There is a perfectly legal procedure for seeking political asylum at these legal ports of entry, but what should they do when they arrive to find that procedure blocked? I suppose they should just suck it up and go home, but if you're a parent you know that is not really an option for them. Also since this policy is new the first families affected by it literally would not have known about it, and therefore couldn't be held responsible for choosing their punishment.

 

The law posted above refers to persons who are criminally prosecuted for crossing the border illegally. Past administrations would not prosecute every single person that crossed illegally, certainly not those with a "credible fear" of their country of origin (asylum seekers). The Trump administration, driven by Jeff Sessions, has changed that policy and now prosecutes every single person that illegally crosses the border regardless of their situation. There is no law which says they have to do that. They intentionally created a zero tolerance policy and are trying to hide behind a law that wouldn't apply if the zero tolerance policy wasn't in effect.

There are no laws on the books that say you have to prosecute criminals committing crimes?  

 

Interesting.  

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7 hours ago, HappyDays said:

And if anyone wants to read more about how the Trump administration specifically created this new policy, this article explains it in detail:

 

https://www.dallasnews.com/news/politics/2018/06/18/fact-check-no-law-requires-family-separation-border-despite-trump-administrations-claims

 

In anticipation of cries of media bias, I will note that this paper endorsed Hillary Clinton in 2016, however she was the first Democrat they had endorsed since FDR. They are not a liberal news rag. These are the facts of this new policy and no one can pretend that it is a simple matter of enforcing existing laws.

So if he simply decided not to enforce the first law then there would be no need to enforce the second law?

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13 minutes ago, BringBackOrton said:

There are no laws on the books that say you have to prosecute criminals committing crimes?  

 

Interesting.  

 

Those from Central America who qualify for asylum  are a special case. They may not know the proper procedure , give them a break on a case by case basis . They are very desperate after a long and dangerous journey.

 

Of course weed out criminals and MS-13

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2 minutes ago, Tiberius said:

People seeking asylum are criminals? No 

Perhaps you misread what I quoted.

12 minutes ago, BringBackOrton said:

The Trump administration, driven by Jeff Sessions, has changed that policy and now prosecutes every single person that illegally crosses the border regardless of their situation. There is no law which says they have to do that. 

 

1 minute ago, ALF said:

 

Those from Central America who qualify for asylum  are a special case. They may not know the proper procedure , give them a break on a case by case basis . They are very desperate after a long and dangerous journey.

When was ignorance of the law an absolute defense?

 

More reason to build a wall. 

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2 minutes ago, BringBackOrton said:

Perhaps you misread what I quoted.

 

When was ignorance of the law an absolute defense?

 

More reason to build a wall. 

 

I have no problem with a wall and tight border security. Screen carefully everyone who is legally admitted.

7 minutes ago, joesixpack said:

 

Why?

 

Why are they special?

 

 

Questions and Answers: Asylum Eligibility and Applications

 

Can I Still Apply for Asylum Even if I Am in the United States Illegally?


Yes. You may apply for asylum with USCIS regardless of your immigration status if:

You are not currently in removal proceedings


You file an asylum application within one year of arriving to the United States or demonstrate that you are within an exception to that rule.

 

https://www.uscis.gov/humanitarian/refugees-asylum/asylum/questions-and-answers-asylum-eligibility-and-applications

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9 minutes ago, ALF said:

 

I have no problem with a wall and tight border security. Screen carefully everyone who is legally admitted.

 

Questions and Answers: Asylum Eligibility and Applications

 

Can I Still Apply for Asylum Even if I Am in the United States Illegally?


Yes. You may apply for asylum with USCIS regardless of your immigration status if:

You are not currently in removal proceedings


You file an asylum application within one year of arriving to the United States or demonstrate that you are within an exception to that rule.

 

https://www.uscis.gov/humanitarian/refugees-asylum/asylum/questions-and-answers-asylum-eligibility-and-applications

 

Interesting, but it doesn't answer the question.

 

Why are asylum seekers from central america special?

 

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Just now, joesixpack said:

 

Interesting, but it doesn't answer the question.

 

Why are asylum seekers from central america special?

 

 

Their lives are threatened especially if young family members do not become gang members. If I understand what is going on there, not Mexico.

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1 minute ago, ALF said:

 

Their lives are threatened especially if young family members do not become gang members. If I understand what is going on there, not Mexico.

 

So they're seeking "asylum" from criminal gangs, not from repressive governments.

 

I should also note that these same gangs exist HERE. How will asylum help those people?

 

It won't.

 

 

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1 minute ago, joesixpack said:

 

So they're seeking "asylum" from criminal gangs, not from repressive governments.

 

I should also note that these same gangs exist HERE. How will asylum help those people?

 

It won't.

 

 

 

The problem in Central America is that their governments are unable to protect them and are corrupt. Poverty creates dire problems in some places.

 

Jail or deport gang members here .

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5 minutes ago, joesixpack said:

 

So that's our problem, how?

 

 

By extension it's America's back yard.  If you ignore it, don't be surprised about the vermin that will take root there.  US would get a far bigger bang for the buck by improving the conditions in Central America than trying to build the wall

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9 minutes ago, ALF said:

 

The problem in Central America is that their governments are unable to protect them and are corrupt. Poverty creates dire problems in some places.

 

Jail or deport gang members here .

If only their governments weren't corrupt and had properly implemented communism everything would be awesome.

 

Jail or deport gang members?  What if the swallow their membership cards when they are in line for their interviews?  How will we know?

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